diff --git a/llvm/docs/DeveloperPolicy.rst b/llvm/docs/DeveloperPolicy.rst index 49ec310b382f9..f74adc4702d38 100644 --- a/llvm/docs/DeveloperPolicy.rst +++ b/llvm/docs/DeveloperPolicy.rst @@ -1077,6 +1077,8 @@ If you have questions or comments about these topics, please ask on the please realize that most compiler developers are not lawyers, and therefore you will not be getting official legal advice. +.. _LLVM Discourse forums: https://discourse.llvm.org + Copyright --------- @@ -1301,4 +1303,28 @@ to move code from (e.g.) libc++ to the LLVM core without concern, but that code cannot be moved from the LLVM core to libc++ without the copyright owner's permission. -.. _LLVM Discourse forums: https://discourse.llvm.org +.. _ai contributions: + +AI generated contributions +-------------------------- + +Artificial intelligence systems raise many questions around copyright that have +yet to be answered. Our policy on AI tools is guided by our copyright policy: +Contributors are responsible for ensuring that they have the right to contribute +code under the terms of our license, typically meaning that either they, their +employer, or their collaborators hold the copyright. Using AI tools to +regenerate copyrighted material does not remove the copyright, and contributors +are responsible for ensuring that such material does not appear in their +contributions. + +As such, the LLVM policy is that contributors are permitted to use artificial +intelligence tools to produce contributions, provided that they have the right +to license that code under the project license. Contributions found to violate +this policy will be removed just like any other offending contribution. + +While the LLVM project has a liberal policy on AI tool use, contributors are +considered responsible for their contributions. We encourage contributors to +review all generated code before sending it for review to verify its +correctness and to understand it so that they can answer questions during code +review. Reviewing and maintaining generated code that the original contributor +does not understand is not a good use of limited project resources. diff --git a/llvm/docs/FAQ.rst b/llvm/docs/FAQ.rst index 229ac99f703c1..aa20de47a6998 100644 --- a/llvm/docs/FAQ.rst +++ b/llvm/docs/FAQ.rst @@ -22,6 +22,13 @@ Yes. This is why we distribute LLVM under a less restrictive license than GPL, as explained in the first question above. +Can I use AI coding tools, such as GitHub co-pilot, to write LLVM patches? +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +Yes, as long as the resulting work can be licensed under the project license, as +covered in the :doc:`DeveloperPolicy`. Using an AI tool to reproduce copyrighted +work does not rinse it of copyright and grant you the right to relicense it. + + Source Code ===========