Even if it is licensed under Apache 2.0, you should *not* put any files which are pre-built in a Git repository, or in release tarballs. We may have no way to build them in Debian for example. This could be a reason for murano-agent to be removed from Debian, which would be really bad, as the Murano images are Debian based.
If you need this, then put it in a separated project, like murano-agent-windows.
Serg,
Even if it is licensed under Apache 2.0, you should *not* put any files which are pre-built in a Git repository, or in release tarballs. We may have no way to build them in Debian for example. This could be a reason for murano-agent to be removed from Debian, which would be really bad, as the Murano images are Debian based.
If you need this, then put it in a separated project, like murano- agent-windows.