Apache Lenya project guidelines
- The mission of Apache Lenya
- Open development
- Roles and responsibilities
- Project Management Committee (PMC)
- Decision making
- Communication channels
- Code management
- Contribution and acknowledgement
- Development procedure
This document provides the guidelines under which the Apache Lenya project operates. It defines the roles and responsibilities, who may vote, how voting works, how conflicts are resolved, etc. Apache Lenya is a project of The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) which is a non-profit corporation. As with all such organisations there are some procedures to be followed. The ASF website explains the operation and background of the ASF. These project guidelines supplement that ASF documentation. Normally these guidelines are not needed - the project just gets on with its day-to-day operation - but they enable all people to understand how the project operates.
The mission of Apache Lenya
The generation of open source content management solutions, maintaining a separation of content and presentation.
Open development
Lenya is typical of Apache projects, in that it operates under a set of principles that encourage open development. There is no clear definition (perhaps that is part of it) and it is ever-evolving. Each ASF project is different in its own way - there is healthy diversity rather than uniformity across all projects. The main principles are to facilitate open collaborative development, with respect for others; to ensure that there is a healthy community (even to give community issues higher priority than code issues); to use a consensus-based approach; to ensure that each contributor is recognised and feels a productive part of the community; to encourage diversity; to make the project a nice place to be.
Each project, as part of the resolution that formed its Project Management Committee (PMC), creates its set of project guidelines intended to encourage open development and increased participation. These facilitate the project to conduct its main charge, which is the creation and maintenance of open-source software for distribution at no charge to the public with the purpose of its mission.
For more information about the way that Apache projects operate, please refer to the ASF foundation and ASF developer sections of the ASF website, including the ASF ByLaws and the How it works document, the FAQs about the Foundation, and the Incubator project.
Roles and responsibilities
The meritocracy enables various roles as defined in the How it works document.
user | developer | committer | PMC member | ASF member
The current Apache Lenya committers and PMC members are listed. The Lenya PMC has additionally granted commit access to committers from its sister projects Apache Cocoon and Apache Forrest.
Project Management Committee (PMC)
The Apache Lenya project was established in spring 2003 and became a top-level project in September 2004. The Project Management Committee (PMC) was created by a resolution of the board of the Apache Software Foundation. See explanation of the role of the PMC in that resolution and also the ASF Bylaws and How-it-works.
The responsibilities of the PMC include:
- Be familiar with these project guidelines, and the ASF Bylaws, and with the ASF documentation and procedures in general.
- Keep oversight of the commit log messages and ensure that the codebase does not have copyright and license issues.
- Resolve license disputes regarding products of the project, including other supporting software that is re-distributed.
- Decide what is distributed as products of the project. In particular all releases must be approved by the PMC.
- Guide the direction of the project.
- Strive for and help to facilitate a harmonious productive community.
- Nominate new PMC members and committers.
- Maintain the project's shared resources, including the codebase repository, mailing lists, websites.
- Speak on behalf of the project.
- Maintain these and other guidelines of the project.
The PMC does have a private mailing list on which it can discuss certain issues. However this list is rarely used and every effort is made to conduct all discussion on the public mailing lists.
Membership of the PMC is by invitation only and must receive consensus approval of the active PMC members.
A PMC member is considered "emeritus" by their own declaration or by not contributing in any form to the project for over six months. An emeritus member may request reinstatement to the PMC. Such reinstatement is subject to consensus approval of the active PMC members. Membership of the PMC can be revoked by unanimous consensus of all active PMC members (other than the member in question).
The chair of the PMC is appointed by the Board and is an officer of the ASF (Vice President). The chair has primary responsibility to the Board, and has the power to establish rules and procedures for the day-to-day management of the communities for which the PMC is responsible, including the composition of the PMC itself. The chair reports to the board every three months about the status of the project. The PMC may consider the position of PMC chair annually and may recommend a new chair to the board. Ultimately, however, it is the board's responsibility who it chooses to appoint as the PMC chair. See further explanation of the role of the chair in the ASF Bylaws and the PMC FAQ
Quarterly reports to ASF Board
Every three months, it is the responsibility of our PMC chair to send a report to the ASF Board. This is mainly concerned with the status of our community, but can also include the technical progress. Further details are in the "committers" SVN in the /board/ directory.
The minutes are available for each board meeting. Our reporting schedule is: Feb, May, Aug, Nov.
Electing new committers and PMC members
We conduct committer/PMC member proposals on the private PMC mailing list to enable a frank discussion. The vote for committership will be conducted on the lenya dev list, if no concerns are aired prior on the private PMC list. This is out of for historical reasons. We inherited that from cocoon: it shows people that we appreciate them in a ceremonial way. The vote for a new PMC member however will be conducted on the private list and later announced on the dev list.
Decision making
Different types of decisions require different forms of approval. For example, the previous section describes several decisions which require "consensus approval". This section defines how voting is performed, the types of approval, and which types of decision require which type of approval.
Most day-to-day operations do not require explicit voting - just get on and do the work. See the "Lazy approval" type described below.
Voting
Certain actions and decisions regarding the project are made by votes on the project development mailing list. Where necessary, PMC voting may take place on the private PMC mailing list.
Votes are clearly indicated by subject line starting with [VOTE]. Discussion and proposal should have happened prior to the vote. Voting is carried out by replying to the vote mail. See voting procedure below. Votes are expressed using one of the following symbols:
+1 | "Yes," "Agree," or "the action should be performed." In general, this vote also indicates a willingness on the behalf of the voter to assist with "making it happen". |
+0 | This vote indicates a willingness for the action under consideration to go ahead. The voter, however will not be able to help. |
-0 | This vote indicates that the voter does not, in general, agree with the proposed action but is not concerned enough to prevent the action going ahead. |
-1 | This is a negative vote. On issues where consensus is required, this vote counts as a veto. All vetoes must contain an explanation of why the veto is appropriate. Vetoes with no explanation are void. It may also be appropriate for a -1 vote to include an alternative course of action. |
abstain | People can abstain from voting. They can either remain silent or express their reason. |
All participants in the project are encouraged to show their preference for a particular action by voting. When the votes are tallied, only the votes of PMC members are binding. Non-binding votes are still useful to enable everyone to understand the perception of an action by the wider community.
Voting can also be applied to changes made to the project codebase. These typically take the form of a veto (-1) in reply to the commit message sent when the commit is made.
Types of approval
Different actions require different types of approval:
Consensus approval | Consensus approval requires 3 binding +1 votes and no binding vetoes. |
Lazy majority | A lazy majority vote requires 3 binding +1 votes and more binding +1 votes than -1 votes. |
Lazy approval | An action with lazy approval is implicitly allowed unless a -1 vote is received, at which time, depending on the type of action, either lazy majority or consensus approval must be obtained. |
2/3 majority | Some actions require a 2/3 majority of active PMC members. Such actions typically affect the foundation of the project (e.g. adopting a new codebase to replace an existing product). The higher threshold is designed to ensure such changes are strongly supported. To pass this vote requires at least 2/3 of binding vote holders to vote +1 |
Unanimous consensus | All voters with binding votes must vote and there can be no binding vetoes (-1). |
Vetoes
A valid veto cannot be over-ruled, it can only be withdrawn by its issuer. Any veto must be accompanied by reasoning and be prepared to defend it.
The validity of a veto, if challenged, can be confirmed by anyone who has a binding vote. This does not necessarily signify agreement with the veto - merely that the veto is valid. In case of disputes about whether a veto is valid, then opinion of the PMC chair is final.
If you disagree with a valid veto, then you must engage the person casting the veto to further discuss the issues. The vetoer is obliged to vote early and to then work with the community to resolve the matter.
If a veto is not withdrawn, the action that has been vetoed must be reversed in a timely manner.
Actions
This section describes the various actions which are undertaken within the project, the corresponding approval required for that action, and those who have binding votes over the action.
Action | Description | Approval | Binding Votes |
---|---|---|---|
Code change | A change made to a codebase of the project by a committer. This includes source code, documentation, website content, etc. | Lazy approval for trunk, lazy majority for the release branch. | Active PMC members |
Opening / Closing a branch | When a commiter wants to open a new branch in SVN, or close an existing branch, a vote is required. | Lazy majority | Active PMC members |
Release plan | Defines the timetable and actions for a release. | Lazy majority | Active PMC members |
Product release | When a release of one of the project's products is ready, a vote is required to accept the release as an official release of the project. | Lazy majority | Active PMC members |
Adoption of new codebase | When the codebase for an existing, released product is to be replaced with an alternative codebase. If such a vote fails to gain approval, the existing code base will continue. This also covers the creation of new sub-projects within the project. | 2/3 majority | Active PMC members |
New committer | When a new committer is proposed for the project. | Consensus approval | Active PMC members |
New PMC member | When a new member is proposed for the PMC. | Consensus approval | Active PMC members |
Reinstate emeritus member | An emeritus PMC member can be reinstated. | Consensus approval | Active PMC members (excluding the member in question) |
Committer removal | When removal of commit privileges is sought. | Unanimous consensus | Active PMC members (excluding the committer in question if a member of the PMC) |
PMC member removal | When removal of a PMC member is sought. See also section 6.5 of the ASF Bylaws whereby the ASF Board may remove a PMC member. | Unanimous consensus | Active PMC members (excluding the member in question) |
Voting timeframes
Votes are normally open for a period of one week to allow all active voters time to consider the vote. If the vote has not achieved a quorum, then it can be extended for another week. If still no quorum, then the vote fails, and would need to be raised again later. Votes relating to code changes are not subject to a strict timetable, but should be made as timely as possible.
Voting procedure
Discussion about the topic would have already happened in a [Proposal] email thread to express the issues and opinions. The [Vote] thread is to ratify the proposal.
The instigator sends the Vote email to the dev mailing list. Describe the issue with no ambiguity and in a positive sense. Define the date and time for the end of the vote period.
Votes are expressed by replying email using the voting symbols defined above. Voters can change their vote during the timeframe. At the end of the vote period, the instigator tallies the number of final votes and reports the results.
Ultimatum and breakdown
For breakdown situations and those requiring unanimous consensus, if this consensus cannot be reached within the extended timeframe, then the Board expects the chair to act as the officer of the Foundation and make the ultimate decision.
Communication channels
The primary mechanism for communication is the mailing lists. Anyone can participate, no matter what their time zone. A reliable searchable archive of past discussion is built. Oversight is enabled. Many eyes ensures that the project evolves in a consistent direction.
All decisions are made on the "dev" mailing list.
The main channel for user support is the "user" mailing list. As is usual with mailing lists, be prepared to wait for an answer.
Occasionally we will use other communication channels such as IRC. These are used only for a specific purpose and are not permanently available. This policy ensures that solutions are available in the mailing list archives and enables people to respond at whatever time that they choose. Permanent IRC channels are poor from a community-building point-of-view, as they tend to create time-zone based cliques. So we don't.
Similarly, private discussions are discouraged. The rest of the community would not benefit from the understanding that is developed. Off-list discussions put too much load on overworked volunteers.
Code management
Development on the Lenya codebase happens on the trunk, unless a vote to create a branch has passed. Experimental code not immediately intended for merging into trunk may be commited to the sandbox. In order to prevent a code graveyard, sandbox contents will be reviewed every 6 months and either merged into trunk, promoted to their own top-level directory, or deleted. At any one time, the Lenya project maintains one release branch. At appropriate times, the Lenya project may cut a new release branch from trunk, and retire the previous one. Old release branches are kept in SVN, but are clearly marked as unmaintained both in SVN and on the web site.
The term "patch" has two meanings: Developers provide a set of changes via our issue tracker marked for inclusion, which will be applied by a committer. Committers apply their own work directly, but it is still essentially a patch.
We use the Commit-then-review method for decision-making about code changes by commiters on trunk, and Review-then-Commit on the release branch. Please refer to that glossary definition. Note that it does not preclude the committer from making changes to patches prior to their commit, nor mean that the committer can be careless. Rather it is a policy for decision-making. Patches from non-commiters are applied according to the same rules by a commiter.
There is an important issue where both developers and committers need to pay special attention: "licenses". We must not introduce licensing conditions that go beyond the terms of the Apache License. If such issues do creep in to our repository, then we must work as quickly as possible to address it and definitely before the next release.
There are some other problem areas: What should a committer do if the patch is sloppy, containing inconsistent whitespace and other code formatting, which mean that actual changes are not easily visible in the svn diff messages. What if there is poorly constructed (yet working) xml or java code? What if the new functionality is beyond the scope of the project? What if there is a better way to do the task? What if the patch will break the build, thereby preventing other developers from working and causing an unstable trunk?
The committer has various options: ask the developer to resubmit the patch; change the patch to fix the problems prior to committing; discuss the issues on the dev list; commit it and then draw attention to the issues so that the rest of the community can review and fix it. A combination of these options would appear to be the best approach. Please aim to not break the build, or introduce license problems, or make noisy changes that obscure the real differences.
Committers should not be afraid to add changes that still need attention. This enables prompt patch application and eases the load on the individual committer. An interesting side-effect is that it encourages community growth.
Contribution and acknowledgement
Some principles of open development at ASF are to ensure that each contributor is recognised and feels a productive part of the community, and to encourage diversity, respect, and equality. Key to this is the recognition of contributions from individuals in a manner that also recognises the community effort that made it all possible. It is important to remember that there is no concept of individual leadership. See the discussion of meritocracy and other sections of the How the ASF works document.
In an Open Source Project, or more importantly, a project developed using an open process, such as Apache Lenya, most contributions of actual code are supported by, or at least *should* be supported by, design discussion, oversight, testing, documentation, bug fixes and much more. No code contribution is an independent unit of work (or should not be). It is therefore impossible to credit individual contributors, it is simply unmanageable, even if it is possible to identify each part of a contribution.
At Apache Lenya we use the following method to provide recognition:
- All developers encourage other developers to participate on the mailing lists, treat each other with respect, and openly collaborate. This enables the contributors to feel a part of the project and shows that their discussion and ideas are valuable. These replies enhance the presence of their name in the email archives and search engines.
- Encourage contributors to add patches via the issue tracker. This also enables clear tracking of the issue and by default specifically shows who was the contributor.
- When committers apply the patch, they refer to the issue number and the contributor's name. This enables linkage between the issue tracker and the Subversion history. It adds the contributor's name to the mail archives.
- Committers apply patches as soon as possible. This keeps the contributor enthused and shows them that their work is valuable. Plus, it reduces the risk of bit rot, ie, patches that no longer cleanly apply due to unrelated code changes.
- Committers write descriptive commit messages, which are then aggregated into a top-level changes document. This enables linkage to the relevant issue and shows the contributor's name. It also shows the name of the committer who did the work to add the patch.
- The existing PMC will notice new contributors who are committed. It eventually invites them to become new committers/PMC members. See the forrest notes about this topic.
- Committers/PMC members are listed.
As discussed above, there is no specific documentation which lists each contributor and their work. For those who are interested there are various mechanisms: Use general internet search services; use search services provided by various third-party mail archives; search the "svn" mailing list using committer IDs and using contributor names; browse the changes pages; use 'svn log' and 'svn blame'.
Development procedure
This section is still under development. The issues have been discussed on the mailing list. Decisions need to be put into words, so that we do not need to revisit the topic.
Development work is done on the trunk of SVN. If a commiter determines a need for a new branch, he discusses the rationale on the developer list, and the decision is made by a vote.