governance/reference/service-project-naming.rst
Thierry Carrez 6d0cf799c1 Use opendev for repository links
Update the :repo: shorthand role to use opendev instead of cgit links
in project team pages.

Make sure that the other content under the reference/ directory is
updated to use :repo: instead of cgit links (except the one in
pti/javascript.rst which should really point to the NPM package).

Change-Id: I1009ba2a0f8d0fd1dab26f05241903b71c63e4fb
2019-05-10 15:51:53 +02:00

3.5 KiB

Service and Project Naming

OpenStack projects must follow naming conventions for both the project team and the service the team provides. Following are some guidelines for reference to ensure consistency, reduce confusion, and enable documentation clarity.

Project Naming Process

The Technical Committee reviews the incoming project proposals through the openstack/governance repository with an update to the doc/source/reference/projects.yaml file. TC members should review the patches with these guidelines.

Project Name Guidelines

When seeking a project name refer to the Legal Issues FAQ on the OpenStack wiki. Realize the team name will not become a trademark.

In documentation on docs.openstack.org, project names are consistently lowercase, such as nova and keystone. The documentation also uses lowercase when referring to file names such as nova.conf, and when referring to the Command Line Interfaces (CLI) for those projects including the openstack CLI command.

The history of this decision is that the documentation contributors wanted the least amount of cognitive overhead when writing and reviewing. Learning rules about case can be difficult across multiple projects with hundreds of documentation contributors and thousands of changes and additions. Lowercase for project names as a rule is then easiest to review and enforce at this scale and growth pattern.

Service Name Guidelines

When naming the service that your project provides, please consider the use of the service name in documentation for operators, administrators, end-users, and developers consuming the service. The current convention is:

  • Use service in documentation to further clarify what the project offers.
  • Use an initial capital for all words in the service name, including the word after a hyphen.
  • Do not use OpenStack in the name of the service. Certain other words may be reserved also due to trademark, but we have had examples of getting permission such as Puppet.

Examples of these guidelines in service names are: the Block Storage service (cinder), the Object Storage service (swift), or the Bare Metal service (ironic).

Review Guidelines

Early in the OpenStack history, service names in combination with the brand name "OpenStack," were thought to be legally binding. However, as more services are added, the complexity of the names of services has increased. So, while the names are considered proper nouns, naming conventions do not indicate a legal right to the name.

If you have a question about legal use of the OpenStack name or logo, refer to the OpenStack Brand website. Refer to Documentation Conventions and ask for guidance on the openstack-docs mailing list if you have questions about using the names in context. As a final arbitration or decision point, refer to the IBM Style Guide as it is the final decision point for spelling or usage of a term.

Developer documentation may refer to the project name, but end-user, operator, administrator, and application developer documentation must refer to the service name. When reviewing service names, consider the consumers of the information.