governance/reference/new-projects-requirements.rst
Doug Hellmann 5118d12464 describe a process for managing community-wide goals
One of the outcomes of the discussion at the leadership training session
earlier this year was the idea that the TC should set some
community-wide goals for accomplishing specific technical tasks to get
the projects synced up and moving in the same direction.

This patch includes the proposed process for managing those goals, a
template for describing a goal, the placeholder for goals for the Ocata
cycle, and a tool for mechanically generating part of the documents.

I had help with reviews and drafts of some portions of this text from a
bunch of other folks including jroll, dtroyer, johnthetubaguy, spamaps,
mordred, ttx, notmorgan, thingee, and amrith.

Change-Id: I46cc66eafe9dbcfda94fb6a1a8c66c2ca77de45a
Signed-off-by: Doug Hellmann <doug@doughellmann.com>
2016-08-05 13:12:01 -04:00

4.0 KiB

Requirements for new OpenStack Projects applications

Teams in OpenStack can be created as-needed and grow organically. By becoming an official OpenStack Project, they place themselves under the authority of the OpenStack Technical Committee. In return, their contributors get to vote in the Technical Committee election.

When considering new projects for addition, the TC will check that:

  • The project aligns with the OpenStack Mission: The project must have a clear and defined scope. It should help further the OpenStack mission, by providing a cloud infrastructure service, or directly building on an existing OpenStack infrastructure service.
  • The project follows the OpenStack way ("the 4 opens"):
    • Open Source:
      • The proposed project uses an open source license (preferably the Apache v2.0 license, since it is necessary if the project wants to be used in an OpenStack trademark program)
      • Project must have no library dependencies which effectively restrict how the project may be distributed or deployed
    • Open Community:
      • The leadership is chosen by the contributors to the project
      • The project has regular public meetings on IRC and those meetings are logged and published (moving to official OpenStack meeting channels once the project's application is accepted, if they're not held there already)
      • The project shall provide a level and open collaboration playing field for all contributors. The project shall not benefit a single vendor, or a single vendors product offerings; nor advantage contributors from a single vendor organization due to access to source code, hardware, resources or other proprietary technology available only to those contributors.
    • Open Development:
      • The project uses public code reviews on the OpenStack infrastructure
      • The project has core reviewers and adopts a test-driven gate in the OpenStack infrastructure for changes
      • The project provides liaisons that serve as contacts for the work of cross-project teams in OpenStack
      • Where it makes sense, the project cooperates with existing projects rather than gratuitously competing or reinventing the wheel
      • Where appropriate, the project adopts technology and patterns used by existing OpenStack projects
    • Open Design:
      • The project direction is discussed at the Design Summit and/or on public forums
      • The project uses the openstack-dev ML to discuss issues
  • The project ensures basic interoperability with the rest of OpenStack: User-facing API services should support Keystone for discovery and authentication.
  • The project should have an active team of one or more contributors
  • The project participates in any goals specified by the TC, as defined by release-cycle-goals. Any existing goals that are not met should be prioritized and completed within the first year of a team joining.
  • The project meets any policies that the TC requires all projects to meet. For instance, the project-testing-interface

In order to do an evaluation against this criteria, the TC expects the project to be set up and have some history to evaluate. A few months of operating and following these project requirements is a rough guideline for how long to wait before applying to be approved by the TC.

Once a project has joined OpenStack, it may create additional source code repositories as needed at the discretion of its Project Team Lead (PTL) without prior approval from the TC as long as the additional source code repositories fall within the scope of the approved project mission statement.

Official project teams are expected to participate in all elections held after the team is accepted as official, regardless of how recently the team leadership may have been established.