Annotation of embedaddon/curl/docs/GOVERNANCE.md, revision 1.1.1.1
1.1 misho 1: # Decision making in the curl project
2:
3: A rough guide to how we make decisions and who does what.
4:
5: ## BDFL
6:
7: This project was started by and has to some extent been pushed forward over
8: the years with Daniel Stenberg as the driving force. It matches a standard
9: BDFL (Benevolent Dictator For Life) style project.
10:
11: This setup has been used due to convenience and the fact that is has worked
12: fine this far. It is not because someone thinks of it as a superior project
13: leadership model. It will also only continue working as long as Daniel manages
14: to listen in to what the project and the general user population wants and
15: expects from us.
16:
17: ## Legal entity
18:
19: There is no legal entity. The curl project is just a bunch of people scattered
20: around the globe with the common goal to produce source code that creates
21: great products. We are not part of any umbrella organization and we are not
22: located in any specific country. We are totally independent.
23:
24: The copyrights in the project are owned by the individuals and organizations
25: that wrote those parts of the code.
26:
27: ## Decisions
28:
29: The curl project is not a democracy, but everyone is entitled to state their
30: opinion and may argue for their sake within the community.
31:
32: All and any changes that have been done or will be done are eligible to bring
33: up for discussion, to object to or to praise. Ideally, we find consensus for
34: the appropriate way forward in any given situation or challenge.
35:
36: If there is no obvious consensus, a maintainer who's knowledgeable in the
37: specific area will take an "executive" decision that they think is the right
38: for the project.
39:
40: ## Donations
41:
42: Donating plain money to curl is best done to curl's [Open Collective
43: fund](https://opencollective.com/curl). Open Collective is a US based
44: non-profit organization that holds on to funds for us. This fund is then used
45: for paying the curl security bug bounties, to reimburse project related
46: expenses etc.
47:
48: Donations to the project can also come in form of server hosting, providing
49: services and paying for people to work on curl related code etc. Usually, such
50: donations are services paid for directly by the sponsors.
51:
52: We grade sponsors in a few different levels and if they meet the criterias,
53: they can be mentioned on the Sponsors page on the curl web site.
54:
55: ## Commercial Support
56:
57: The curl project does not do or offer commercial support. It only hosts
58: mailing lists, runs bug trackers etc to facilitate communication and work.
59:
60: However, Daniel works for wolfSSL and we offer commercial curl support there.
61:
62: ## Key roles
63:
64: ### Maintainers
65:
66: A maintainer in the curl project is an individual who has been given
67: permissions to push commits to one of the git repositories.
68:
69: Maintainers are free to push commits to the repositories at their own will.
70: Maintainers are however expected to listen to feedback from users and any
71: change that is non-trivial in size or nature *should* be brought to the
72: project as a PR to allow others to comment/object before merge.
73:
74: ### Former maintainers
75:
76: A maintainer who stops being active in the project will at some point get
77: their push permissions removed. We do this for security reasons but also to
78: make sure that we always have the list of maintainers as "the team that push
79: stuff to curl".
80:
81: Getting push permissions removed is not a punishment. Everyone who ever worked
82: on maintaining curl is considered a hero, for all time hereafter.
83:
84: ### Security team members
85:
86: We have a security team. That's the team of people who are subscribed to the
87: curl-security mailing list; the receivers of security reports from users and
88: developers. This list of people will vary over time but should be skilled
89: developers familiar with the curl project.
90:
91: The security team works best when it consists of a small set of active
92: persons. We invite new members when the team seems to need it, and we also
93: expect to retire security team members as they "drift off" from the project or
94: just find themselves unable to perform their duties there.
95:
96: ### Server admins
97:
98: We run a web server, a mailing list and more on the curl project's primary
99: server. That physical machine is owned and run by Haxx. Daniel is the primary
100: admin of all things curl related server stuff, but Björn Stenberg and Linus
101: Feltzing serve as backup admins for when Daniel is gone or unable.
102:
103: The primary server is paid for by Haxx. The machine is physically located in a
104: server bunker in Stockholm Sweden, operated by the company Portlane.
105:
106: The web site contents are served to the web via Fastly and Daniel is the
107: primary curl contact with Fastly.
108:
109: ### BDFL
110:
111: That's Daniel.
112:
113: # Maintainers
114:
115: A curl maintainer is a project volunteer who has the authority and rights to
116: merge changes into a git repository in the curl project.
117:
118: Anyone can aspire to become a curl maintainer.
119:
120: ### Duties
121:
122: There are no mandatory duties. We hope and wish that maintainers consider
123: reviewing patches and help merging them, especially when the changes are
124: within the area of personal expertise and experience.
125:
126: ### Requirements
127:
128: - only merge code that meets our quality and style guide requirements.
129: - *never* merge code without doing a PR first, unless the change is "trivial"
130: - if in doubt, ask for input/feedback from others
131:
132: ### Recommendations
133:
134: - we require two-factor authentication enabled on your github account to
135: reduce risk of malicious source code tampering
136: - consider enabling signed git commits for additional verification of changes
137:
138: ### Merge advice
139:
140: When you're merging patches/PRs...
141:
142: - make sure the commit messages follow our template
143: - squash patch sets into a few logical commits even if the PR didn't, if
144: necessary
145: - avoid the "merge" button on github, do it "manually" instead to get full
146: control and full audit trail (github leaves out you as "Committer:")
147: - remember to credit the reporter and the helpers!
148:
149: ## Who are maintainers?
150:
151: The [list of maintainers](https://github.com/orgs/curl/people). Be aware that
152: the level of presence and activity in the project vary greatly between
153: different individuals and over time.
154:
155: ### Become a maintainer?
156:
157: If you think you can help making the project better by shouldering some
158: maintaining responsibilities, then please get in touch.
159:
160: You will be expected to be familiar with the curl project and its ways of
161: working. You need to have gotten a few quality patches merged as a proof of
162: this.
163:
164: ### Stop being a maintainer
165:
166: If you (appear to) not be active in the project anymore, you may be removed as
167: a maintainer. Thank you for your service!
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