github.com/christopherobin/docker@v1.6.2/MAINTAINERS (about)

     1  # Docker maintainers file
     2  #
     3  # This file describes who runs the Docker project and how.
     4  # This is a living document - if you see something out of date or missing,
     5  # speak up!
     6  #
     7  # It is structured to be consumable by both humans and programs.
     8  # To extract its contents programmatically, use any TOML-compliant
     9  # parser.
    10  
    11  [Rules]
    12  
    13  	[Rules.maintainers]
    14  
    15  		title = "What is a maintainer?"
    16  
    17  		text = """
    18  There are different types of maintainers, with different responsibilities, but
    19  all maintainers have 3 things in common:
    20  
    21  1) They share responsibility in the project's success.
    22  2) They have made a long-term, recurring time investment to improve the project.
    23  3) They spend that time doing whatever needs to be done, not necessarily what
    24  is the most interesting or fun.
    25  
    26  Maintainers are often under-appreciated, because their work is harder to appreciate.
    27  It's easy to appreciate a really cool and technically advanced feature. It's harder
    28  to appreciate the absence of bugs, the slow but steady improvement in stability,
    29  or the reliability of a release process. But those things distinguish a good
    30  project from a great one.
    31  """
    32  
    33  	[Rules.bdfl]
    34  
    35  		title = "The Benevolent dictator for life (BDFL)"
    36  
    37  		text = """
    38  Docker follows the timeless, highly efficient and totally unfair system
    39  known as [Benevolent dictator for
    40  life](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benevolent_Dictator_for_Life), with
    41  yours truly, Solomon Hykes, in the role of BDFL. This means that all
    42  decisions are made, by default, by Solomon. Since making every decision
    43  myself would be highly un-scalable, in practice decisions are spread
    44  across multiple maintainers.
    45  
    46  Ideally, the BDFL role is like the Queen of England: awesome crown, but not
    47  an actual operational role day-to-day. The real job of a BDFL is to NEVER GO AWAY.
    48  Every other rule can change, perhaps drastically so, but the BDFL will always
    49  be there, preserving the philosophy and principles of the project, and keeping
    50  ultimate authority over its fate. This gives us great flexibility in experimenting
    51  with various governance models, knowing that we can always press the "reset" button
    52  without fear of fragmentation or deadlock. See the US congress for a counter-example.
    53  
    54  BDFL daily routine:
    55  
    56  * Is the project governance stuck in a deadlock or irreversibly fragmented?
    57  	* If yes: refactor the project governance
    58  * Are there issues or conflicts escalated by core?
    59  	* If yes: resolve them
    60  * Go back to polishing that crown.
    61  """
    62  
    63  	[Rules.decisions]
    64  
    65  		title = "How are decisions made?"
    66  
    67  		text = """
    68  Short answer: EVERYTHING IS A PULL REQUEST.
    69  
    70  Docker is an open-source project with an open design philosophy. This
    71  means that the repository is the source of truth for EVERY aspect of the
    72  project, including its philosophy, design, road map, and APIs. *If it's
    73  part of the project, it's in the repo. If it's in the repo, it's part of
    74  the project.*
    75  
    76  As a result, all decisions can be expressed as changes to the
    77  repository. An implementation change is a change to the source code. An
    78  API change is a change to the API specification. A philosophy change is
    79  a change to the philosophy manifesto, and so on.
    80  
    81  All decisions affecting Docker, big and small, follow the same 3 steps:
    82  
    83  * Step 1: Open a pull request. Anyone can do this.
    84  
    85  * Step 2: Discuss the pull request. Anyone can do this.
    86  
    87  * Step 3: Merge or refuse the pull request. Who does this depends on the nature
    88  of the pull request and which areas of the project it affects. See *review flow*
    89  for details.
    90  
    91  Because Docker is such a large and active project, it's important for everyone to know
    92  who is responsible for deciding what. That is determined by a precise set of rules.
    93  
    94  * For every *decision* in the project, the rules should designate, in a deterministic way,
    95  who should *decide*.
    96  
    97  * For every *problem* in the project, the rules should designate, in a deterministic way,
    98  who should be responsible for *fixing* it.
    99  
   100  * For every *question* in the project, the rules should designate, in a deterministic way,
   101  who should be expected to have the *answer*.
   102  """
   103  
   104  	[Rules.review]
   105  
   106  		title = "Review flow"
   107  
   108  		text = """
   109  Pull requests should be processed according to the following flow:
   110  
   111  * For each subsystem affected by the change, the maintainers of the subsystem must approve or refuse it.
   112  It is the responsibility of the subsystem maintainers to process patches affecting them in a timely
   113  manner.
   114  
   115  * If the change affects areas of the code which are not part of a subsystem,
   116  or if subsystem maintainers are unable to reach a timely decision, it must be approved by 
   117  the core maintainers.
   118  
   119  * If the change affects the UI or public APIs, or if it represents a major change in architecture,
   120  the architects must approve or refuse it.
   121  
   122  * If the change affects the operations of the project, it must be approved or rejected by
   123  the relevant operators.
   124  
   125  * If the change affects the governance, philosophy, goals or principles of the project,
   126  it must be approved by BDFL.
   127  
   128  * A pull request can be in 1 of 5 distinct states, for each of which there is a corresponding label
   129  that needs to be applied. `Rules.review.states` contains the list of states with possible targets
   130  for each.
   131  """
   132  
   133  		# Triage
   134  		[Rules.review.states.0-triage]
   135  
   136  			# Maintainers are expected to triage new incoming pull requests by removing
   137  			# the `0-triage` label and adding the correct labels (e.g. `1-design-review`)
   138  			# potentially skipping some steps depending on the kind of pull request.
   139  			# Use common sense for judging.
   140  			#
   141  			# Checking for DCO should be done at this stage.
   142  			#
   143  			# If an owner, responsible for closing or merging, can be assigned to the PR,
   144  			# the better.
   145  
   146  			close = "e.g. unresponsive contributor without DCO"
   147  			3-docs-review = "non-proposal documentation-only change"
   148  			2-code-review = "e.g. trivial bugfix"
   149  			1-design-review = "general case"
   150  
   151  		# Design review
   152  		[Rules.review.states.1-design-review]
   153  
   154  			# Maintainers are expected to comment on the design of the pull request.
   155  			# Review of documentation is expected only in the context of design validation,
   156  			# not for stylistic changes.
   157  			#
   158  			# Ideally, documentation should reflect the expected behavior of the code.
   159  			# No code review should take place in this step.
   160  			#
   161  			# Once design is approved, a maintainer should make sure to remove this label
   162  			# and add the next one.
   163  
   164  			close = "design rejected"
   165  			3-docs-review = "proposals with only documentation changes"
   166  			2-code-review = "general case"
   167  
   168  		# Code review
   169  		[Rules.review.states.2-code-review]
   170  
   171  			# Maintainers are expected to review the code and ensure that it is good
   172  			# quality and in accordance with the documentation in the PR.
   173  			#
   174  			# If documentation is absent but expected, maintainers should ask for documentation.
   175  			#
   176  			# All tests should pass.
   177  			#
   178  			# Once code is approved according to the rules of the subsystem, a maintainer
   179  			# should make sure to remove this label and add the next one.
   180  
   181  			close = ""
   182  			1-design-review = "raises design concerns"
   183  			4-merge = "trivial change not impacting documentation"
   184  			3-docs-review = "general case"
   185  
   186  		# Docs review
   187  		[Rules.review.states.3-docs-review]
   188  
   189  			# Maintainers are expected to review the documentation in its bigger context,
   190  			# ensuring consistency, completeness, validity, and breadth of coverage across
   191  			# all extent and new documentation.
   192  			#
   193  			# They should ask for any editorial change that makes the documentation more
   194  			# consistent and easier to understand.
   195  			#
   196  			# Once documentation is approved (see below), a maintainer should make sure to remove this
   197  			# label and add the next one.
   198  
   199  			close = ""
   200  			2-code-review = "requires more code changes"
   201  			1-design-review = "raises design concerns"
   202  			4-merge = "general case"
   203  			
   204  		# Docs approval
   205  		[Rules.review.docs-approval]
   206  			# Changes and additions to docs must be reviewed and approved (LGTM'd) by a minimum of two docs sub-project maintainers.
   207  			# If the docs change originates with a docs maintainer, only one additional LGTM is required (since we assume a docs maintainer approves of their own PR). 	
   208  
   209  		# Merge
   210  		[Rules.review.states.4-merge]
   211  
   212  			# Maintainers are expected to merge this pull request as soon as possible.
   213  			# They can ask for a rebase, or carry the pull request themselves.
   214  			# These should be the easy PRs to merge.
   215  
   216  			close = "carry PR"
   217  			merge = ""
   218  
   219  	[Rules.DCO]
   220  
   221  	title = "Helping contributors with the DCO"
   222  
   223  	text = """
   224  The [DCO or `Sign your work`](
   225  https://github.com/docker/docker/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#sign-your-work)
   226  requirement is not intended as a roadblock or speed bump.
   227  
   228  Some Docker contributors are not as familiar with `git`, or have used a web based
   229  editor, and thus asking them to `git commit --amend -s` is not the best way forward.
   230  
   231  In this case, maintainers can update the commits based on clause (c) of the DCO. The
   232  most trivial way for a contributor to allow the maintainer to do this, is to add
   233  a DCO signature in a Pull Requests's comment, or a maintainer can simply note that
   234  the change is sufficiently trivial that it does not substantivly change the existing
   235  contribution - i.e., a spelling change.
   236  
   237  When you add someone's DCO, please also add your own to keep a log.
   238  """
   239  
   240  	[Rules.holiday]
   241  
   242  	title = "I'm a maintainer, and I'm going on holiday"
   243  
   244  	text = """
   245  Please let your co-maintainers and other contributors know by raising a pull
   246  request that comments out your `MAINTAINERS` file entry using a `#`.
   247  """
   248  
   249  	[Rules."no direct push"]
   250  
   251  	title = "I'm a maintainer. Should I make pull requests too?"
   252  
   253  	text = """
   254  Yes. Nobody should ever push to master directly. All changes should be
   255  made through a pull request.
   256  """
   257  
   258  	[Rules.meta]
   259  
   260  	title = "How is this process changed?"
   261  
   262  	text = "Just like everything else: by making a pull request :)"
   263  
   264  # Current project organization
   265  [Org]
   266  
   267  	bdfl = "shykes"
   268  
   269  	# The chief architect is responsible for the overall integrity of the technical architecture
   270  	# across all subsystems, and the consistency of APIs and UI.
   271  	# 
   272  	# Changes to UI, public APIs and overall architecture (for example a plugin system) must
   273  	# be approved by the chief architect.
   274  	"Chief Architect" = "shykes"
   275  
   276  	# The Chief Operator is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the project including:
   277  	# - facilitating communications amongst all the contributors;
   278  	# - tracking release schedules;
   279  	# - managing the relationship with downstream distributions and upstream dependencies;
   280  	# - helping new contributors to get involved and become successful contributors and maintainers
   281  	#
   282  	# The role is also responsible for managing and measuring the success of the overall project
   283  	# and ensuring it is governed properly working in concert with the Docker Governance Advisory Board (DGAB).
   284  	"Chief Operator" = "spf13"
   285  
   286  	[Org.Operators]
   287  
   288  	# The operators make sure the trains run on time. They are responsible for overall operations
   289  	# of the project. This includes facilitating communication between all the participants; helping
   290  	# newcomers get involved and become successful contributors and maintainers; tracking the schedule
   291  	# of releases; managing the relationship with downstream distributions and upstream dependencies;
   292  	# define measures of success for the project and measure progress; Devise and implement tools and
   293  	# processes which make contributors and maintainers happier and more efficient.
   294  
   295  
   296  		[Org.Operators.security]
   297  
   298  			people = [
   299  				"erw"
   300  			]
   301  
   302  		[Org.Operators."monthly meetings"]
   303  
   304  			people = [
   305  				"sven",
   306  				"tianon"
   307  			]
   308  
   309  		[Org.Operators.infrastructure]
   310  
   311  			people = [
   312  				"jfrazelle",
   313  				"crosbymichael"
   314  			]
   315  
   316  	# The chief maintainer is responsible for all aspects of quality for the project including
   317  	# code reviews, usability, stability, security, performance, etc. 
   318  	# The most important function of the chief maintainer is to lead by example. On the first
   319  	# day of a new maintainer, the best advice should be "follow the C.M.'s example and you'll
   320  	# be fine".
   321  	"Chief Maintainer" = "crosbymichael"
   322  
   323  	[Org."Core maintainers"]
   324  
   325  	# The Core maintainers are the ghostbusters of the project: when there's a problem others
   326  	# can't solve, they show up and fix it with bizarre devices and weaponry.
   327  	# They have final say on technical implementation and coding style.
   328  	# They are ultimately responsible for quality in all its forms: usability polish,
   329  	# bugfixes, performance, stability, etc. When ownership  can cleanly be passed to
   330  	# a subsystem, they are responsible for doing so and holding the
   331  	# subsystem maintainers accountable. If ownership is unclear, they are the de facto owners.
   332  
   333  	# For each release (including minor releases), a "release captain" is assigned from the
   334  	# pool of core maintainers. Rotation is encouraged across all maintainers, to ensure
   335  	# the release process is clear and up-to-date.
   336  	#
   337  	# It is common for core maintainers to "branch out" to join or start a subsystem.
   338  
   339  
   340  
   341  		people = [
   342  			"unclejack",
   343  			"crosbymichael",
   344  			"erikh",
   345  			"estesp",
   346  			"icecrime",
   347  			"jfrazelle",
   348  			"lk4d4",
   349  			"tibor",
   350  			"vbatts",
   351  			"vieux",
   352  			"vishh"
   353  		]
   354  
   355  
   356  	[Org.Subsystems]
   357  
   358  	# As the project grows, it gets separated into well-defined subsystems. Each subsystem
   359  	# has a dedicated group of maintainers, which are dedicated to that subsytem and responsible
   360  	# for its quality.
   361  	# This "cellular division" is the primary mechanism for scaling maintenance of the project as it grows.
   362  	# 
   363  	# The maintainers of each subsytem are responsible for:
   364  	# 
   365  	# 1. Exposing a clear road map for improving their subsystem.
   366  	# 2. Deliver prompt feedback and decisions on pull requests affecting their subsystem.
   367  	# 3. Be available to anyone with questions, bug reports, criticism etc.
   368  	#   on their component. This includes IRC, GitHub requests and the mailing
   369  	#   list.
   370  	# 4. Make sure their subsystem respects the philosophy, design and
   371  	#   road map of the project.
   372  	#
   373  	# #### How to review patches to your subsystem
   374  	# 
   375  	# Accepting pull requests:
   376  	# 
   377  	#   - If the pull request appears to be ready to merge, give it a `LGTM`, which
   378  	#     stands for "Looks Good To Me".
   379  	#   - If the pull request has some small problems that need to be changed, make
   380  	#     a comment adressing the issues.
   381  	#   - If the changes needed to a PR are small, you can add a "LGTM once the
   382  	#     following comments are adressed..." this will reduce needless back and
   383  	#     forth.
   384  	#   - If the PR only needs a few changes before being merged, any MAINTAINER can
   385  	#     make a replacement PR that incorporates the existing commits and fixes the
   386  	#     problems before a fast track merge.
   387  	# 
   388  	# Closing pull requests:
   389  	# 
   390  	#   - If a PR appears to be abandoned, after having attempted to contact the
   391  	#     original contributor, then a replacement PR may be made.  Once the
   392  	#     replacement PR is made, any contributor may close the original one.
   393  	#   - If you are not sure if the pull request implements a good feature or you
   394  	#     do not understand the purpose of the PR, ask the contributor to provide
   395  	#     more documentation.  If the contributor is not able to adequately explain
   396  	#     the purpose of the PR, the PR may be closed by any MAINTAINER.
   397  	#   - If a MAINTAINER feels that the pull request is sufficiently architecturally
   398  	#     flawed, or if the pull request needs significantly more design discussion
   399  	#     before being considered, the MAINTAINER should close the pull request with
   400  	#     a short explanation of what discussion still needs to be had.  It is
   401  	#     important not to leave such pull requests open, as this will waste both the
   402  	#     MAINTAINER's time and the contributor's time.  It is not good to string a
   403  	#     contributor on for weeks or months, having them make many changes to a PR
   404  	#     that will eventually be rejected.
   405  
   406  		[Org.Subsystems.Documentation]
   407  
   408  			people = [
   409  				"fredlf",
   410  				"james",
   411  				"sven",
   412  				"spf13",
   413  				"mary"
   414  			]
   415  
   416  		[Org.Subsystems.libcontainer]
   417  
   418  			people = [
   419  				"crosbymichael",
   420  				"vmarmol",
   421  				"mpatel",
   422  				"jnagal",
   423  				"lk4d4"
   424  			]
   425  
   426  		[Org.Subsystems.registry]
   427  
   428  			people = [
   429  				"dmp42",
   430  				"vbatts",
   431  				"joffrey",
   432  				"samalba",
   433  				"sday",
   434  				"jlhawn",
   435  				"dmcg"
   436  			]
   437  
   438  		[Org.Subsystems."build tools"]
   439  
   440  			people = [
   441  				"shykes",
   442  				"tianon"
   443  			]
   444  
   445  		[Org.Subsystem."remote api"]
   446  
   447  			people = [
   448  				"vieux"
   449  			]
   450  
   451  		[Org.Subsystem.swarm]
   452  
   453  			people = [
   454  				"aluzzardi",
   455  				"vieux"
   456  			]
   457  
   458  		[Org.Subsystem.machine]
   459  
   460  			people = [
   461  				"bfirsh",
   462  				"ehazlett"
   463  			]
   464  
   465  		[Org.Subsystem.compose]
   466  
   467  			people = [
   468  				"aanand"
   469  			]
   470  
   471  		[Org.Subsystem.builder]
   472  
   473  			people = [
   474  				"erikh",
   475  				"tibor",
   476  				"duglin"
   477  			]
   478  
   479  
   480  [people]
   481  
   482  # A reference list of all people associated with the project.
   483  # All other sections should refer to people by their canonical key
   484  # in the people section.
   485  
   486  	# ADD YOURSELF HERE IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
   487  
   488  	[people.aanand]
   489  	Name = "Aanand Prasad"
   490  	Email = "aanand@docker.com"
   491  	GitHub = "aanand"
   492  
   493  	[people.aluzzardi]
   494  	Name = "Andrea Luzzardi"
   495  	Email = "aluzzardi@docker.com"
   496  	GitHub = "aluzzardi"
   497  
   498  	[people.bfirsh]
   499  	Name = "Ben Firshman"
   500  	Email = "ben@firshman.co.uk"
   501  	GitHub = "bfirsh"
   502  
   503  	[people.crosbymichael]
   504  	Name = "Michael Crosby"
   505  	Email = "crosbymichael@gmail.com"
   506  	GitHub = "crosbymichael"
   507  
   508  	[people.duglin]
   509  	Name = "Doug Davis"
   510  	Email = "dug@us.ibm.com"
   511  	GitHub = "duglin"
   512  
   513  	[people.dmcg]
   514  	Name = "Derek McGowan"
   515  	Email = "derek@docker.com"
   516  	Github = "dmcgowan"
   517  
   518  	[people.dmp42]
   519  	Name = "Olivier Gambier"
   520  	Email = "olivier@docker.com"
   521  	Github = "dmp42"
   522  
   523  	[people.ehazlett]
   524  	Name = "Evan Hazlett"
   525  	Email = "ejhazlett@gmail.com"
   526  	GitHub = "ehazlett"
   527  
   528  	[people.erikh]
   529  	Name = "Erik Hollensbe"
   530  	Email = "erik@docker.com"
   531  	GitHub = "erikh"
   532  
   533  	[people.erw]
   534  	Name = "Eric Windisch"
   535  	Email = "eric@windisch.us"
   536  	GitHub = "ewindisch"
   537  
   538  	[people.estesp]
   539  	Name = "Phil Estes"
   540  	Email = "estesp@linux.vnet.ibm.com"
   541  	GitHub = "estesp"
   542  
   543  	[people.fredlf]
   544  	Name = "Fred Lifton"
   545  	Email = "fred.lifton@docker.com"
   546  	GitHub = "fredlf"
   547  
   548  	[people.icecrime]
   549  	Name = "Arnaud Porterie"
   550  	Email = "arnaud@docker.com"
   551  	GitHub = "icecrime"
   552  
   553  	[people.jfrazelle]
   554  	Name = "Jessie Frazelle"
   555  	Email = "jess@docker.com"
   556  	GitHub = "jfrazelle"
   557  
   558  	[people.jlhawn]
   559  	Name = "Josh Hawn"
   560  	Email = "josh.hawn@docker.com"
   561  	Github = "jlhawn"
   562  
   563  	[people.joffrey]
   564  	Name = "Joffrey Fuhrer"
   565  	Email = "joffrey@docker.com"
   566  	Github = "shin-"
   567  
   568  	[people.lk4d4]
   569  	Name = "Alexander Morozov"
   570  	Email = "lk4d4@docker.com"
   571  	GitHub = "lk4d4"
   572  
   573  	[people.mary]
   574  	Name = "Mary Anthony"
   575  	Email = "mary.anthony@docker.com"
   576  	GitHub = "moxiegirl"
   577  
   578  	[people.sday]
   579  	Name = "Stephen Day"
   580  	Email = "stephen.day@docker.com"
   581  	Github = "stevvooe"
   582  
   583  	[people.shykes]
   584  	Name = "Solomon Hykes"
   585  	Email = "solomon@docker.com"
   586  	GitHub = "shykes"
   587      
   588  	[people.spf13]
   589  	Name = "Steve Francia"
   590  	Email = "steve.francia@gmail.com"
   591  	GitHub = "spf13"
   592  	
   593  	[people.sven]
   594  	Name = "Sven Dowideit"
   595  	Email = "SvenDowideit@home.org.au"
   596  	GitHub = "SvenDowideit"
   597  
   598  	[people.tianon]
   599  	Name = "Tianon Gravi"
   600  	Email = "admwiggin@gmail.com"
   601  	GitHub = "tianon"
   602  
   603  	[people.tibor]
   604  	Name = "Tibor Vass"
   605  	Email = "tibor@docker.com"
   606  	GitHub = "tiborvass"
   607  
   608  	[people.vbatts]
   609  	Name = "Vincent Batts"
   610  	Email = "vbatts@redhat.com"
   611  	GitHub = "vbatts"
   612  
   613  	[people.vieux]
   614  	Name = "Victor Vieux"
   615  	Email = "vieux@docker.com"
   616  	GitHub = "vieux"
   617  
   618  	[people.vmarmol]
   619  	Name = "Victor Marmol"
   620  	Email = "vmarmol@google.com"
   621  	GitHub = "vmarmol"
   622  
   623  	[people.jnagal]
   624  	Name = "Rohit Jnagal"
   625  	Email = "jnagal@google.com"
   626  	GitHub = "rjnagal"
   627  
   628  	[people.mpatel]
   629  	Name = "Mrunal Patel"
   630  	Email = "mpatel@redhat.com"
   631  	GitHub = "mrunalp"
   632  
   633  	[people.unclejack]
   634  	Name = "Cristian Staretu"
   635  	Email = "cristian.staretu@gmail.com"
   636  	GitHub = "unclejack"
   637  
   638  	[people.vishh]
   639  	Name = "Vishnu Kannan"
   640  	Email = "vishnuk@google.com"
   641  	GitHub = "vishh"