>> this announcement is available online at http://s.apache.org/M0R 


FOUNDATION OPERATIONS SUMMARY 
Second Quarter, Fiscal Year 2016 (August-October 2015) 

"From the Apache HTTP Server to Apache Spark, via Apache Hadoop, Apache 
Geronimo and Apache CloudStack and almost 150 other projects, the Apache 
Software Foundation has set the standard for modern application and 
infrastructure software as well as the open source collaborative processes 
through which it is developed." --Matt Aslett, research director, 451 Research 


> President's Statement: Another quarter of growth for the ASF in almost every 
> respect. We welcomed a number of new sponsors, organizations and individuals 
> we remain deeply grateful to. Without these "no strings attached" 
> sponsorships we would not be able to provide the vendor neutral collaboration 
> space we create for our communities. Talking of money and sponsorship, did 
> you know that from May to October this year we spent a few cents over $2,035 
> per project, at that spend rate we will spend a shade over $4,000 per project 
> for the full year. Where else can you find software that changes the world 
> for such a low overhead cost? 

We manage to achieve this through our unique governance approach which rewards 
those who invest time and resources into our projects. For Apache cash (and the 
things cash can buy) is not what builds viable open source communities. At the 
ASF the creation and management of a vendor neutral space is the key. Over the 
last 20+ years our model has proven successful time and time again. That vendor 
neutral space enables communities of collaborating software developers to 
flourish, even where those individual developers are gainfully employed by 
competing organizations. 

It is our sponsors who give us the freedom to create this space, it is our 
volunteers who create the communities and code within that space. We salute 
them all. 

Talking of communities, during the last quarter, we gradated 5 incubator 
communities to Top Level status: 

- Apache Ignite - High-performance, integrated and distributed in-memory 
platform for computing and transacting on large-scale data sets in real-time 
- Apache Lens – A unified analytics platform 
- Apache Serf - high performance C-based HTTP client library built upon the 
Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library 
- Apache Usergrid - The BaaS Framework you run 
- Apache Yetus - A collection of libraries and tools that enable contribution 
and release processes for software projects. 


We also had the honor of welcoming 5 new communities into our Incubator: 

- Apex - an enterprise grade native YARN big data-in-motion platform that 
unifies stream processing as well as batch processing 
- HAWQ – an advanced enterprise SQL on Hadoop analytic engine built around a 
robust and high-performance massively-parallel processing (MPP) SQL framework 
- MADLib - Big Data Machine Learning in SQL for Data Scientists 
- Rya – a cloud-based RDF triple store that supports SPARQL queries 
- Unomi - reference implementation of the OASIS Context Server specification 


This brings the total of communities in the ASF to 171 Top Level Project 
communities and 44 Incubating communities. For more information on our projects 
see the Apache Projects Directory (https://projects.apache.org/) 

We've also had a busy quarter with respect to events. ApacheCon Europe was 
joined by the inaugural Apache Big Data Europe in Budapest (thanks to the Linux 
Foundation who produce these events for us) while ApacheCon Roadshow returned 
to China for the first time since 2011 (thanks to KAIYUANSHE for producing this 
one). There have been far too many meetups around the world for us to list 
here, but we have a page showing the next two weeks worth of Apache related 
meetups (http://www.apache.org/events/meetups.html; updated weekly). Our Travel 
Assistance Committee helped a good number of people attend the event, an 
initiative that helps to ensure those not normally able to afford travel and 
conference tickets to engage directly with our communities – again we must 
thank our sponsors for their support of this work. 

Finally, the Call For Papers for both Apache BigData NA 
(http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apache-big-data-north-america/program/cfp)
 and ApacheCon Core NA 
(http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apachecon-north-america/program/cfp) 
is now open. Please send us your proposals. 

> Community and Events: ApacheCon EU took place in Budapest in October. This 
> was the first time we split the event into two components, one with a Big 
> Data focus, the other with an Apache Community focus. Combined attendance was 
> over 600 a number kept artificially low by the political situation in the 
> region at this time. Nevertheless, the events were a great success and we are 
> repeated the dual conference approach for ApacheCon North America May 2016 
> (see http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apache-big-data-north-america 
> and http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apachecon-core-north-america for 
> CFP and registration details) 

For the first time Apache will have official representation at FOSDEM in 
Belgium, Jan 2016. We look forward to meeting you there. 

Travel Assistance for our conferences is another area that received focus this 
quarter. Since we partnered with the Linux Foundation to produce the Apache Con 
events we have been able to work with the Linux Foundation to extend support to 
more people by combining the Linux Foundations and our own assistance programs. 
We've worked to simplify the process of applying for support and look forward 
to supporting more people in their journey to ApacheCon in 2016 and onwards. 

> Committers: One of the key roles of the ASF Secretary's office is to ensure 
> that new committers have their paperwork processed quickly so that they can 
> get on with writing great code within our projects. During the initial stages 
> of contribution there is no need for any paperwork, however, once an 
> individual is granted write access to our repositories they must submit an 
> Individual Contributor License Agreement. This is a good measure of the 
> growth of our foundation in terms of the number of active committers we have. 

In this quarter the Secretary processed 237 ICLAs. That's 237 more people with 
direct write access to one or more of our projects. These individuals join the 
thousands of existing committers who accept and process contributions from even 
more thousands of contributing individuals. The activity of these committers 
and the community of contributors they serve can be seen at 
http://status.apache.org/#commits 

> Brand Management: The brand management team continues to work on educational 
> materials to help promote our many Apache project brands, as well as showing 
> our volunteer communities effective ways to police third party use of Apache 
> project brands.  We now have a detailed list of trademark and branding 
> resources available for our communities as well as vendors who work with 
> Apache projects: http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/resources 

Along with presenting on trademark basics at ApacheCon conferences, Shane 
Curcuru, our VP of Brand Management, was invited to speak on a panel discussion 
about community owned trademarks at Columbia Law School, at SFLC's annual 
conference.  Improving awareness of the importance of trademarks to our 
communities as well as to the Foundation is critical in ensuring long-lived and 
widely-contributed to software projects. 

We are also continuing to seek US trademark registrations for projects that ask 
for one, as well as improving our ability to register selected Apache project 
brands in other countries with our limited budget. 

> Infrastructure: During this quarter, the main focus (outside of keeping our 
> services running) has been on improving logging and reporting from our 
> systems. In August we reported that we had a "decent baseline of metrics". 
> These monitoring tools are now driving an increased awareness of the 
> performance of our core services, allowing us to focus on areas of pain for 
> our projects. Having said that, as can be seen from the uptime graph below, 
> our service stability has been increasing for some time, and continue to do 
> so. We are very proud of ensuring our projects have a reliable infrastructure 
> on which to collaborate. 

[please refer to image at 
https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/mediaresource/09822d33-73a6-44bd-b764-952ae9f7f5f2
 ] 


For some time now we have been focusing on automating the configuration of our 
machine in order to allow us to more easily recover from hardware failures and 
to perform updates. During this quarter we saw what was probably the best 
example of how our monitoring and automation work is paying off. In August, we 
lost an LDAP server. This this caused a number of services to cease being 
useful. Our alerting detected the problem in a timely manner, our infra team 
were alerted and, thanks to our resilient architecture and configuration 
management, we were able to provision a new host and have it working again 
within 12 minutes. A 12 minute Mean-Time-to-Recovery is a stunning statistic 
that we are very proud to report. 

We experienced a DDoS attack on our download mirror redirection CGI script – a 
script that redirects users who click a download link to their geographically 
nearest mirror. This took around 12 hours to fully resolve. The resolution 
included a complete rewrite of the redirection script, which has resulted in a 
much more efficient process. 

In terms of service improvement we have been working on revamping our Mail 
archive infrastructure. This will provide both a more efficient processing of 
the huge amounts of mail traffic our projects generate as well as presenting a 
more useful user interface for the archives. At this time we are focusing on 
proof of concept work and expect to be moving to production soon. 

A complete view of the status of our infrastructure, with uptime graphs, can 
always be viewed at http://status.apache.org/ 

> Financial Statement: 


[please refer to the image at 
https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/mediaresource/91325e5c-3e14-497c-aefb-56ddf19051ff
 ] 

> Fundraising: The ASF thanks its sponsors for their continued support. Hadrian 
> Zbarcea and Jim Jagielski, our VPs of Fundraising, continued our outreach 
> activities and maintain open communication channels with our sponsors. This 
> quarter we added one new silver sponsor: Private Internet Access. We also 
> have an open dialog with a few other organization who expressed interest in 
> sponsoring the ASF. 

Currently we are enjoying the support of the following sponsors: 

- 8 Platinum Sponsors: Citrix, Cloudera, Facebook, Google, Matt Mullenweg, 
Microsoft, Pivotal, and Yahoo 
- 6 Gold Sponsors: Bloomberg, Comcast, Hewlett Packard,  Hortonworks, IBM, and 
PhoenixNAP 
- 10 Silver Sponsors: Budget Direct, Cerner, Huawei, InMotion Hosting, iSIGMA, 
Private Internet Access, Produban, Red Hat Software, Serenata Flowers, and 
WANDisco 
- 7 Bronze Sponsors: Accor, Basis Technology, Bluehost, Cloudsoft Corporation, 
Samsung, Talend, and Twitter 
- 11 Infrastructure Sponsors: OSU Open Source Labs, No-IP, Symantec, Rackspace, 
Ping My Box, PagerDuty, Bintray, SURFnet, Sonatype, Freie Universitat Berlin, 
and HotWax Systems 


Fundraising is a very important activity for the ASF. The ASF experiences 
steady growth. Every month there are new promising projects entering the Apache 
Incubator as well as maturing ones that exit the Incubator to become Top-Level 
Projects. We rely on our sponsors' generous help for smooth operation, 
especially for infrastructure which is our main cost center. 

We want to use this opportunity to express again our gratitude to our sponsors 
for being part of our journey. 

# # # 


Report prepared by Sally Khudairi, Vice President Marketing & Publicity, with 
contributions by ASF President Ross Gardler; Shane Curcuru, Vice President 
Brand Management; Chris Mattmann, ASF Treasurer, and Tom Pappas, Vice 
President, Finance & Accounting at Virtual, Inc.; and Hadrian Zbarcea, co-Vice 
President of Fundraising.
For more information, subscribe to the [email protected] mailing list and 
visit http://www.apache.org/, the ASF Blog at http://blogs.apache.org/, and the 
@TheASF feed on Twitter. 
(c) The Apache Software Foundation 2015 

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