As a follow-up to the previous discussion regarding adopting project bylaws, 
I’d like to start an official VOTE to formally adopt the bylaws as listed below.

Please vote on adopting the proposed bylaws.

[+1] Adopt the bylaws as listed
[+0] No opinion
[-1] Do not adopt the bylaws because…

This vote will be 2/3 Majority as described below, and open for 6 days.

-Taylor

-----------------------------

# Apache Storm Project Bylaws


## Roles and Responsibilities

Apache projects define a set of roles with associated rights and 
responsibilities. These roles govern what tasks an individual may perform 
within the project. The roles are defined in the following sections:

### Users:

The most important participants in the project are people who use our software. 
The majority of our developers start out as users and guide their development 
efforts from the user's perspective.

Users contribute to the Apache projects by providing feedback to developers in 
the form of bug reports and feature suggestions. As well, users participate in 
the Apache community by helping other users on mailing lists and user support 
forums.

### Contributors:

Contributors are all of the volunteers who are contributing time, code, 
documentation, or resources to the Storm Project. A contributor that makes 
sustained, welcome contributions to the project may be invited to become a 
Committer, though the exact timing of such invitations depends on many factors.

### Committers:

The project's Committers are responsible for the project's technical 
management. Committers have access to all project source repositories. 
Committers may cast binding votes on any technical discussion regarding storm.

Committer access is by invitation only and must be approved by lazy consensus 
of the active PMC members. A Committer is considered emeritus by their own 
declaration or by not contributing in any form to the project for over six 
months. An emeritus Committer may request reinstatement of commit access from 
the PMC. Such reinstatement is subject to lazy consensus approval of active PMC 
members.

All Apache Committers are required to have a signed Contributor License 
Agreement (CLA) on file with the Apache Software Foundation. There is a 
[Committers' FAQ](https://www.apache.org/dev/committers.html) which provides 
more details on the requirements for Committers.

A Committer who makes a sustained contribution to the project may be invited to 
become a member of the PMC. The form of contribution is not limited to code. It 
can also include code review, helping out users on the mailing lists, 
documentation, testing, etc.

### Project Management Committee(PMC):

The PMC is responsible to the board and the ASF for the management and 
oversight of the Apache Storm codebase. The responsibilities of the PMC include:

 * Deciding what is distributed as products of the Apache Storm project. In 
particular all releases must be approved by the PMC.
 * Maintaining the project's shared resources, including the codebase 
repository, mailing lists, websites.
 * Speaking on behalf of the project.
 * Resolving license disputes regarding products of the project.
 * Nominating new PMC members and Committers.
 * Maintaining these bylaws and other guidelines of the project.

Membership of the PMC is by invitation only and must be approved by a consensus 
approval of active PMC members. A PMC member is considered "emeritus" by their 
own declaration or by not contributing in any form to the project for over six 
months. An emeritus member may request reinstatement to the PMC. Such 
reinstatement is subject to consensus approval of the active PMC members.

The chair of the PMC is appointed by the ASF board. The chair is an office 
holder of the Apache Software Foundation (Vice President, Apache Storm) and has 
primary responsibility to the board for the management of the projects within 
the scope of the Storm PMC. The chair reports to the board quarterly on 
developments within the Storm project.

The chair of the PMC is rotated annually. When the chair is rotated or if the 
current chair of the PMC resigns, the PMC votes to recommend a new chair using 
Single Transferable Vote (STV) voting. See 
http://wiki.apache.org/general/BoardVoting for specifics. The decision must be 
ratified by the Apache board.

## Voting

Decisions regarding the project are made by votes on the primary project 
development mailing list ([email protected]). Where necessary, PMC voting 
may take place on the private Storm PMC mailing list. Votes are clearly 
indicated by subject line starting with [VOTE]. Votes may contain multiple 
items for approval and these should be clearly separated. Voting is carried out 
by replying to the vote mail. Voting may take four flavors:
        
| Vote | Meaning |
|------|---------|
| +1 | 'Yes,' 'Agree,' or 'the action should be performed.' |
| +0 | Neutral about the proposed action. |
| -0 | Mildly negative, but not enough so to want to block it. |
| -1 |This is a negative vote. On issues where consensus is required, this vote 
counts as a veto. All vetoes must contain an explanation of why the veto is 
appropriate. Vetoes with no explanation are void. It may also be appropriate 
for a -1 vote to include an alternative course of action. |

All participants in the Storm project are encouraged to show their agreement 
with or against a particular action by voting. For technical decisions, only 
the votes of active Committers are binding. Non-binding votes are still useful 
for those with binding votes to understand the perception of an action in the 
wider Storm community. For PMC decisions, only the votes of active PMC members 
are binding.

Voting can also be applied to changes already made to the Storm codebase. These 
typically take the form of a veto (-1) in reply to the commit message sent when 
the commit is made. Note that this should be a rare occurrence. All efforts 
should be made to discuss issues when they are still patches before the code is 
committed.

Only active (i.e. non-emeritus) Committers and PMC members have binding votes.

## Approvals

These are the types of approvals that can be sought. Different actions require 
different types of approvals

| Approval Type | Criteria |
|---------------|----------|
| Consensus Approval | Consensus approval requires 3 binding +1 votes and no 
binding vetoes. |
| Majority Approval | Majority approval requires at least 3 binding +1 votes 
and more +1 votes than -1 votes. |
| Lazy Consensus | Lazy consensus requires no -1 votes ('silence gives 
assent'). |
| 2/3 Majority | 2/3 majority votes requires at least 3 votes and twice as many 
+1 votes as -1 votes. |

### Vetoes

A valid, binding veto cannot be overruled. If a veto is cast, it must be 
accompanied by a valid reason explaining the reasons for the veto. The validity 
of a veto, if challenged, can be confirmed by anyone who has a binding vote. 
This does not necessarily signify agreement with the veto - merely that the 
veto is valid.

If you disagree with a valid veto, you must lobby the person casting the veto 
to withdraw their veto. If a veto is not withdrawn, any action that has been 
vetoed must be reversed in a timely manner.

## Actions

This section describes the various actions which are undertaken within the 
project, the corresponding approval required for that action and those who have 
binding votes over the action.

| Actions | Description | Approval | Binding Votes | Minimum Length | Mailing 
List |
|---------|-------------|----------|---------------|----------------|--------------|
| Code Change | A change made to a source code of the project and committed by 
a Committer. | A minimum of one +1 from a Committer other than the one who 
authored the patch, and no -1s. The code can be committed after the first +1. 
If a -1 is received to the patch within 7 days after the patch was posted, it 
may be reverted immediately if it was already merged. | Active Committers | 1 
day from initial patch (**Note:** Committers should consider allowing more time 
for review based on the complexity and/or impact of the patch in 
question.)|JIRA or Github pull ( with notification sent to 
[email protected]) |
| Non-Code Change | A change made to a repository of the project and committed 
by a Committer. This includes documentation, website content, etc., but not 
source code, unless only comments are being modified. | Lazy Consensus | Active 
Committers | At the discression of the Committer |JIRA or Github pull (with 
notification sent to [email protected]) |
| Product Release | A vote is required to accept a proposed release as an 
official release of the project. Any Committer may call for a release vote at 
any point in time. | Majority Approval | Active PMC members | 3 days | 
[email protected] |
| Adoption of New Codebase | When the codebase for an existing, released 
product is to be replaced with an alternative codebase. If such a vote fails to 
gain approval, the existing code base will continue. This also covers the 
creation of new sub-projects and submodules within the project as well as 
merging of feature branches. | 2/3 Majority | Active PMC members | 6 days | 
[email protected] |
| New Committer | When a new Committer is proposed for the project. | Consensus 
Approval | Active PMC members | 3 days | [email protected] |
| New PMC Member | When a member is proposed for the PMC. | Consensus Approval 
| Active PMC members | 3 days | [email protected] |
| Emeritus PMC Member re-instatement | When an emeritus PMC member requests to 
be re-instated as an active PMC member. | Consensus Approval | Active PMC 
members | 6 days | [email protected] |
| Emeritus Committer re-instatement | When an emeritus Committer requests to be 
re-instated as an active Committer. | Consensus Approval | Active PMC members | 
6 days | [email protected] |
| Committer Removal | When removal of commit privileges is sought. Note: Such 
actions will also be referred to the ASF board by the PMC chair. | 2/3 Majority 
| Active PMC members (excluding the Committer in question if a member of the 
PMC). | 6 Days | [email protected] |
| PMC Member Removal | When removal of a PMC member is sought. Note: Such 
actions will also be referred to the ASF board by the PMC chair. | 2/3 Majority 
| Active PMC members (excluding the member in question). | 6 Days | 
[email protected] |
| Modifying Bylaws | Modifying this document. | 2/3 Majority | Active PMC 
members | 6 Days | [email protected] |

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail

Reply via email to