On Fri, 2005-07-29 at 08:02 -0400, Michael Stover wrote:
> The Jakarta PMC is not going to allow a JMeter release unless it can be
> backed by 3 Jakarta PMC members. 

<snip>

this isn't just a jakarta thing but apache wide. 

it is not possible to create an official ASF release without the backing
of three pmc members. for legal reasons, only votes by pmc members can
be binding. (each pmc is a committee and can act on behalf of the ASF:
individual committers cannot.) i know that this isn't how many projects
operated in the past but this change is inevitable. 

the major advantage that this structure gives is that release managers
gain some measure of legal protection (they are acting on behalf of the
ASF) and could be defended by the ASF in any action against them. 

jmeter isn't the only jakarta sub-project which is going to have to deal
with this issue in the next few months but it just happens to have
bubbled to the top first...

<snip>

> My personal preference is to make JMeter a top-level project.  Jakarta
> wants us out anyway, and it seems inevitable in the long run.  Might as
> well get it over with is my feeling.

i don't think anyone wants to force jmeter to leave (i'm sorry if i gave
that impression). 

the only way to avoid management is for active committers to be pmc
members. that way, normal votes on the jmeter list would be binding
legally and there's no need for any extra layers of management. life
proceeds pretty much as it has done in the past. everyone's happy :)

the easiest way to achieve this would be for the active jmeter
committers to accept nominations to the jakarta pmc. if the active
jmeter committers don't feel comfortable with that then they could move
to their own TLP. alternatively, jmeter could ask to join the tomcat
TLP. there is no escaping the need for active committers to sign up as
members of some pmc, though.

- robert

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