On Thu, 27 Mar 2008, Keaton Adams wrote:

I have been working with PG / Open Source projects for only a year and need some direction on how to propose having this development effort undertaken by the PG development group.

Don't everybody answer at once.

The "PostgreSQL Global Development Group" (or PGDG for short) is a legal entity with group of organizers. They tell you outright at http://www.postgresql.org/developer/ : "We don't hire programmers, we reach across the Internet, drawing the best database developers in the world to PostgreSQL". While it's great to donate money to them via http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate that fund is earmarked for "advocacy materials, conference expenses, legal expenses, and travel costs"; note the lack of the work "development" on that list.

This is probably better answered by the PostgreSQL developer team

The people actually developing new features in PostgreSQL aren't all on a single "team" as you're used to in traditional software companies, they're a community: lots of people with similar goals who happen to be working on the same project, each with their own agenda and source(s) of funding and motivation. There is a "core team" of 7 people: http://www.postgresql.org/community/contributors/ but since they're all too busy to write your feature their existence doesn't really help you.

Bruce addresses part of what you're asking about at http://momjian.us/main/writings/pgsql/company_contributions/ which has some more good comments on the whole community aspect to things, I'd recommend that since you say you're still new to how open source projects work. But that article is more aimed at companies offering bodies to work on the code rather than ones with dollars to spend.

The exact mechanics of how to effectively sponsor work on a feature you'd like to have is somewhat off-topic for this list. Discussion here is aimed at hashing out technical issues, not business ones. And it's kind of a touchy subject to bring up as well, since it's hard to make recommendations without looking unprofessional--which partly explains the dead silence you've gotten as a response here so far.

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* Greg Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gregsmith.com Baltimore, MD

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