[openstack-tc] [openstack-dev] Proposal to recognize indirect contributions to our code base
Doug Hellmann
doug.hellmann at dreamhost.com
Tue Nov 12 16:34:50 UTC 2013
On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 6:56 PM, Sean Dague <sean at dague.net> wrote:
> On 11/11/2013 06:47 PM, John Griffith wrote:
> > On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 10:44 AM, Daniel P. Berrange
> <snip>
> >> IMHO, lets call this what it is: "marketing".
> >>
> >> I'm fine with the idea of a company wanting to have recognition for work
> >> that they fund. They can achieve this by putting out a press release or
> >> writing a blog post saying that they "funded awesome feature XYZ to
> bring
> >> benefits ABC to the project" on their own websites, or any number of
> other
> >> marketing approaches. Most / many companies and individuals contributing
> >> to OpenStack in fact already do this very frequently which is fine /
> great.
> >>
> >> I don't think we need to, nor should we, add anything to our code
> commits,
> >> review / development workflow / toolchain to support such marketing
> pitches.
> >> The identities recorded in git commits / gerrit reviewes / blueprints
> etc
> >> should exclusively focus on technical authorship, not sponsorship. Leave
> >> the marketing pitches for elsewhere.
> >
> > +1000
>
> Agreed. When a bunch of us were at LinuxCon a number of us attended a
> session that described another project with lots of sub projects. The
> language they used was:
>
> Project A, being done by Vendor A
> Project B, being done by Vendor C
> Project C, being done by Vendor A
> ...
>
> Mark McClain and I were walking out after words and remarked "that was
> weird, in OpenStack we'd talk about people, not vendors".
>
> I really don't want to see us go away from that, I see that as a core
> strength of our community. If entities are very concerned that their
> name comes with their contribution, get the contributor to land patches
> with an email address from the org in question. Anything beyond that
> seems to be abusing the commit history, and it's going to be a slippery
> slope.
>
> -Sean
>
I noticed the same thing, and was glad that we had an establish precedent
(if not explicit rule) that new OpenStack projects needed to have
contributors from more than one company to be accepted for incubation.
Doug
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