We intend our governance model to be as flexible as possible. Our primary goal is to enable a vibrant development community for the Open Enclave SDK. If you feel we should make any changes to our guidelines, please start a discussion with us.
Our model is based on the liberal contribution policy. See below for more info.
In order to maintain a pleasant and welcoming environment, we want to reiterate that it is imperative that all community members adhere to our Code of Conduct. Anyone failing to follow the Code of Conduct will be removed from the community by the Community Governance Committee. If you are made to feel uncomfortable, or have any concerns about behavior within the community, we encourage you to reach out to members of the Community Governance Committee.
To this end, we want to be open and upfront about all changes, with the majority of discussions happening in public (on our GitHub repository). Understanding that many discussions may still happen in person, the outcome of those talks should always be reiterated on the relevant GitHub issues and PRs such that the whole community has a chance to participate in the discussion.
Please understand that we may not be able to respond to every issue as soon as we would like, but we intend to reply within one week. If you haven't heard anything by then, please feel free to remind us with a ping on the thread.
Remember that security issues should be reported through a separate channel, and will receive a response within 24 hours. See Reporting Security Issues.
A "committer" is anyone with direct write access to the Open Enclave repository on GitHub, as granted by the Committee. All Committee members are committers, but not all committers are Committee members. Finally, "contributor" is anyone else making contributions to the project, including: creating or commenting on issues, opening or reviewing pull requests, or other useful contributions such as providing support in forums or chats.
See the Community Governance Committee document for more information on the Community Governance Committee, our process for adding new committers and Committee members, as well the areas of expertise for each of the committers.
Project committers will merge changes that improve the project significantly and broadly and that align with the Open Enclave roadmap. Contributions must also satisfy the other published guidelines. Committers may revert changes if they are found to be breaking.
We make most decisions through a consensus seeking process, rather than a formal voting process. For example, committers can merge contributions that were reviewed without objections. If there are objections that cannot be resolved, an issue can be escalated to the Community Governance Committee to make a decision, which handles issues as discussed in the Community Governance Committee document.
See the Community Governance Committee document for the list of project committers, and how to become one.
We want to ensure that our releases go through a process of community feedback. That means that before any release is finalized, a feedback solicitation period will happen. The release manager will open a GitHub issue announcing a Release Candidate (RC), with currently built and tested packages attached, and the suggested release notes in the description. The title should be "Release Candidate 1 for v0.4.0", with the candidate number and version updated as appropriate.
We are starting with a waiting period of about one week (in addition to the week between the initial announcement / version bump and the release candidate), but this time frame of two weeks is flexible to the community's and individual release's needs. During this time, the community is encouraged to provide feedback and test out the candidate packages.
- If something is missing in the release, open an issue where you mention the release manager and reference the RC issue. If it is a blocker, reply to the RC issue that is it not ready to be released.
- If something breaks, do the same!
- If everything works as intended, please provide that feedback as well.
- If you simply need more time to test, ask on the RC issue to extend the waiting period.
It is likely that a release goes through multiple RCs. When an RC is not ready for release, the release manager will work with the community to incorporate the necessary changes on the release branch, craft a new RC, and when it is ready, close the current RC issue and open a new one to begin the process again.
We do not intend to finalize a release until the majority of the community agrees it is ready. Once a consensus is reached, that is, all major grievances have been discussed and resolved, the release is considered approved, and the release manager will close the issue and move forward with the releasing process. Note that "resolved" does not necessarily mean fixed, but means the grievance has been discussed, and a fix or compromise was agreed upon.
We do not currently intend to service releases before v1.0.0
. That is, if a
major bug is found, we will include the fix in the next release rather than
attempt to backport. As this is pre-release software, our expectation is that
users are happy to move forward with us as we develop the SDK. As we approach a
stable release, we would like the community to help us decide how to provide
release servicing.