Date   

Re: Final RFC: CNCF Sandbox

Chris Aniszczyk
 

I added a comment to this nature, the final version of the sandbox guidelines are here:

I will call a formal vote tomorrow barring any major issues.

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 9:05 AM, alexis richardson <alexis@...> wrote:
Chris

I think the right way to reflect our governance values is in the
Graduation criteria and Incubation criteria.  Therefore the Sandbox
doc could add a statement of the form "The CNCF will help projects
adopt good principles of governance in preparation for future
Incubation, if the project leads so desire".

alexis


On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 5:00 PM, Chris Aniszczyk
<caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> Thanks for your feedback here Stephen, a big tenant of CNCF has always been
> that projects are self governing and can bring their own governance as long
> as it's transparent + fair (we call this minimum viable governance):
> https://github.com/cncf/toc/blob/master/PRINCIPLES.md#projects-are-self-governing
>
> Over time (especially these days), I find that successful projects evolve
> towards more open governance (we've even had this happen in CNCF with
> containerd moving from bdfl to committee model) due to community/adopter
> pressure.
>
> I'll look at seeing how I can codify your point in the sandbox proposal that
> open governance is important and the earlier the better. I'm looking to
> finalize the proposal the next day or so before calling for a vote.
>
> Thanks!
>
> On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 5:48 AM, Stephen Watt <swatt@...> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks Chris. Firstly, I think the way the sandbox doc is articulated in
>> the doc is great. However, I imagine sandbox projects should be aware of the
>> TLP graduation criteria and trying to steer their ship towards those goals,
>> and as such, it prompted a broader meta question that I thought might be
>> better suited to the TOC list, rather than a comment on the doc.
>>
>> When I look at the graduation criteria from Sandbox -> Incubation ->
>> Graduated, I see in the criteria for "graduated" that one needs to have
>> committers from at least 2 organizations. This hints at a desire for CNCF
>> projects to have some measure of open governance but stops short of calling
>> it out directly. Why not do so?
>>
>> I believe I've heard it stated by the TOC before that you don't want to
>> preclude healthy important projects where the vast majority of committers
>> happen to be from one organization. I agree. However, I don't think that is
>> at odds with an open governance model. For example, you could have an open
>> governance model where it just so happened to be, that the participation in
>> the project is all from a single company, however, because of the governance
>> model, should contributors join later from other companies, they would have
>> a path to equal influence in the project decision making and contributions
>> being committed.
>>
>> Why am I bringing this up? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of
>> cure. I believe the advantage of calling open gov out explicitly in the
>> graduation criteria helps avoid a future scenario where a CNCF project is
>> governed by a cabal largely dominated by one company, that has a token
>> committer from outside, that actively or passively ignores contributions
>> from the community (the incentives can differ from project to project). I
>> suspect you have come across github projects with open source licenses that
>> behave this way. Projects like this are bad for the project's and
>> foundation's brand.  The ASF had to deal with this issue a number of times
>> with popular projects in their Big Data stack. It was painful, but they were
>> able to deal with it because they are prescriptive about how ASF projects
>> are to be governed. I realize this can be a slippery slope because the next
>> step would be to become prescriptive about what type(s) of open governance
>> model CNCF projects would deem acceptable. However, perhaps something worth
>> anticipating and discussing.
>>
>> Regards
>> Steve Watt
>>
>> On Tue, Feb 20, 2018 at 12:06 PM, Chris Aniszczyk
>> <caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>>>
>>> At today's TOC call there was consensus on the CNCF Sandbox proposal is
>>> close to being ready for a formal vote. We will leave the document open for
>>> any community comments for a week and do a formal vote next week:
>>> https://goo.gl/gZhBjY
>>>
>>> After the vote and assuming the sandbox is approved, we will resume
>>> voting on new project proposals (existing inception proposals will be
>>> slotted for the sandbox).
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
>






--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Alban Crequy
 

+1 non-binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 5:52 PM, Chris Aniszczyk
<caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with
graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation
of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace
of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now
operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management
practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the
Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering)
unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and
graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of
sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with
thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to
develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds
of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project
(https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged
contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month
(https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located
here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate
non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719


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Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Erin Boyd
 

+1 non-binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 1:20 PM, Quinton Hoole <quinton.hoole@...> wrote:
+1 (non-binding)


From: <cncf-toc@...> on behalf of Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org>
Date: Monday, February 26, 2018 at 08:52
To: "cncf-toc@..." <cncf-toc@...>
Subject: [cncf-toc] [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719



Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Cody McCain <cody@...>
 

+1 non-binding


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Arun Gupta
 

+1 (non-binding)

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM, Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719





Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Christopher LILJENSTOLPE <cdl@...>
 

+1 non-binding


On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM, Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719



Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Mark Interrante <minterrante@...>
 

+1 non-binding.

-Mark

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 2:43 PM, Chris Wright <chrisw@...> wrote:
+1 non-binding

thanks,
-chris

On Feb 26, 2018 5:52 PM, "Chris Aniszczyk" <caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719




--
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SVP Infrastructure Engineering | Salesforce


--
-


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Chris Wright
 

+1 non-binding

thanks,
-chris

On Feb 26, 2018 5:52 PM, "Chris Aniszczyk" <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Quinton Hoole
 

+1 (non-binding)


From: <cncf-toc@...> on behalf of Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...>
Date: Monday, February 26, 2018 at 08:52
To: "cncf-toc@..." <cncf-toc@...>
Subject: [cncf-toc] [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Richard Hartmann
 

Obvious +1, obviously non-binding.


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Grigoriu, Marius <marius.grigoriu@...>
 

+1 non-binding

 

From: <cncf-toc@...> on behalf of Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...>
Date: Monday, February 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM
To: "cncf-toc@..." <cncf-toc@...>
Subject: [cncf-toc] [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

 

After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

 

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)

- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

 

--

Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Benjamin Hindman
 

+1 binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM, Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719




--
Benjamin Hindman
Founder of Mesosphere and Co-Creator of Apache Mesos

Follow us on Twitter: @mesosphere

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Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Joseph Jacks <jacks.joe@...>
 

+1 non-binding


Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Brandon DuRette
 

+1 non-binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:52 AM, Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719




--
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CHIEF ARCHITECT

E: brandon.durette@...   
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Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

DanW@concur.com <danw@...>
 

+1 non-binding

woot!

 

 

From: <cncf-toc@...> on behalf of Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...>
Date: Monday, February 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM
To: "cncf-toc@..." <cncf-toc@...>
Subject: [cncf-toc] [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

 

After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

 

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)

- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

 

--

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Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Taha Ozket
 

+1 non binding




On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 7:52 PM Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719

--
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Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Zhang Lei
 

+1 of course, non binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:13 AM, Brian Grant via Lists.Cncf.Io <briangrant=google.com@...> wrote:
+1 binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM, Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719




Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Timothy Chen
 

+1 non binding

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:40 AM Sam Lambert <samlambert@...> wrote:
+1 binding.

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:32 AM, Manik Taneja via Lists.Cncf.Io <manik.taneja=docker.com@...> wrote:
+1, non-binding!

Cheers,
Manik

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719



Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Sam Lambert <samlambert@...>
 

+1 binding.

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:32 AM, Manik Taneja via Lists.Cncf.Io <manik.taneja=docker.com@...> wrote:
+1, non-binding!

Cheers,
Manik

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steeringunanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719



Re: [VOTE] Kubernetes moving to graduation

Manik Taneja <manik.taneja@...>
 

+1, non-binding!

Cheers,
Manik

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:52 AM Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
After last week's TOC call, we decided to start moving forward with graduation reviews. Kubernetes was the project that motivated the creation of the CNCF, and was its first (seed) project. It has sustained a fast pace of growth of contributors, contributing organizations, and users, and now operates at massive scale. The project's governance and community-management practices continue to evolve and mature as the project grows, but the Kubernetes Steering Committee (https://github.com/kubernetes/steering) unanimously believes that Kubernetes fulfills all the CNCF incubating and graduation criteria:

- Used successfully in production by at least three independent end users of sufficient scale and quality: https://kubernetes.io/case-studies
- Have a healthy number of committers: Kubernetes is so large, with thousands of contributors and nearly 100 repositories, that we had to develop our own mechanism to manage approval permissions. We have hundreds of approvers, listed in more than 4000 OWNERS files across the project (https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=org%3Akubernetes+filename%3AOWNERS&type=Code)
- Demonstrate a substantial ongoing flow of commits and merged contributions: Devstats shows that we have thousands of PRs merged per month (https://k8s.devstats.cncf.io/)

Please vote (+1/0/-1) by replying to this thread; the full proposal located here: https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/91

Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support!

--
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719