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[Karaf and Kalumet mix] |
- JIRA - Like many thousands of other software projects, Apache uses JIRA, a software tool for tracking issues and project management. JIRA can connect bugs directly to subversion source code with native CVS (Concurrent Versions System) integration. Find more about JIRA here (or Godzilla for short?)
- Mailing Lists - This JIRA issue was made to manage the creation of the following mailing lists for Kalumet:
- User - General questions about Kalumet usage, use cases, etc. Where users may ask questions.
- Dev - Discussion about Kalumet development. This mailing list is used by all Kalumet committers. It's where the discussions, proposal, road-map, and votes stand.
- Private - For Kalumet's PMCs.
- Commits - Notification for all Kalumet's SVN commits.
- Incubator Repository - This is where the Incubator projects (like Kalumet) live. The ASF uses SVN and GIT (GNU Integrated Tools) as their distributed revision control system.
- Quarterly board report - An automated system emails board meeting dates/info to the development mailing list each month in advance, to allow for review time. The report for Kalumet forms part of the Incubator PMC report. This is because Kalumet is a podling (referring to the codebase and community while being 'incubated'). The reports are appended to the Incubator Wiki page each month. Last month's quarterly board report is located under http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/October2011. Mentors should review reports for their project(s) and sign off on them on the Incubator wiki page. Signing off on a report shows that Mentors are following the project. Projects that are not signed may raise alarms for the Incubator PMC.
- New Committer - Since I've been voted in, my name on the Apache committers index moved from "Unlisted CLA" to "SVN-Committer" with my username, full name, and project (Incubator). Then the PMC Chair filled out a ASF new request forum (or any ASF member if the chair was unavailable) on my behalf. Different types of elections are held on either the public mailing list or private mailing list. Once my request was received, a community member with root access created my account, adding permissions like relevant source code modules (which enables me to commit). Since this is volunteer work, this sometimes takes time. After accounts are created, they are managed by the Apache infrastructure team. root@apache then sent me an email with various information and mentions that the community mailing list among others are available if I am interested.
- LDAP Managed Services - The root email mentioned above sends committers the location and login information of these services:
- Shell (people.apache.org) - Committers can SSH to this location with their Apache username and password like this: ssh userName@people.apache.org
- SVN (svn.apache.org) - SVN stands for Subversion
- cn=ldapmonitor,ou=users,ou=services,dc=apache,dc=org
- Email - Committers get a @apache.org email address. According to the root email I received, mail servers are updated every hour which enables new members to receive emails from their Apache email address. I cannot receive email directly from the server, at least one forwarding email address has to be set up. This can be changed by logging into https://id.apache.org/details/userName. Committers can link apache.org emails to their gmail account by following these steps.
- Names - One thing I've noticed is a very small number of Apache members do not have real names attached to their profile. A PMC member informed me that in some countries it is illegal to partake in this type of activity so they leave their name out for privacy/legal purposes. As you would imagine, those people working in open source that are in hiding do not talk about it often online, but I've scowered the internet and posted a few related articles which I've linked below:
- Guardian.uk.co - When using open source makes you an enemy of the state. From the link it says "the US copyright lobby has long argued against open source software - now Indonesia's in the firing line for encouraging the idea in government departments".
- Janimo from Cluj Napoca, Romania - Public tender of about 3mil EUR explicitly disqualifies 'GPL and similar' software. A blog post about the situation from Romania.
- Marek Mahut from OpenSource.com - Open Source Software is Illigal? This talks about the Slovak Republic and the Romanian Ministry of Internal Affairs.
- OSOR.EU - RO Interoperability Requirements Force Ministry to Block Open Source. Talks about the Romanian Ministry of Internal Affairs. There are lots of other romanian links about it here.
- SOIT - New Copyright Law Later this Year. And here is google translate.
- Kalumet is pretty DOAP (Description of a Project) - The DOAP file is a XML file containing a RDF Schema defining the project.
This is me, take it or leave it NL.