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nodejs/GOVERNANCE.md
Rich Trott ba74e42000 doc: revise Collaborator Nominations introduction
Revise the introductory paragraphs for Collaborator Nominations in
GOVERNANCE.md. This change splits long and unnecessarily complex
sentences into multiple simple statements.

PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/27237
Reviewed-By: Anatoli Papirovski <apapirovski@mac.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <michael_dawson@ca.ibm.com>
Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <ruben@bridgewater.de>
2019-04-17 09:38:33 -07:00

7.2 KiB

Node.js Project Governance

Collaborators

Node.js Core Collaborators maintain the nodejs/node GitHub repository. The GitHub team for Node.js Core Collaborators is @nodejs/collaborators. Their privileges include but are not limited to:

  • Commit access to the nodejs/node repository
  • Access to the Node.js continuous integration (CI) jobs

Both Collaborators and non-Collaborators may propose changes to the Node.js source code. The mechanism to propose such a change is a GitHub pull request. Collaborators are responsible for reviewing and merging (landing) pull requests.

At least two Collaborators must approve a pull request before the pull request can land. (One Collaborator approval is enough if the pull request has been open for more than 7 days.) Approving a pull request indicates that the Collaborator accepts responsibility for the change. Approval must be from Collaborators who are not authors of the change.

If a Collaborator opposes a proposed change, then the change cannot land. The exception is if the TSC votes to approve the change despite the opposition. Usually, involving the TSC is unnecessary. Often, discussions or further changes result in Collaborators removing their opposition.

See:

Collaborator Activities

Typical activities of a Collaborator include:

  • Helping users and novice contributors
  • Contributing code and documentation changes that improve the project
  • Reviewing and commenting on issues and pull requests
  • Participation in working groups
  • Merging pull requests

The TSC can remove inactive Collaborators or provide them with Emeritus status. Emeriti may request that the TSC restore them to active status.

Technical Steering Committee

A subset of the Collaborators forms the Technical Steering Committee (TSC). The TSC has final authority over this project, including:

  • Technical direction
  • Project governance and process (including this policy)
  • Contribution policy
  • GitHub repository hosting
  • Conduct guidelines
  • Maintaining the list of Collaborators

The current list of TSC members is in the project README.

The TSC Charter governs the operations of the TSC. All changes to the Charter need approval by the Node.js Board of Directors.

TSC Meetings

The TSC meets in a voice conference call. Each year, the TSC elects a chair to run the meetings. The TSC streams its meetings for public viewing on YouTube or a similar service.

The TSC agenda includes issues that are at an impasse. The intention of the agenda is not to review or approve all patches. Collaborators review and approve patches on GitHub.

Any community member can create a GitHub issue asking that the TSC review something. If consensus-seeking fails for an issue, a Collaborator may apply the tsc-agenda label. That will add it to the TSC meeting agenda.

Before each TSC meeting, the meeting chair will share the agenda with members of the TSC. TSC members can also add items to the agenda at the beginning of each meeting. The meeting chair and the TSC cannot veto or remove items.

The TSC may invite people to take part in a non-voting capacity.

During the meeting, the TSC chair ensures that someone takes minutes. After the meeting, the TSC chair ensures that someone opens a pull request with the minutes.

The TSC seeks to resolve as many issues as possible outside meetings using the TSC issue tracker. The process in the issue tracker is:

  • A TSC member opens an issue explaining the proposal/issue and @-mentions @nodejs/tsc.
  • The proposal passes if, after 72 hours, there are two or more TSC approvals and no TSC opposition.
  • If there is an extended impasse, a TSC member may make a motion for a vote.

Collaborator Nominations

Existing Collaborators can nominate someone to become a Collaborator. Nominees should have significant and valuable contributions across the Node.js organization.

To nominate a new Collaborator, open an issue in the nodejs/node repository. Provide a summary of the nominee's contributions. For example:

  • Commits in the nodejs/node repository.
    • Can be shown using the link https://github.com/nodejs/node/commits?author=${GITHUB_ID} (replace ${GITHUB_ID} with the nominee's GitHub ID).
  • Pull requests and issues opened in the nodejs/node repository.
    • Can be shown using the link https://github.com/nodejs/node/pulls?q=author%3A${GITHUB_ID}+
  • Comments and reviews on issues and pull requests in the nodejs/node repository
    • Can be shown using the links https://github.com/nodejs/node/pulls?q=reviewed-by%3A${GITHUB_ID}+ and https://github.com/nodejs/node/pulls?q=commenter%3A${GITHUB_ID}+
  • Assistance provided to end users and novice contributors
  • Participation in other projects, teams, and working groups of the Node.js organization
    • Can be shown using the links https://github.com/search?q=author%3A${GITHUB_ID}++org%3Anodejs&type=Issues and https://github.com/search?q=commenter%3A${GITHUB_ID}++org%3Anodejs&type=Issues
  • Other participation in the wider Node.js community

Mention @nodejs/collaborators in the issue to notify other Collaborators about the nomination.

If there are no objections raised by any Collaborators one week after the issue is opened, the nomination will be considered as accepted. Should there be any objections against the nomination, the TSC is responsible for working with the individuals involved and finding a resolution. The nomination must be approved by the TSC, which is assumed when there are no objections from any TSC members.

Prior to the public nomination, the Collaborator initiating it can seek feedback from other Collaborators in private using the GitHub discussion page of the Collaborators team, and work with the nominee to improve the nominee's contribution profile, in order to make the nomination as frictionless as possible.

If individuals making valuable contributions do not believe they have been considered for a nomination, they may log an issue or contact a Collaborator directly.

Onboarding

When the nomination is accepted, the new Collaborator will be onboarded by a TSC member. See the onboarding guide on details of the onboarding process. In general, the onboarding should be completed within a month after the nomination is accepted.

Consensus Seeking Process

The TSC follows a Consensus Seeking decision-making model as described by the TSC Charter.