Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

Committer Nominations


Excerpt
hiddentrue

How new

...

committers can be nominated (by anyone at any time)


Table of Contents
minLevel2
outlinetrue
stylenone

Committers Group Overview

...

Being a committer means participating in the evolution of the DSpace platform, typically by making changes to the source code, improving documentation, reviewing/testing others' code, or managing the integration of contributions made by the community at large. But, it also means having a voice and an official vote on technical, administrative and release management issues, providing your expertise and guidance on the lists, organizing testing, etc.

...

Although there are no explicit requirements to become a committer, generally we look for someone who has shown initiative and/or has been an active participant in the DSpace Community. Participation may be in the form of actively helping people on mailing lists, submitting code patches/features, reviewing/testing others' code, presenting on DSpace at conferences, leading workshops, or generally volunteering time to help with any DSpace initiative.

...

Once a committer is nominated, the nomination is voted on by all current Committers. The decision to accept or reject the nomination is made based on a majority vote. If a nomination is accepted, that person will immediately receive an invite to become a DSpace Committer! If a nomination is rejected, we will provide feedback on how that person may become more active in the community, so that he/she could be potentially re-nominated and accepted in the future. (Please note that a rejection of a nomination does not mean that the person is "unqualified". It just means that the existing Committers may not be familiar enough with that person's activities in the DSpace Community. A person can always be re-nominated at a later time.)

For more information see the Committers' policies on adding a new Committer.