VIVO Committers Group
VIVO Committers work with the community to maintain and advance the code and have the following primary responsibilities:
- Maintain the codebase; Committers are the only individuals who can actively change/commit to the codebase
- Review all code contributions/changes to ensure stability, etc.
- Merge/accept community code contributions
- Help to resolve bugs or security issues within codebase
- Help to provide ongoing support to community developers and users via community forums (e.g. mailing lists, etc.)
- Perform and manage new releases based on the roadmap
Anyone may be nominated as a Committer by anyone else. Typically, nominations are made by existing Committers on the basis of sustained contribution to VIVO that indicates an ability to fulfil Committer responsibilities. Examples of such contribution are participation in discussions on the VIVO mailings lists, participation in developer meetings, reporting bugs, help with testing, and contribution of code via pull requests. Only existing Committers may vote to add a nominated person to the Committers group.
Committers
The following individuals are current Committers for VIVO open source software:
Name | Organization | Code Signing Key Fingerprint | Key ID |
TIB Hannover | |||
University of Florida | |||
Ontocale | |||
Clarivate Analytics | F1766ADFDD451605A316C1932B620513930640D9 | 930640D9 | |
Cornell | |||
Cornell | |||
LYRASIS | 7BCE77FB75D06477C7A1D6EF04BE1CAB70B358DF | 70B358DF | |
University of Alabama, Birmingham | A60EDC4D8048413D658A5EC1BC8EEF9427286316 | 27286316 | |
University of Colorado, Boulder |
Release Managers
Name | Organization | Code Signing Key Fingerprint | Key ID |
Kitio Fofack |
Emeritus Committers
Emeritus Committers are those who, for one reason or another, are no longer able to contribute code to VIVO on a regular basis. Although no longer members of the Committers Group, this group continues to act in an advisory role within the VIVO development community. We wish to recognize the contributions each of these individuals has made to VIVO software over the years. Their code contributions and guidance have played an integral part in helping to make VIVO what it is today.
- Ted Lawless - Brown University
- Nate Prewitt - University of Colorado Boulder
- Jim Blake - Cornell University
- Tim Worrall - Cornell University
- Muhammad Javed - Mastercard
Special Recognition of Cornell University and the NIH Grant Development Team
The VIVO project was initiated at Cornell University Library in 2003, and further supported by an NIH grant funded team from 2009 to 2012. Without these efforts, VIVO would not be the success it is today, and as such we would like to extend a special recognition to the members of that team.
- Jon Corson-Rikert - Cornell
- Jim Blake - Cornell
- John Ferreira - Cornell
- Tim Worrall - Cornell
- Huda Khan - Cornell
- Holly Mistelbauer - Cornell
- Brian Caruso - Cornell
- Brian Lowe - Cornell
- Manolo Bevia - Cornell
- Stella Mitchell - Cornell
- Rebecca Younes - Cornell
- Joseph R. Mc Enerney - Cornell
- Nick Cappadona - Cornell
- Stephen V. Williams - University of Florida
- Nick Skaggs - University of Florida
- Michael Barbieri - University of Florida
- Katy Börner - Indiana
- Chintan Tank - Indiana
- Chin Hua - Indiana
- Yuyin Sun - Indiana
- Eliza Chan - Weill Cornell Medical College
Committer Discussions / Meetings
As much as possible, Committers ensure that all VIVO technology decisions are transparent to the developer community. The only exception is when security issues require us to resolve them before they are publicly reported.
- All Developer Meetings are open for anyone to attend. The meeting minutes are publicly available.
- Technology discussions take place in the following places:
- vivo-tech Mailing list
- VIVO Issue Tracker (When discussion is related to a specific ticket).
- GitHub [Vitro / VIVO] (When discussion is related to a specific GitHub pull request)
- Occasionally on the Wiki itself, usually for early scoping and proposals of features/changes - especially larger developments involving a co-ordinated effort.
- All technology decisions are made following our Community Decision Making process