From d94b1e44b2614ed30a9ed8f5bd557013ed578d19 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mariusz Felisiak Date: Tue, 20 Jul 2021 10:48:17 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] [3.1.x] Refs #31676 -- Removed Core team from organization docs. According to DEP 0010. Backport of caa2dd08c4722c8702588f5dfe1fa4c506aa66fc from main --- docs/internals/organization.txt | 101 -------------------------------- 1 file changed, 101 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/internals/organization.txt b/docs/internals/organization.txt index 9260077cb1..3c289454f1 100644 --- a/docs/internals/organization.txt +++ b/docs/internals/organization.txt @@ -21,107 +21,6 @@ and its community. .. _Django Code of Conduct: https://www.djangoproject.com/conduct/ .. _Django Software Foundation: https://www.djangoproject.com/foundation/ -The Django core team makes the decisions, nominates its new members, and -elects its technical board. While it holds decision power in theory, it aims -at using it as rarely as possible in practice. Rough consensus should be the -norm and formal voting an exception. - -.. _core-team: - -Core team -========= - -Role ----- - -The core team is the group of trusted volunteers who manage the Django -Project. They assume many roles required to achieve the project's goals, -especially those that require a high level of trust. They make the decisions -that shape the future of the project. - -Core team members are expected to act as role models for the community and -custodians of the project, on behalf of the community and all those who rely -on Django. - -They will intervene, where necessary, in online discussions or at official -Django events on the rare occasions that a situation arises that requires -intervention. - -They have authority over the Django Project infrastructure, including the -Django Project website itself, the Django GitHub organization and -repositories, the Trac bug tracker, the mailing lists, IRC channels, etc. - -Prerogatives ------------- - -Core team members may participate in formal votes, typically to nominate new -team members and to elect the technical board. - -Some contributions don't require commit access. Depending on the reasons why a -contributor joins the team, they may or may not have commit permissions to the -Django code repository. - -However, should the need arise, any team member may ask for commit access by -writing to the core team's mailing list. Access will be granted unless the -person withdraws their request or the technical board vetoes the proposal. - -Core team members who have commit access are referred to as "committers" or -"core developers". - -Other permissions, such as access to the servers, are granted to those who -need them through the same process. - -Membership ----------- - -`Django team members `_ -demonstrate: - -- a good grasp of the philosophy of the Django Project -- a solid track record of being constructive and helpful -- significant contributions to the project's goals, in any form -- willingness to dedicate some time to improving Django - -As the project matures, contributions go way beyond code. Here's an incomplete -list of areas where contributions may be considered for joining the core team, -in no particular order: - -- Working on community management and outreach -- Providing support on the mailing-lists and on IRC -- Triaging tickets -- Writing patches (code, docs, or tests) -- Reviewing patches (code, docs, or tests) -- Participating in design decisions -- Providing expertise in a particular domain (security, i18n, etc.) -- Managing the continuous integration infrastructure -- Managing the servers (website, tracker, documentation, etc.) -- Maintaining related projects (djangoproject.com site, ex-contrib apps, etc.) -- Creating visual designs - -Very few areas are reserved to core team members: - -- Reviewing security reports -- Merging patches (code, docs, or tests) -- Packaging releases - -Core team membership acknowledges sustained and valuable efforts that align -well with the philosophy and the goals of the Django Project. - -It is granted by a four fifths majority of votes cast in a core team vote and -no veto by the technical board. - -Core team members are always looking for promising contributors, teaching them -how the project is managed, and submitting their names to the core team's vote -when they're ready. - -There's no time limit on core team membership. However, in order to provide -the general public with a reasonable idea of how many people maintain Django, -core team members who have stopped contributing are encouraged to declare -themselves as "past team members". Those who haven't made any non-trivial -contribution in two years may be asked to move themselves to this category, -and moved there if they don't respond. Past team members lose their privileges -such as voting rights and commit access. - .. _technical-board: Technical board