OpenTimelineIO is a project of the Academy Software Foundation and relies on the ASWF governance policies, supported by the Linux Foundation.
There are three primary project roles:
- Contributors submit code to the project;
- Committers approve code to be included into the project; and
- the Technical Steering Committee (TSC) provides overall high-level project guidance.
The OpenTimelineIO project grows and thrives from assistance from Contributors. Contributors include anyone in the community that submits code, documentation, or other artifacts to the project. Such contributions must be approved by a project Committer before they become a part of the project.
Anyone can be a Contributor. You need no formal approval from the project, beyond the legal forms.
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Review the coding standards to ensure your contribution is in line with the project's coding and styling guidelines.
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Sign the Individual CLA, or have your organization sign the Corporate CLA.
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Submit your code as a PR with the appropriate DCO sign-off.
Project Committers have merge access on the OpenTimelineIO GitHub repository and are responsible for approving submissions by Contributors.
Typical activities of a Committer include:
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Helping users and novice contributors.
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Ensuring a response to questions posted to the https://lists.aswf.io/g/otio-discussion mailing list.
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Contributing code and documentation changes that improve the project.
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Reviewing and commenting on issues and pull requests.
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Ensuring that changes and new code meet acceptable standards and are in the long-term interest of the project.
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Participation in working groups.
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Merging pull requests.
Any existing Committer can nominate an individual making significant and valuable contributions to the OpenTimelineIO project to become a new Committer. New committers are approved by vote of the TSC.
If you are interested in becoming a Committer, contact the TSC at https://lists.aswf.io/g/otio-discussion
The Technical Steering Committee (TSC) oversees the overall technical direction of OpenTimelineIO, as defined in the project charter. This charter defines the TSC member terms and succession policies.
The responsibilities of the TSC include:
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Coordinating technical direction of the project.
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Project governance and contribution policy.
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GitHub repository administration.
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Maintaining the list of additional Committers.
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Appointing representatives to work with other open source or open standards communities.
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Discussions, seeking consensus, and where necessary, voting on technical matters relating to the code base that affect multiple projects.
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Coordinating any marketing, events, or communications regarding the project.
The TSC elects a Chair person, who acts as the project manager, organizing meetings and providing oversight to project administration. The Chair is elected by the TSC. The Chair also serves as the OpenTimelineIO representative on the Academy Software Foundation (ASWF) Technical Advisory Council (TAC), and represents the project at ASWF TAC meetings.
(alphabetical by last name)
- Joshua Minor (chair) - Pixar
- Nick Porcino - Pixar
- Eric Reinecke - Netflix
- Stephan Steinbach - Pixar
All meetings of the TSC are open to participation by any member of the OpenTimelineIO community. Meeting times are listed in the ASWF technical community calendar. The TSC Chair moderates the meeting, or appoints another TSC member to moderate in their absence.
Items are added to the TSC agenda which are considered contentious or are modifications of governance, contribution policy, TSC membership, or release process, in addition to topics involving the high-level technical direction of the project.
The intention of the agenda is not to approve or review all patches. That should happen continuously on GitHub and be handled by the larger group of Committers.
Any community member or Contributor can ask that something be reviewed
by the TSC at the meeting by logging a GitHub issue. Any Committer,
TSC member, or the meeting chair can bring the issue to the TSC's
attention by applying the TSC
label.
Prior to 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 additional persons to participate in a non-voting capacity.
The meeting chair is responsible for archiving the minutes in a publicly visible location.
Due to the challenges of scheduling a global meeting with participants in several time zones, the TSC will seek to resolve as many agenda items as possible outside of meetings on the public mailing list.