oslc-domains message
[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]
| [List Home]
Subject: Re: [oslc-sc] Re: OASIS OSLC Open Project Proposal
- From: "Jim Amsden" <jamsden@us.ibm.com>
- To: Carol Geyer <carol.geyer@oasis-open.org>
- Date: Thu, 20 Dec 2018 13:46:38 -0500
Carol,
Great answers,
thank you. I think this goes a long way toward resolving most of our questions
and issues.
Jim Amsden, Senior
Technical Staff Member
OSLC and Linked Lifecycle
Data
919-525-6575
From:
Carol
Geyer <carol.geyer@oasis-open.org>
To:
oslc-sc@lists.oasis-open.org,
OSLC Core TC <oslc-core@lists.oasis-open.org>, OASIS OSLC Domains
TC Discussion List <oslc-domains@lists.oasis-open.org>
Cc:
TC
Administrator <chet.ensign@oasis-open.org>, Scott McGrath <scott.mcgrath@oasis-open.org>
Date:
12/20/2018
01:29 PM
Subject:
[oslc-sc]
Re: OASIS OSLC Open Project Proposal
Sent
by: <oslc-sc@lists.oasis-open.org>
OSLC StC
and TCs,
We are excited
by the possibility of transitioning the OSLC Member Section and TCs to
an Open Project.
Our answers
to your questions are in red below. We're happy to discuss on or in advance
of the StC call on Jan 21.
On Mon, Dec 17, 2018 at 1:13 PM Jim Amsden
<jamsden@us.ibm.com>
wrote:
The OASIS OSLC
Membership Steering Committee (StC) proposes to migrate the current OASIS
OSLC standardization activities to a new OASIS OSLC Open Project.
The purposes of this migration are to:
* Engage a broader community in OSLC technical work by allowing participation
and contribution from non-members without incurring dues or fees
* Increase OSLC adoption by encouraging more contribution, awareness and
users
* Provide a context in which to develop related work products including
open source reference implementations, sample applications, and other collateral
that expand and complement the OASIS Standards track documents
* Simplify the infrastructure and processes for developing OASIS Standards
* Reduce fragmentation in the OSLC community by providing a central, world
wide, respected organization in which to develop OSLC related work products
Specifically, the StC proposes the following:
1. Utilize the current StC members to form the initial OSLC Project Governing
Board (PGB), retaining the current chair
2. The current Core and Domains TC members are merged and become the initial
OSLC Technical Steering Committee, retaining the current chairs and cochairs.
3. The existing OSLC Core and Domains GitHub repositories will be migrated
as is to the OSLC Open Project
4. The existing OSLC4JS project will also be migrated to the OSLC Open
Project and will provide a code base that establishes a Statement of Use
of the OSLC Standards and a code base for exploring and validating proposed
changes to the standards
5. The existing eclipse/Lyo Open Source project at eclipse.orgwill remain unchanged in order to leverage the eclipse governance process
and Type B due diligence.
This proposal is subject to approval by the StC, with the decision scheduled
to be addressed at the next StC meeting, Jan 21, 2019.
In order to facilitate the decision process, the StC would like clarification
on the following questions.
1. What exactly are the Open Project fees and who pays them?
Open Project
fees are used to fund core services provided by OASIS (legal, technical,
and fiscal administration, basic marketing support, etc.).
Unlike OASIS
TCs (which are funded by inclusive OASIS membership dues and where dues
are required for technical participation), each Open Project is funded
by fees paid by its own sponsoring organizations (we're calling these "Project
Backers"). The funding provided by Project Backers enables anyone
in the community to participate technically without paying dues.
Basic
Project Backer fees are paid annually. The fees are scaled, based on the
organizationâs employee headcount:
$
25,000: 2,000+ employees
$
15,000: 500-1,999 employees
$
10,000: 100-499 employees
$
5,000: 10-99 employees
$
2,000: <10 employees
$
1,000: Nonprofit, university, local or non-OECD government
Project
Backer organizations each receive a seat on the Project Governing Board
(PGB) as well as exclusive visibility and promotional benefits.
For
OSLC... if the StC and TCs decide in January to form the Open Project (in
time for inclusion in OASISâ program roll-out in late March), OASIS will
waive the Backer fees for the organizations that are represented on the
current OSLC MS StC for the foreseeable future, provided that those companies
retain their OASIS Foundational Sponsor, Sponsor, or Contributor memberships.
Organizations
not represented on the current OSLC MS StC will be able to become OSLC
Backers by paying the annual fees listed above.
Note:
This offer covers core services provided by OASIS. If the OSLC PGB determines
the need for supplemental activities (code auditing, event hosting, consultants,
etc.), then additional funding will be required. OASIS staff will work
with the OSLC PGB to determine its funding requirements and how to best
meet them.
1.1. What are the startup and annual fees for an Open Project?
1.2. It is our understanding that the PGC requires a minimum threshold
in annual sponsorship commitments by OASIS member companies. What is this
minimum threshold?
Normally,
OASIS requires new projects to identify commitments of at least $25,000
in annual Project Backers fees and at least two organizations for its PGB
before it can be launched.
Current
OASIS OSLC members will enjoy the fee waiver noted above, but still will
need to have at least two organizations on its PGB. These may be either
current MS StC organizations (holding OASIS Foundational, Sponsor, or Contributors
membership) or new organizations that pay the annual OSLC Project Backer
fee.
1.3. What are
OASIS members of the PGC expected to contribute to the Open Project fees?
Current OSLC
MS organizations are not expected to contribute additional funding for
the foreseeable future to cover the core services provided by OASIS. If
the OSLC PGB decides supplemental activities/services are needed, fees
may be necessary.
1.4. What is the
relationship between the OASIS member dues and Open Project fees?
That is, if an OASIS member company participates in many Open Projects
that develop different OASIS Standards, will the member company have to
pay OASIS membership fees as well as additional fees for each Open Project
for which they are PGC members?
Technically,
thereâs no relationship between OASIS membership and Open Project sponsorship.
Each Open Project is funded by its own Project Backers.
In
special cases, we may offer OASIS members a reduced or waived fee to become
Project Backers for specific Open Projects (e.g., our current offering
to OSLC MS members).
1.5. What happens of the member participation in the PGC falls below the
minimum threshold, but there is still ongoing work by the Technical Steering
Committee in the open source and/or specification deliverables?
The OP program
is designed to gracefully degrade in such cases. If the OP no longer has
at least two Project Backers:- OASIS will
continue to provide free public access to the project's deliverables in
perpetuity.
- The project's
repositories remain open. Contributions and comments may be accepted, and
successor Maintainers may be appointed.
- The project
will no longer receive facilitation or other services from OASIS.
- The repoâs
content wonât continue to be eligible for approval as Project Specifications
or advanced through the OASIS standards track.
2. What are the rules for non-member participants, contributors, maintainers
and PGB members?
2.1. Do non-members of either the Technical Steering Committee or Project
Governing Board have voting rights?
In keeping
with common open source practices, Open Projects rules allow most decisions
to be made by group consensus.
Members
of the PGB approve major governance and advancement actions via ballot
when needed.
Members
of the Technical Steering Committee (TSC) are free to determine how to
manage achieving consensus; voting is not required.
2.2. How are these voting rights calculated? At the discretion of the PGB?
Decisions
are made on the PGB by one-org/one-vote. Each Project Backer organization
has one seat on the PGB.
TSC members
are selected for their technical contributions to the project, regardless
of whether or not they are employed by Project Backers. Thisgives the project another opportunity for inclusive leadership.
2.3. Do all voting members have to sign the CLA (even if they don't contribute
content)?
All PGB members
must sign the CLA regardless of whether or not they contribute content.
3. Regarding Legal entity, oversight, management of IP and licensing agreements,
trademarks and copyrights: Specifically what services will OASIS provide
in order to assess the IP of Open Project work products, including dependencies
on components outside the project?
For example, open source projects often have dependencies on other open
source projects. In order to assess IP exposure, it is typically necessary
to examine all direct and transitive dependencies to ensure there are no
licensing issues. This often requires code scans to detect potential issues.
Will OASIS provide these services?
Upon request
from a PGB, OASIS will contract with a third-party to provide code scan
services. OASIS will work with the PGB to identify the provider and scope
of service that best meets their projectâs needs.
Code
scans are not included in the core services provided by OASIS for all Open
Projects. The cost to provide this service will have to be covered by supplemental
funding (e.g. fees for Project Backers).
If
OSLC requires code scans, let us know as soon as possible. OASIS will work
with the StC to determine specific needs, evaluate service provider options,
and agree on how the cost will be covered.
4. Will the current OSLC TC GitHub repos, wikis and issues be migrated
as is to the new open project?
Yes (assuming
participants agree to re-contribute them). When the outgoing license
is royalty-free, and the selected incoming FOSS license is reasonably permissive,
itâs an easy ask from the participants. This is made even easier when
a known, stable group is involved, as is the case with OSLC.
4.1. Will there
be any impact on existing TC work products?
Not on the
TC-approved versions. Once a published OASIS Committee Specification,
always a published OASIS Committee Specification.
4.2. Will the
open project specification template be different than what is currently
being used by the OSLC TCs, and automated through ReSpec? We are trying
to minimize spec rework and ReSpec updates.
Specification
templates for Open Project work are based on the current TC templates.
While there will be some labeling differences, rework will be minimal.
4.3. The Open
Project specification lifecycle appears to require statements of use before
public review. What are the implications for OSLC Domain and Core TC documents
that are already in progress?
Open Projects
Specifications only require public reviews and Statements of Use when they
move forward as Candidate OASIS Standards (in the same way a TC would proceed).
SoU are not required for a public review. Migrating to Open Projects should
have little effect on existing work.
4.4. Are there any changes in how Open Project standards track work products
are published by OASIS?
Specifically I'm trying to understand if the issue we had with document
relative links being broken by the OASIS publishing process will be resolved
by migrating to an Open Project so that we don't have do the work to modify
ReSpec to fix up links on document publish.
The specifics
on this are TBD, but we are confident we can work out an arrangement where
the canonical standard lives on the OP repo with a backup verified copy
on docs.oasis-open.org.
5. What are the hosting constraints and any additional costs associated
with utilizing the Open Project Web site?
We have just deployed a new open-servicers.netsite. This site was developed using HUGO (https://gohugo.io).
Can we continue using this technology and URL for the Open Project web
site? Note that it is necessary to preserve the open-service.netdomain since the OSLC namespaces utilize this domain name for backward
compatibility and access to machine readable vocabulary documents.
Details on
this will require investigation, but we donât expect a problem. We will
want to add boilerplate text and minimal branding to the site, and some
kind of linking or mirroring so that material cross-references into OASIS
resources. Staying with this current infrastructure and URLs will make
life easier for all of us.
Jim Amsden, Senior Technical Staff Member
OSLC and Linked Lifecycle Data
919-525-6575
--
Carol Geyer
Chief Development Officer
Open Source and Standards Communities
OASIS
[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]
| [List Home]