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PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/58925 Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Michaël Zasso <targos@protonmail.com> Reviewed-By: Antoine du Hamel <duhamelantoine1995@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Paolo Insogna <paolo@cowtech.it> Reviewed-By: Marco Ippolito <marcoippolito54@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Joyee Cheung <joyeec9h3@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Rafael Gonzaga <rafael.nunu@hotmail.com> Reviewed-By: Darshan Sen <raisinten@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Moshe Atlow <moshe@atlow.co.il>
347 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
347 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
# Node.js Project Governance
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<!-- TOC -->
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* [Triagers](#triagers)
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* [Collaborators](#collaborators)
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* [Collaborator activities](#collaborator-activities)
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* [Technical steering committee](#technical-steering-committee)
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* [TSC meetings](#tsc-meetings)
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* [Collaborator nominations](#collaborator-nominations)
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* [Who can nominate Collaborators?](#who-can-nominate-collaborators)
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* [Ideal Nominees](#ideal-nominees)
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* [Nominating a new Collaborator](#nominating-a-new-collaborator)
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* [Onboarding](#onboarding)
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* [Consensus seeking process](#consensus-seeking-process)
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<!-- /TOC -->
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## Triagers
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Triagers assess newly-opened issues in the [nodejs/node][] and [nodejs/help][]
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repositories. The GitHub team for Node.js triagers is @nodejs/issue-triage.
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Triagers are given the "Triage" GitHub role and have:
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* Ability to label issues and pull requests
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* Ability to comment, close, and reopen issues and pull requests
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See:
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* [List of triagers](./README.md#triagers)
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* [A guide for triagers](./doc/contributing/issues.md#triaging-a-bug-report)
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## Collaborators
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Node.js core collaborators maintain the [nodejs/node][] GitHub repository.
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The GitHub team for Node.js core collaborators is @nodejs/collaborators.
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Collaborators have:
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* Commit access to the [nodejs/node][] repository
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* Access to the Node.js continuous integration (CI) jobs
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Both collaborators and non-collaborators may propose changes to the Node.js
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source code. The mechanism to propose such a change is a GitHub pull request.
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Collaborators review and merge (_land_) pull requests.
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Two collaborators must approve a pull request before the pull request can land.
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(One collaborator approval is enough if the pull request has been open for more
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than 7 days.) Approving a pull request indicates that the collaborator accepts
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responsibility for the change. Approval must be from collaborators who are not
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authors of the change.
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If a collaborator opposes a proposed change, then the change cannot land. The
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exception is if the TSC votes to approve the change despite the opposition.
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Usually, involving the TSC is unnecessary. Often, discussions or further changes
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result in collaborators removing their opposition.
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See:
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* [List of collaborators](./README.md#current-project-team-members)
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* [A guide for collaborators](./doc/contributing/collaborator-guide.md)
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### Collaborator activities
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* Helping users and novice contributors
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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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* Participation in working groups
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* Merging pull requests
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The TSC can remove inactive collaborators or provide them with _emeritus_
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status. Emeriti may request that the TSC restore them to active status.
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A collaborator is automatically made emeritus (and removed from active
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collaborator status) if it has been more than 12 months since the collaborator
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has authored or approved a commit that has landed.
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## Technical Steering Committee
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A subset of the collaborators forms the Technical Steering Committee (TSC).
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The TSC has final authority over this project, including:
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* Technical direction
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* Project governance and process (including this policy)
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* Contribution policy
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* GitHub repository hosting
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* Conduct guidelines
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* Maintaining the list of collaborators
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The current list of TSC members is in
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[the project README](./README.md#current-project-team-members).
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The [TSC Charter][] governs the operations of the TSC. All changes to the
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Charter need approval by the OpenJS Foundation Cross-Project Council (CPC).
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### TSC meetings
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The TSC meets in a video conference call. Each year, the TSC elects a chair to
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run the meetings. The TSC streams its meetings for public viewing on YouTube.
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TSC meetings may consist of a public portion and a private portion. The private
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portion is used to discuss sensitive topics, such as personnel issues,
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security vulnerabilities, or other confidential matters. Private discussions
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should be avoided as much as possible, and the TSC should strive to keep
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discussions in the public portion of the meeting, but there are times when
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private discussions are necessary.
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The TSC agenda includes issues that are at an impasse. The intention of the
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agenda is not to review or approve all patches. Collaborators review and approve
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patches on GitHub. The preference is to minimize the need for TSC meetings to
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make decisions that can otherwise be made by collaborators on GitHub.
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Any community member can create a GitHub issue asking that the TSC review
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something. If consensus-seeking fails for an issue, a collaborator may apply the
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`tsc-agenda` label. That will add it to the TSC meeting agenda.
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Before each TSC meeting, the meeting chair will share the agenda with members of
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the TSC. TSC members can also add items to the agenda at the beginning of each
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meeting. The meeting chair and the TSC cannot veto or remove items.
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The TSC may invite people to take part in a non-voting capacity in either the
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public or private portions of the meeting.
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During the public portion of the meeting, the TSC chair ensures that someone
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takes minutes that include a summary of the discussion and any
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decisions made. After the meeting, the TSC chair ensures that someone opens a
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public pull request with the minutes from the public portion of the meeting.
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The public portion of the TSC meeting is expected to be recorded and made
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available for live streaming during the meeting or download by anyone after.
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This expectation is to be announced to all participants at the start of the
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each meeting before the recording is started. Continued participation in the
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public portion of the meeting after this announcement is interpreted as consent to the
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recording.
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For the private portion of the meeting, the TSC chair ensures that someone
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produces a summary of the discussions, gets it reviewed by the attendees,
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and shares it to all the TSC members once approved by the attendees via a
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private discussion channel such as the TSC private mailing list. The summary
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may be made public if there is consensus within the TSC and the non-TSC
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attendees to make it public.
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Recording the private portion of a meeting or maintaining or publishing a
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detailed transcript is only permitted when all participants present during the
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private portion of the meeting explicitly agree to the recording and/or
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transcript, in order to comply to privacy regulations.
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All discussions made during meetings are considered provisional, receiving no
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objections from folks at the TSC meeting to take an action is not equivalent to
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the TSC endorsing that action.
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If a quorum of TSC voting members is present, it is possible to call for an
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explicit vote, and take the vote immediately if there are no objections. The
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decision is considered confirmed once the rest of the TSC voting members have
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been informed and no objection for taking that vote has been raised in 48 hours.
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To clarify, TSC voting members can object to the vote taking place during the
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meeting, but not to the vote itself.
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For discussions outside of meetings, the TSC uses
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[the TSC issue tracker](https://github.com/nodejs/TSC/issues) for public
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issues, and the private TSC email list for private matters. The process for
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public issues in the issue tracker is:
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* A TSC member opens an issue explaining the proposal/issue and @-mentions
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@nodejs/tsc.
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* The proposal passes if, after 72 hours, there are two or more TSC voting
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member approvals and no TSC voting member opposition.
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* If there is an extended impasse, a TSC member may ask for the issue to be
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added to the TSC agenda, or make a motion for a vote.
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## Collaborator nominations
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### Who can nominate Collaborators?
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Existing Collaborators can nominate someone to become a Collaborator.
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### Ideal Nominees
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Nominees should have significant and valuable contributions across the Node.js
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organization.
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Contributions can be:
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* Opening pull requests.
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* Comments and reviews.
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* Opening new issues.
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* Participation in other projects, teams, and working groups of the Node.js
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organization.
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Collaborators should be people volunteering to do unglamorous work because it's
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the right thing to do, they find the work itself satisfying, and they care about
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Node.js and its users. People should get collaborator status because they're
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doing work and are likely to continue doing work where having the abilities that
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come with collaborator status are helpful (abilities like starting CI jobs,
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reviewing and approving PRs, etc.). That will usually--but, very importantly, not
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always--be work involving committing to the `nodejs/node` repository. For an example
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of an exception, someone working primarily on the website might benefit from being
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able to start Jenkins CI jobs to test changes to documentation tooling. That,
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along with signals indicating commitment to Node.js, personal integrity, etc.,
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should be enough for a successful nomination.
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It is important to understand that potential collaborators may have vastly
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different areas and levels of expertise, interest, and skill. The Node.js
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project is large and complex, and it is not expected that every collaborator
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will have the same level of expertise in every area of the project. The
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complexity or "sophistication" of an individual’s contributions, or even their
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relative engineering "skill" level, are not primary factors in determining
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whether they should be a collaborator. The primary factors do include the quality
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of their contributions (do the contributions make sense, do they add value, do
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they follow documented guidelines, are they authentic and well-intentioned,
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etc.), their commitment to the project, can their judgement be trusted, and do
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they have the ability to work well with others.
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#### The Authenticity of Contributors
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The Node.js project does not require that contributors use their legal names or
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provide any personal information verifying their identity.
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It is not uncommon for malicious actors to attempt to gain commit access to
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open-source projects in order to inject malicious code or for other nefarious
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purposes. The Node.js project has a number of mechanisms in place to prevent
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this, but it is important to be vigilant. If you have concerns about the
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authenticity of a contributor, please raise them with the TSC. Anyone nominating
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a new collaborator should take reasonable steps to verify that the contributions
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of the nominee are authentic and made in good faith. This is not always easy,
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but it is important.
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### Nominating a new Collaborator
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To nominate a new Collaborator:
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1. **Optional but strongly recommended**: open a
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[discussion in the nodejs/collaborators][] repository. Provide a summary of
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the nominee's contributions (see below for an example).
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2. **Optional but strongly recommended**: After sufficient wait time (e.g. 72
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hours), if the nomination proposal has received some support and no explicit
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block, and any questions/concerns have been addressed, add a comment in the
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private discussion stating you're planning on opening a public issue, e.g.
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"I see a number of approvals and no block, I'll be opening a public
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nomination issue if I don't hear any objections in the next 72 hours".
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3. **Optional but strongly recommended**: Privately contact the nominee to make
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sure they're comfortable with the nomination.
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4. Open an issue in the [nodejs/node][] repository. Provide a summary of
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the nominee's contributions (see below for an example). Mention
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@nodejs/collaborators in the issue to notify other collaborators about
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the nomination.
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The _Optional but strongly recommended_ steps are optional in the sense that
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skipping them would not invalidate the nomination, but it could put the nominee
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in a very awkward situation if a nomination they didn't ask for pops out of
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nowhere only to be rejected. Do not skip those steps unless you're absolutely
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certain the nominee is fine with the public scrutiny.
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Example of list of contributions:
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* Commits in the [nodejs/node][] repository.
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* Use the link `https://github.com/nodejs/node/commits?author=GITHUB_ID`
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* Pull requests and issues opened in the [nodejs/node][] repository.
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* Use the link `https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues?q=author:GITHUB_ID`
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* Comments on pull requests and issues in the [nodejs/node][] repository
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* Use the link `https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues?q=commenter:GITHUB_ID`
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* Reviews on pull requests in the [nodejs/node][] repository
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* Use the link `https://github.com/nodejs/node/pulls?q=reviewed-by:GITHUB_ID`
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* Help provided to end-users and novice contributors
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* Pull requests and issues opened throughout the Node.js organization
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* Use the link `https://github.com/search?q=author:GITHUB_ID+org:nodejs`
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* Comments on pull requests and issues throughout the Node.js organization
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* Use the link `https://github.com/search?q=commenter:GITHUB_ID+org:nodejs`
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* Participation in other projects, teams, and working groups of the Node.js
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organization
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* Other participation in the wider Node.js community
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The nomination passes if no collaborators oppose it (as described in the
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following section) after one week. In the case of an objection, the TSC is
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responsible for working with the individuals involved and finding a resolution.
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The TSC may, following typical TSC consensus seeking processes, choose to
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advance a nomination that has otherwise failed to reach a natural consensus or
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clear path forward even if there are outstanding objections. The TSC may also
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choose to prevent a nomination from advancing if the TSC determines that any
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objections have not been adequately addressed.
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#### How to review a collaborator nomination
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A collaborator nomination can be reviewed in the same way one would review a PR
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adding a feature:
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* If you see the nomination as something positive to the project, say so!
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* If you are neutral, or feel you don't know enough to have an informed opinion,
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it's certainly OK to not interact with the nomination.
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* If you think the nomination was made too soon, or can be detrimental to the
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project, share your concerns. See the section "How to oppose a collaborator
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nomination" below.
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Our goal is to keep gate-keeping at a minimal, but it cannot be zero since being
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a collaborator requires trust (collaborators can start CI jobs, use their veto,
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push commits, etc.), so what's the minimal amount is subjective, and there will
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be cases where collaborators disagree on whether a nomination should move
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forward.
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Refrain from discussing or debating aspects of the nomination process
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itself directly within a nomination private discussion or public issue.
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Such discussions can derail and frustrate the nomination causing unnecessary
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friction. Move such discussions to a separate issue or discussion thread.
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##### How to oppose a collaborator nomination
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An important rule of thumb is that the nomination process is intended to be
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biased strongly towards implicit approval of the nomination. This means
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discussion and review around the proposal should be more geared towards "I have
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reasons to say no..." as opposed to "Give me reasons to say yes...".
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Given that there is no "Request for changes" feature in discussions and issues,
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try to be explicit when your comment is expressing a blocking concern.
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Similarly, once the blocking concern has been addressed, explicitly say so.
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Explicit opposition would typically be signaled as some form of clear
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and unambiguous comment like, "I don't believe this nomination should pass".
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Asking clarifying questions or expressing general concerns is not the same as
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explicit opposition; however, a best effort should be made to answer such
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questions or addressing those concerns before advancing the nomination.
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Opposition does not need to be public. Ideally, the comment showing opposition,
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and any discussion thereof, should be done in the private discussion _before_
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the public issue is opened. Opposition _should_ be paired with clear suggestions
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for positive, concrete, and unambiguous next steps that the nominee can take to
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overcome the objection and allow it to move forward. While such suggestions are
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technically optional, they are _strongly encouraged_ to prevent the nomination
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from stalling indefinitely or objections from being overridden by the TSC.
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Remember that all private discussions about a nomination will be visible to
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the nominee once they are onboarded.
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### Onboarding
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After the nomination passes, a TSC member onboards the new collaborator. See
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[the onboarding guide](./onboarding.md) for details of the onboarding
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process.
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## Consensus seeking process
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The TSC follows a [Consensus Seeking][] decision-making model per the
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[TSC Charter][].
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[Consensus Seeking]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus-seeking_decision-making
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[TSC Charter]: https://github.com/nodejs/TSC/blob/HEAD/TSC-Charter.md
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[discussion in the nodejs/collaborators]: https://github.com/nodejs/collaborators/discussions/categories/collaborator-nominations
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[nodejs/help]: https://github.com/nodejs/help
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[nodejs/node]: https://github.com/nodejs/node
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