Leaders of the Eclipse community,
There are a number of topics that I would like to bring everyone up
to speed on. All of this is going to be announced over the next
month or so. So I would appreciate it if you don't blog, etc. until
the Foundation has the opportunity to communicate it to the
community and public.
A lot of this can be viewed as a re-balancing. The Eclipse
Foundation has in many ways focused more on the needs of our
technology adopters than both our users, and you, our committers. I
am not saying we're completely changing, but the time has come for a
bit of a re-calibration.
IP Process
We are going to be making some changes to reduce the burden of the
IP process on projects. There are lots of implementation details
that need to be worked out, but the Board approved some significant
items this week for the EMO to go implement. A few examples include:
- Eliminate piggyback CQs, and rely on automation to report
where dependencies are being used.
- Automate CQ creation for contributions > 1KLOC
- Removing the requirement that committers who contribute >
1KLOC to another project need to file a CQ. (Sadly there is a
corner case for about 75 committers whose employer did not allow
them contribute to any projects other than the ones listed in
the employer consent form.)
- Completely eliminate IP reviews for service releases of
previously-approved dependencies, and significantly reduce the
review we do for minor revision releases. CQs will still need to
be filed, but the time-to-close will go way down.
Development Funding
The Eclipse Foundation is going to start funding some development
of our core platform and Java IDE, paid for by corporate and
individual donations. We will also be starting a member-led
working group to help co-ordinate and prioritize corporate
contributions. In mid-July we are going to be announcing that
all Friends of Eclipse contributions will be used to fund
development. We are going to be putting on a donation push, with
the hope that this message will result in an increase of
donations, which are currently running at about $140K/yr. Earlier
this year Ericsson kindly provided us with a non-trivial amount of
funds, and a list of priorities. That single contribution had a
material and positive impact on the Mars release.
The Eclipse Foundation will be working with the Eclipse and WTP
PMCs to establish priorities for what we fund with the FoE monies.
On the other side of the equation, we are going to be working on a
transparent process for how the money gets spent, and who the EF
funds to do work. I trust that it will not be a surprise that
self-employed committers, and member companies will all be
considered as preferred sources.
This is a big change from the status quo. But it is not a
panacea. Unless our corporate contributions vastly exceed our
current expectations, we are not going to have the funds to make
dramatic changes to how things happen around here. But we've
already demonstrated in Mars that even a relatively small amount
of funds can have a pretty positive impact.
Simultaneous Release
I am not exactly sure how to go about getting closure on this, but I
would like to see Eclipse move to more of a "rolling release" style.
Users simply don't want to wait a year to get a new feature. On the
other hand, adopters want stable, maintainable releases. There have
been many discussions on this list and others about increasing the
frequency with which we ship. Let's figure this out. Can the Eclipse
Foundation help by hosting a meeting or two?
Eclipse Development Process
Nothing tangible to report here, but please be aware that Wayne
is gearing up for his bi-annual review of the EDP, and we will be
looking for ideas on how to simplify what we ask our projects to do.
I am personally very excited about these changes. There is a lot
going on, and all of it heading in a positive direction. I hope you
agree.
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