Difference between revisions of "Organisation"
(If a person doesn't use their core dev privileges for 6 months, the privileges will be revoked for security reason) |
(Changed the language and added some motivational text) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
* Can vote for and against merging pull requests (Two for-votes are required for code to be mergeable upstream.) | * Can vote for and against merging pull requests (Two for-votes are required for code to be mergeable upstream.) | ||
* Has write access to the Minetest team's repositories on GitHub | * Has write access to the Minetest team's repositories on GitHub | ||
+ | |||
+ | The core team should all be people who are trusted and capable of reviewing C++ code if you ask them to. They don't necessarily need to have the time. However, if a core developer doesn't write or review any code for a long time, the trust disappears. | ||
==== Assignment ==== | ==== Assignment ==== | ||
Core developers are assigned and unassigned by celeron55, based on these rules: | Core developers are assigned and unassigned by celeron55, based on these rules: | ||
* Only people who have already contributed to the project can be assigned to be core developers. | * Only people who have already contributed to the project can be assigned to be core developers. | ||
− | * The person themselves or anyone else can propose someone to become or stop being a core developer. Do this by "/msg celeron55 blah blah". | + | * The person themselves or anyone else can propose someone to become or stop being a core developer. Do this by "/msg celeron55 blah blah", or by email. |
− | * | + | * Celeron55 accepts complaints about core developers and ultimately decides on unassignments. |
* Core developers, like other contributors, should document and publish their work in a way that allows another contributor to pick up on it if the core developer stops working on the project due to any reason. | * Core developers, like other contributors, should document and publish their work in a way that allows another contributor to pick up on it if the core developer stops working on the project due to any reason. | ||
− | * If a person doesn't use their core | + | * If a person doesn't use their core developer privileges for 6 months, the privileges will be revoked for security reasons. |
== Past major changes == | == Past major changes == |
Revision as of 20:40, 10 January 2022
Contributors
A contributor is anyone who has made a pull request that has been merged, or successfully sent a patch to be applied otherwise.
Core developers
Core developers have special privileges and responsibilities compared to other contributors:
- Can vote for and against merging pull requests (Two for-votes are required for code to be mergeable upstream.)
- Has write access to the Minetest team's repositories on GitHub
The core team should all be people who are trusted and capable of reviewing C++ code if you ask them to. They don't necessarily need to have the time. However, if a core developer doesn't write or review any code for a long time, the trust disappears.
Assignment
Core developers are assigned and unassigned by celeron55, based on these rules:
- Only people who have already contributed to the project can be assigned to be core developers.
- The person themselves or anyone else can propose someone to become or stop being a core developer. Do this by "/msg celeron55 blah blah", or by email.
- Celeron55 accepts complaints about core developers and ultimately decides on unassignments.
- Core developers, like other contributors, should document and publish their work in a way that allows another contributor to pick up on it if the core developer stops working on the project due to any reason.
- If a person doesn't use their core developer privileges for 6 months, the privileges will be revoked for security reasons.
Past major changes
2015-11-02: The subsystem maintainer method was officially taken out of use. It had already been unofficially out of use for a long time. See the history of this page for details about how it worked.