Difference between revisions of "5-star-rating"
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#* <i>Ideally this is demonstrated by describing risk adverse organisations who have deployed releases into production systems.</i></span> | #* <i>Ideally this is demonstrated by describing risk adverse organisations who have deployed releases into production systems.</i></span> | ||
− | ==**** Long therm proofed Mature OSGeo Project== | + | ==***** Long therm proofed Mature OSGeo Project== |
* ''Regular builds'' | * ''Regular builds'' |
Latest revision as of 04:08, 5 March 2015
Mail list discussion http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/2010-June/thread.html
History http://wiki.osgeo.org/index.php?title=Marketing_Artefacts&oldid=51118#Maturity_Rating
Compilation
NOTE: The ckecklist is adopted from original Project_Graduation_Checklist wiki page
Purpose
The purpose of this checklist is to determine whether in our "Start rating system" the new OSGeo project is to be sorted.
See also the Incubation Application Questionnaire
* alfa
One star or "alfa" stage project is project, which barely has running code, but it is open source software with relation to geo spatial problematic.
The project has demonstrated that it has an open, active and healthy user and developer community:
- [open.1] Open: projects are expected to function in an open and public manner and include:
- [open.1a] Open source license(s),
- [geospatial.2] Geo-spatial: project has some relationship to geo, spatial and similar topics
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
Eg. collaboration on project activities such as testing, release and feature development. - [open.2b] Long term viability of the project is demonstrated by showing participation, support and direction from multiple developers, and/or power users, and/or sponsors, who come from multiple organisations.
Eg. The project is resilient enough to sustain loss of a developer or supporting organisation, often referred to as having a high bus factor. - [open.2d] Users are supported and encouraged, via an email list or similar.
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
** beta
Software is somehow established, produces new code, attracts new developers and users. Project still does not have to be described as "mature".
- [open.1] Open: projects are expected to function in an open and public manner and include:
- [open.1b] Open communication channels,
- [open.1c] Open decision making process,
- [open.2] Community:
- [open.2c] Decisions are made openly instead of behind closed doors, which empowers all developers to take ownership of the project and facilitates spreading of knowledge between current and future team members.
- [open.2d] Users are supported and encouraged, via an email list or similar.
*** stable
- Bundled software
- updates
- Training
- etc. ...
- [open.1] Open: projects are expected to function in an open and public manner and include:
- [open.1c] Open decision making process,
- [open.2] Active community:
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
Eg. collaboration on project activities such as testing, release and feature development. - [open.2c] Decisions are made openly instead of behind closed doors, which empowers all developers to take ownership of the project and facilitates spreading of knowledge between current and future team members.
- [open.2d] Users are supported and encouraged, via an email list or similar.
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
- [copyright.1] All project source code is available under an Open Source license.
- [copyright.2] Project documentation is available under an open license, such as Creative Commons.
- [copyright.3] [copyright.1] The project code, documentation and data has been adequately vetted to assure it is all properly licensed, and a copyright notice included, as per a Provenance Review.
- [copyright.4] The project maintains a list of all copyright holders identified in the Provenance Review Document.
- [copyright.5] All code contributors have agreed to abide by the project's license policy, and this agreement has been documented and archived.
- [documentation.1] The project has user documentation:
- [documentation.1a] Including sufficient detail to guide a new user through performing the core functionality provided by the application.
- [documentation.2] The project has developer documentation:
- [documentation.2a] Including checkout and build instructions.
- [documentation.2b] Including commented code, ideally published for developer use.
Examples: javadocs for Java applications, or Sphinx documentation for Python applications. - [documentation.2c] Providing sufficient detail for an experience programmer to contribute patches or a new module in accordance with the project's programming conventions.
- [documentation.3] The project has deployment documentation:
- [documentation.3a] Including, where appropriate, how to deploy, configure and optimise the application.
**** Mature OSGeo project
- [open.2] Active and healthy community:
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
Eg. collaboration on project activities such as testing, release and feature development. - [open.2b] Long term viability of the project is demonstrated by showing participation, support and direction from multiple developers, and/or power users, and/or sponsors, who come from multiple organisations.
Eg. The project is resilient enough to sustain loss of a developer or supporting organisation, often referred to as having a high bus factor.
- [open.2a] The project should have a community of developers and users who actively collaborate and support each other in a healthy way.
- [release.1] The project follows a defined release process:
- [release.1a] Which supports both stable and development releases.
- [release.1b] Which includes execution of the testing process before releasing a stable release.
- [release.2] The project follows a documented testing process.
- [release.2a] Ideally, this includes both automated and manual testing.
- [release.2b] Ideally this includes documented conformance to set quality goals, such as reporting Percentage Code Coverage of Unit Tests.
- [release.3] Release and testing processes provide sufficient detail for an experienced programmer to follow.
- [release.4] The project has released stable, feature complete releases.
- Ideally this is demonstrated by describing risk adverse organisations who have deployed releases into production systems.
***** Long therm proofed Mature OSGeo Project
- Regular builds
- Security updates
- Training courses
- Ideally established in business and/or universities environment
- Stable community