THIS PAGE IS BEING DEPRECATED. See Governance 3.0.

Version 2.0, Bill Snow (ONF), Scott Nicholas (Linux Foundation)

Ratified at ONOS board meeting 17 June 2016

Changed ON.Lab references to ONF August 4, 2017 after the assets of ON.Lab were transferred to ONF.

Governance Model

Governance of the ONOS® project is intended to foster a technical meritocracy within the context of stewardship by the ONOS Chief Architect and the ONF Board of Directors.  ONF is a nonprofit organization, and provides engineering resources on behalf of the ONOS Project. 

Goals

The goals of ONOS project governance are to:

Principles

The principles of ONOS governance are in line with these community values:

In addition, the over-arching governance principle is To act in the best interest of the broader community.

Governance Structure

The ONOS project is governed by four steering teams and a board of directors. The four teams are the technical steering team, the use case team, the release management team, and the community team.


ONOS Board

The board is a group of representatives from the partner organizations. It is governed by the Chairman of the Board (the “Chairman”). The board has the following roles and responsibilities:

The board leaves all technical decisions to the technical steering team in the spirit of open source technical meritocracy practice.

The governance document for the board can be found here.

Steering Teams

Four steering teams govern the ONOS project.

Technical Steering Team

The technical steering team is responsible for all technical decisions in the project. They are responsible for the content and structure of the code base and for all technical priorities with respect to the code base. The ONOS chief architect (“Chief Architect”) is the team lead of the technical steering team. The ONF board of directors reserves the right to remove and replace the Chief Architect at any time.

Technical Steering Team Page

Email: onos-tech-steering-team@onosproject.org - Archive

Use Case Steering Team

The Use Case Steering Team now operates at the ONF level and is no longer a part of ONOS governance.

Release Management Team

The release management team owns the release management process and is responsible to make sure that releases happen on time with the highest quality. The release management team owns the responsibility for determining the priority of features targeted for a particular release. The release management team lead is elected by the voting community. The ONF board of directors reserves the right to approve or veto this selection, and to appoint the team lead.

Release Management Team Page

Email: onos-release-team@onosproject.org - Archive

Community Steering Team

The community steering team is responsible for the care and feeding of the community. It is responsible to address community issues, to grow the community and to make sure that the community thrives. The community steering team lead is elected by the voting community. The ONF board of directors reserves the right to approve or veto this selection, and to appoint the team lead.

Community Steering Team Page

Email: onos-community-team@onosproject.org - Archive

Governance Details

Classes of Participation

There are four classes of participation in the governance process. Each plays a different role in governance.

ONOS Board

Composition of the Board

The Board is composed of a chairman and one member from ONF and each partner organization. In addition, each partner may name one alternative member to attend meetings in case the primary member is unable to attend. The maximum number of partner board members is 20. Each organization may only have one member on the board. The current board is found here.

Elections

The Chairman of the Board is chosen by the Open Networking Foundation Board of Directors. Each organization is responsible for nominating their board member. The Chairman must approve the nomination. Board members are (re) nominated/approved every year. Nominations/approvals are held in the first quarter of each calendar year. If any board member must leave before the end of their term, their organization will nominate a new member and that member must be approved by the Chairman of the Board. If the Chairman of the Board must step down, then the ONF Board of Directors will select a new Chairman.

2018 Elections Process and Information can be found here.

2017 Elections Process and Information can be found here.

2016 Elections Process and Information can be found here.

Voting

There are three classes of voting: ONF, Vendors and Service Providers. Each receives votes according to the following allocation of 100 votes. Votes may be fractional.

Should a tie occur on a vote, the Chairman of the Board will break the tie.

Technical Steering Team

The technical steering team is responsible for all technical decisions having to do with the ONOS project and the ONOS core codebase (“ONOS Core”). The ONOS codebase is the software distribution represented by the ONOS trademark. Use case applications, southbound plug-ins for non-OpenFlow devices, sample applications, vendor proprietary extensions may or may not be part of the ONOS Core. It is entirely up to the technical steering team to decide what constitutes the ONOS Core.  Projects within the ONOS Project follow the project lifecycle document which can be found here.  The TST may amend the project lifecycle document (“Project Lifecycle”) with the approval of the Chief Architect.

As per the Project Lifecycle, incubated projects may graduate to either Mature-state or Core-state status. It is intended that threshold for having projects graduate to Mature-state will be lower and the process streamlined relative to having projects graduate to Core-state. The TST is intended to be an oversight body, and is not intended to have responsibility for patch-level project decisions.

The membership is found on the home page.

Roles

The definitive section describing technical roles can be found here. The TST, with approval of the Chief Architect, shall have authority to modify, delete and create new technical roles from time to time.

Becoming a Member of the TST

 

There are several ways to become a member of the TST.

 

  1. The Chief Architect is by definition a member as the lead of the TST.
  2. The voting community will elect members annually as positions open.
  3. When a core project is deemed to be important enough to the success of ONOS, then the TST may choose to add the project lead to the TST. It is entirely up to the TST to make the decision on whether the project warrants consideration. This decision is made at the time the project undergoes the review to become a core project.

Membership Elections

New technical steering team members will be elected on a yearly basis. Elections are held in the first quarter of each calendar year. At the time of election the following occurs:

If a team member leaves the team during the year, it is up to the Chief Architect to decide whether or not to hold an election to put someone else into the position before the next scheduled election.

Other Changes

Technical Advisory Group (currently not used)

The Technical Steering Team may organize a technical  advisory group of architects, developers, and/or other community members. Members of this group do not have to have any affiliation with the ONOS project. The goal of this group is twofold: solicit input from other experts in the field to guide the ONOS architecture and generate advocacy in the larger ecosystem for the work being done with ONOS. The people on the technical advisory group are all chosen by the Technical Steering Team.

The technical steering team will meet with the technical advisory group (if such a group is organized) 2-4 times a year.

Use Case Steering Team

The use case steering team is responsible for choosing and prioritizing the use cases worked on by the community.

Each service provider has one representative on the use case steering team.The current team members are found on their home page.

Membership

The team representatives are by definition the group of board members from the service providers. The lead is elected on a yearly basis by the board. How each service provider chooses their representative is outside the scope of this document. Elections are held in the first quarter of each calendar year. At the time of the election, the following will take place:

A service provider may change its representative for any reason at any time at the sole discretion of the service provider.

If the team lead must step down before an election then a special election will be called to elect a new team leader.

Release Management Team

The Release Management team is responsible for all decisions having to do with requirements and packaging of the release components (note, one can substitute the Agile term “stories” for “requirements” - in this context it is the same thing). More specifically, they own the

Team Lead Election

Elections are held in the first quarter of each calendar year. The team lead of the release management team will be (re) elected by the voting community. During an election, the following will occur: 

Members

Anyone may volunteer to be a member of the team. It is up to the team lead to decide how large the team is and who is accepted onto the team. 

Community Steering Team

The community steering team is responsible for the care and feeding of the community. This team will be responsible to make sure the community has what it needs to function effectively. That may include

Team Lead Election

Elections are held in the first quarter of each calendar year. The team lead of the community steering team will be (re) elected by the voting community. In an election, the following will occur:

Membership

Anyone may volunteer to be a member of the team. It is up to the team lead to decide how large the team is and who is accepted onto the team.