DEPRECATED: This page was used to build consensus during TSC composition discussions.  

Preface:

The TSC’s business responsibilities as a governing body for ONAP are described in Section 2(h) of the ONAP Project a Series of LF Projects, LLC Technical Charter:

h. Responsibilities: The TSC will be responsible for all aspects of oversight relating to the Project, which may include:

i. coordinating the technical direction of the Project;
ii. approving project or system proposals (including, but not limited to, incubation, deprecation, and changes to a sub-project’s scope);
iii. organizing sub-projects and removing projects;
iv. creating sub-committees or working groups to focus on cross-project technical issues and requirements;
v. appointing representatives to work with other open source or open standards communities;
vi. establishing community norms, workflows, issuing releases, and security issue reporting policies;
vii. establishing, maintaining and modifying policies to ensure the integrity, vetting and security of the ONAP Project code base; and
viii. subject to the requirements of Section 7 of this Charter, approving and implementing policies and processes for contributing (to be published onap.org) and coordinating with the Series Manager to resolve matters or concerns that may arise as set forth in Section 7 of this Charter;}
ix. discussions, seeking consensus, and where necessary, voting on technical matters relating to the code base that affect multiple projects; and
x. coordinating any marketing, events, or communications regarding the Project with the LF Projects Manager or their designee.

These mimic what you will find in virtually every other LFN Project Charter and were set up by the Linux Foundation to leave room for each TSC to do what they feel needs to be done to conduct business for their own specific Project. The point of the TSC 2.0 discussion is not to alter, diminish or add to the responsibilities already found in the Charter.  It is instead about how to ensure those making ONAP's day-to-day business decisions are the best qualified to scale and lead a broad technical community that is reshaping face of telecommunications on a global scale


Suggested approach is to divide this up into the following logical steps

  1. Establish what specifically should be expected from any TSC member in the context of their being on the TSC 
  2. Establish what part ( if any )the role of a company's participation, contribution, deployment, or usage of ONAP should play in the composition of the TSC
  3. Address the operational aspects such as elections and how to handle attendance, vacancies, etc. 
  4. Vote on the actual language and amendments to the ONAP Technical Community Document
  5. Kick off the TSC election

Expectation of TSC Members

The Role of a Company in Determining the Composition of the TSC

Operational Aspects Related to TSC Composition




Preface:

The TSC’s business responsibilities as a governing body for ONAP are described in Section 2(h) of the ONAP Project a Series of LF Projects, LLC Technical Charter:

h. Responsibilities: The TSC will be responsible for all aspects of oversight relating to the Project, which may include:

i. coordinating the technical direction of the Project;
ii. approving project or system proposals (including, but not limited to, incubation, deprecation, and changes to a sub-project’s scope);
iii. organizing sub-projects and removing projects;
iv. creating sub-committees or working groups to focus on cross-project technical issues and requirements;
v. appointing representatives to work with other open source or open standards communities;
vi. establishing community norms, workflows, issuing releases, and security issue reporting policies;
vii. establishing, maintaining and modifying policies to ensure the integrity, vetting and security of the ONAP Project code base; and
viii. subject to the requirements of Section 7 of this Charter, approving and implementing policies and processes for contributing (to be published onap.org) and coordinating with the Series Manager to resolve matters or concerns that may arise as set forth in Section 7 of this Charter;}
ix. discussions, seeking consensus, and where necessary, voting on technical matters relating to the code base that affect multiple projects; and
x. coordinating any marketing, events, or communications regarding the Project with the LF Projects Manager or their designee.

These mimic what you will find in virtually every other LFN Project Charter and were set up by the Linux Foundation to leave room for each TSC to do what they feel needs to be done to conduct business for their own specific Project. The point of the TSC 2.0 discussion is not to alter, diminish or add to the responsibilities already found in the Charter.  It is instead about how to ensure those making ONAP's day-to-day business decisions are the best qualified to scale and lead a broad technical community that is reshaping face of telecommunications on a global scale


Suggested approach is to divide this up into the following logical steps

  1. Establish what specifically should be expected from any TSC member in the context of their being on the TSC 
  2. Establish what part ( if any )the role of a company's participation, contribution, deployment, or usage of ONAP should play in the composition of the TSC
  3. Address the operational aspects such as elections and how to handle attendance, vacancies, etc. 
  4. Vote on the actual language and amendments to the ONAP Technical Community Document
  5. Kick off the TSC election

Expectation of TSC Members

The Role of a Company in Determining the Composition of the TSC

Operational Aspects Related to TSC Composition