Initial Commit
This commit is contained in:
615
database/perl/lib/pods/perlpolicy.pod
Normal file
615
database/perl/lib/pods/perlpolicy.pod
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,615 @@
|
||||
=encoding utf8
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 NAME
|
||||
|
||||
perlpolicy - Various and sundry policies and commitments related to the Perl core
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 DESCRIPTION
|
||||
|
||||
This document is the master document which records all written
|
||||
policies about how the Perl 5 Porters collectively develop and maintain
|
||||
the Perl core.
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 GOVERNANCE
|
||||
|
||||
=head2 Perl 5 Porters
|
||||
|
||||
Subscribers to perl5-porters (the porters themselves) come in several flavours.
|
||||
Some are quiet curious lurkers, who rarely pitch in and instead watch
|
||||
the ongoing development to ensure they're forewarned of new changes or
|
||||
features in Perl. Some are representatives of vendors, who are there
|
||||
to make sure that Perl continues to compile and work on their
|
||||
platforms. Some patch any reported bug that they know how to fix,
|
||||
some are actively patching their pet area (threads, Win32, the regexp
|
||||
-engine), while others seem to do nothing but complain. In other
|
||||
words, it's your usual mix of technical people.
|
||||
|
||||
Among these people are the core Perl team. These are trusted volunteers
|
||||
involved in the ongoing development of the Perl language and interpreter.
|
||||
They are not required to be language developers or committers.
|
||||
|
||||
Over this group of porters presides Larry Wall. He has the final word
|
||||
in what does and does not change in any of the Perl programming languages.
|
||||
These days, Larry spends most of his time on Raku, while Perl 5 is
|
||||
shepherded by a steering council of porters responsible for deciding what
|
||||
goes into each release and ensuring that releases happen on a regular
|
||||
basis.
|
||||
|
||||
Larry sees Perl development along the lines of the US government:
|
||||
there's the Legislature (the porters, represented by the core team), the
|
||||
Executive branch (the steering council), and the Supreme Court (Larry).
|
||||
The legislature can discuss and submit patches to the executive branch
|
||||
all they like, but the executive branch is free to veto them. Rarely,
|
||||
the Supreme Court will side with the executive branch over the
|
||||
legislature, or the legislature over the executive branch. Mostly,
|
||||
however, the legislature and the executive branch are supposed to get
|
||||
along and work out their differences without impeachment or court cases.
|
||||
|
||||
You might sometimes see reference to Rule 1 and Rule 2. Larry's power
|
||||
as Supreme Court is expressed in The Rules:
|
||||
|
||||
=over 4
|
||||
|
||||
=item 1
|
||||
|
||||
Larry is always by definition right about how Perl should behave.
|
||||
This means he has final veto power on the core functionality.
|
||||
|
||||
=item 2
|
||||
|
||||
Larry is allowed to change his mind about any matter at a later date,
|
||||
regardless of whether he previously invoked Rule 1.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
Got that? Larry is always right, even when he was wrong. It's rare
|
||||
to see either Rule exercised, but they are often alluded to.
|
||||
|
||||
For the specifics on how the members of the core team and steering
|
||||
council are elected or rotated, consult L<perlgov>, which spells it all
|
||||
out in detail.
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT
|
||||
|
||||
Perl 5 is developed by a community, not a corporate entity. Every change
|
||||
contributed to the Perl core is the result of a donation. Typically, these
|
||||
donations are contributions of code or time by individual members of our
|
||||
community. On occasion, these donations come in the form of corporate
|
||||
or organizational sponsorship of a particular individual or project.
|
||||
|
||||
As a volunteer organization, the commitments we make are heavily dependent
|
||||
on the goodwill and hard work of individuals who have no obligation to
|
||||
contribute to Perl.
|
||||
|
||||
That being said, we value Perl's stability and security and have long
|
||||
had an unwritten covenant with the broader Perl community to support
|
||||
and maintain releases of Perl.
|
||||
|
||||
This document codifies the support and maintenance commitments that
|
||||
the Perl community should expect from Perl's developers:
|
||||
|
||||
=over
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
We "officially" support the two most recent stable release series. 5.26.x
|
||||
and earlier are now out of support. As of the release of 5.32.0, we will
|
||||
"officially" end support for Perl 5.28.x, other than providing security
|
||||
updates as described below.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
To the best of our ability, we will attempt to fix critical issues
|
||||
in the two most recent stable 5.x release series. Fixes for the
|
||||
current release series take precedence over fixes for the previous
|
||||
release series.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
To the best of our ability, we will provide "critical" security patches
|
||||
/ releases for any major version of Perl whose 5.x.0 release was within
|
||||
the past three years. We can only commit to providing these for the
|
||||
most recent .y release in any 5.x.y series.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
We will not provide security updates or bug fixes for development
|
||||
releases of Perl.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
We encourage vendors to ship the most recent supported release of
|
||||
Perl at the time of their code freeze.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
As a vendor, you may have a requirement to backport security fixes
|
||||
beyond our 3 year support commitment. We can provide limited support and
|
||||
advice to you as you do so and, where possible will try to apply
|
||||
those patches to the relevant -maint branches in git, though we may or
|
||||
may not choose to make numbered releases or "official" patches
|
||||
available. See L<perlsec/SECURITY VULNERABILITY CONTACT INFORMATION>
|
||||
for details on how to begin that process.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY AND DEPRECATION
|
||||
|
||||
Our community has a long-held belief that backward-compatibility is a
|
||||
virtue, even when the functionality in question is a design flaw.
|
||||
|
||||
We would all love to unmake some mistakes we've made over the past
|
||||
decades. Living with every design error we've ever made can lead
|
||||
to painful stagnation. Unwinding our mistakes is very, very
|
||||
difficult. Doing so without actively harming our users is
|
||||
nearly impossible.
|
||||
|
||||
Lately, ignoring or actively opposing compatibility with earlier versions
|
||||
of Perl has come into vogue. Sometimes, a change is proposed which
|
||||
wants to usurp syntax which previously had another meaning. Sometimes,
|
||||
a change wants to improve previously-crazy semantics.
|
||||
|
||||
Down this road lies madness.
|
||||
|
||||
Requiring end-user programmers to change just a few language constructs,
|
||||
even language constructs which no well-educated developer would ever
|
||||
intentionally use is tantamount to saying "you should not upgrade to
|
||||
a new release of Perl unless you have 100% test coverage and can do a
|
||||
full manual audit of your codebase." If we were to have tools capable of
|
||||
reliably upgrading Perl source code from one version of Perl to another,
|
||||
this concern could be significantly mitigated.
|
||||
|
||||
We want to ensure that Perl continues to grow and flourish in the coming
|
||||
years and decades, but not at the expense of our user community.
|
||||
|
||||
Existing syntax and semantics should only be marked for destruction in
|
||||
very limited circumstances. If they are believed to be very rarely used,
|
||||
stand in the way of actual improvement to the Perl language or perl
|
||||
interpreter, and if affected code can be easily updated to continue
|
||||
working, they may be considered for removal. When in doubt, caution
|
||||
dictates that we will favor backward compatibility. When a feature is
|
||||
deprecated, a statement of reasoning describing the decision process
|
||||
will be posted, and a link to it will be provided in the relevant
|
||||
perldelta documents.
|
||||
|
||||
Using a lexical pragma to enable or disable legacy behavior should be
|
||||
considered when appropriate, and in the absence of any pragma legacy
|
||||
behavior should be enabled. Which backward-incompatible changes are
|
||||
controlled implicitly by a 'use v5.x.y' is a decision which should be
|
||||
made by the steering council in consultation with the community.
|
||||
|
||||
Historically, we've held ourselves to a far higher standard than
|
||||
backward-compatibility -- bugward-compatibility. Any accident of
|
||||
implementation or unintentional side-effect of running some bit of code
|
||||
has been considered to be a feature of the language to be defended with
|
||||
the same zeal as any other feature or functionality. No matter how
|
||||
frustrating these unintentional features may be to us as we continue
|
||||
to improve Perl, these unintentional features often deserve our
|
||||
protection. It is very important that existing software written in
|
||||
Perl continue to work correctly. If end-user developers have adopted a
|
||||
bug as a feature, we need to treat it as such.
|
||||
|
||||
New syntax and semantics which don't break existing language constructs
|
||||
and syntax have a much lower bar. They merely need to prove themselves
|
||||
to be useful, elegant, well designed, and well tested. In most cases,
|
||||
these additions will be marked as I<experimental> for some time. See
|
||||
below for more on that.
|
||||
|
||||
=head2 Terminology
|
||||
|
||||
To make sure we're talking about the same thing when we discuss the removal
|
||||
of features or functionality from the Perl core, we have specific definitions
|
||||
for a few words and phrases.
|
||||
|
||||
=over
|
||||
|
||||
=item experimental
|
||||
|
||||
If something in the Perl core is marked as B<experimental>, we may change
|
||||
its behaviour, deprecate or remove it without notice. While we'll always
|
||||
do our best to smooth the transition path for users of experimental
|
||||
features, you should contact the perl5-porters mailinglist if you find
|
||||
an experimental feature useful and want to help shape its future.
|
||||
|
||||
Experimental features must be experimental in two stable releases before being
|
||||
marked non-experimental. Experimental features will only have their
|
||||
experimental status revoked when they no longer have any design-changing bugs
|
||||
open against them and when they have remained unchanged in behavior for the
|
||||
entire length of a development cycle. In other words, a feature present in
|
||||
v5.20.0 may be marked no longer experimental in v5.22.0 if and only if its
|
||||
behavior is unchanged throughout all of v5.21.
|
||||
|
||||
=item deprecated
|
||||
|
||||
If something in the Perl core is marked as B<deprecated>, we may remove it
|
||||
from the core in the future, though we might not. Generally, backward
|
||||
incompatible changes will have deprecation warnings for two release
|
||||
cycles before being removed, but may be removed after just one cycle if
|
||||
the risk seems quite low or the benefits quite high.
|
||||
|
||||
As of
|
||||
Perl 5.12, deprecated features and modules warn the user as they're used.
|
||||
When a module is deprecated, it will also be made available on CPAN.
|
||||
Installing it from CPAN will silence deprecation warnings for that module.
|
||||
|
||||
If you use a deprecated feature or module and believe that its removal from
|
||||
the Perl core would be a mistake, please contact the perl5-porters
|
||||
mailinglist and plead your case. We don't deprecate things without a good
|
||||
reason, but sometimes there's a counterargument we haven't considered.
|
||||
Historically, we did not distinguish between "deprecated" and "discouraged"
|
||||
features.
|
||||
|
||||
=item discouraged
|
||||
|
||||
From time to time, we may mark language constructs and features which we
|
||||
consider to have been mistakes as B<discouraged>. Discouraged features
|
||||
aren't currently candidates for removal, but
|
||||
we may later deprecate them if they're found to stand in the way of a
|
||||
significant improvement to the Perl core.
|
||||
|
||||
=item removed
|
||||
|
||||
Once a feature, construct or module has been marked as deprecated, we
|
||||
may remove it from the Perl core. Unsurprisingly,
|
||||
we say we've B<removed> these things. When a module is removed, it will
|
||||
no longer ship with Perl, but will continue to be available on CPAN.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 MAINTENANCE BRANCHES
|
||||
|
||||
New releases of maintenance branches should only contain changes that fall into
|
||||
one of the "acceptable" categories set out below, but must not contain any
|
||||
changes that fall into one of the "unacceptable" categories. (For example, a
|
||||
fix for a crashing bug must not be included if it breaks binary compatibility.)
|
||||
|
||||
It is not necessary to include every change meeting these criteria, and in
|
||||
general the focus should be on addressing security issues, crashing bugs,
|
||||
regressions and serious installation issues. The temptation to include a
|
||||
plethora of minor changes that don't affect the installation or execution of
|
||||
perl (e.g. spelling corrections in documentation) should be resisted in order
|
||||
to reduce the overall risk of overlooking something. The intention is to
|
||||
create maintenance releases which are both worthwhile and which users can have
|
||||
full confidence in the stability of. (A secondary concern is to avoid burning
|
||||
out the maint-release manager or overwhelming other committers voting on
|
||||
changes to be included (see L</"Getting changes into a maint branch">
|
||||
below).)
|
||||
|
||||
The following types of change may be considered acceptable, as long as they do
|
||||
not also fall into any of the "unacceptable" categories set out below:
|
||||
|
||||
=over
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that fix CVEs or security issues. These changes should
|
||||
be passed using the security reporting mechanism rather than applied
|
||||
directly; see L<perlsec/SECURITY VULNERABILITY CONTACT INFORMATION>.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that fix crashing bugs, assertion failures and
|
||||
memory corruption but which do not otherwise change perl's
|
||||
functionality or negatively impact performance.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that fix regressions in perl's behavior relative to previous
|
||||
releases, no matter how old the regression, since some people may
|
||||
upgrade from very old versions of perl to the latest version.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that fix bugs in features that were new in the corresponding 5.x.0
|
||||
stable release.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that fix anything which prevents or seriously impacts the build
|
||||
or installation of perl.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Portability fixes, such as changes to Configure and the files in
|
||||
the hints/ folder.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Minimal patches that fix platform-specific test failures.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Documentation updates that correct factual errors, explain significant
|
||||
bugs or deficiencies in the current implementation, or fix broken markup.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Updates to dual-life modules should consist of minimal patches to
|
||||
fix crashing bugs or security issues (as above). Any changes made to
|
||||
dual-life modules for which CPAN is canonical should be coordinated with
|
||||
the upstream author.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
The following types of change are NOT acceptable:
|
||||
|
||||
=over
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that break binary compatibility. (Please talk to the steering
|
||||
council.)
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that add or remove features.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches that add new warnings or errors or deprecate features.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Ports of Perl to a new platform, architecture or OS release that
|
||||
involve changes to the implementation.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
New versions of dual-life modules should NOT be imported into maint.
|
||||
Those belong in the next stable series.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
If there is any question about whether a given patch might merit
|
||||
inclusion in a maint release, then it almost certainly should not
|
||||
be included.
|
||||
|
||||
=head2 Getting changes into a maint branch
|
||||
|
||||
Historically, only the single-person project manager cherry-picked
|
||||
changes from bleadperl into maintperl. This has scaling problems. At
|
||||
the same time, maintenance branches of stable versions of Perl need to
|
||||
be treated with great care. To that end, as of Perl 5.12, we have a new
|
||||
process for maint branches.
|
||||
|
||||
Any committer may cherry-pick any commit from blead to a maint branch by
|
||||
first adding an entry to the relevant voting file in the maint-votes branch
|
||||
announcing the commit as a candidate for back-porting, and then waiting for
|
||||
at least two other committers to add their votes in support of this (i.e. a
|
||||
total of at least three votes is required before a commit may be back-ported).
|
||||
|
||||
Most of the work involved in both rounding up a suitable set of candidate
|
||||
commits and cherry-picking those for which three votes have been cast will
|
||||
be done by the maint branch release manager, but anyone else is free to add
|
||||
other proposals if they're keen to ensure certain fixes don't get overlooked
|
||||
or fear they already have been.
|
||||
|
||||
Other voting mechanisms may also be used instead (e.g. sending mail to
|
||||
perl5-porters and at least two other committers responding to the list
|
||||
giving their assent), as long as the same number of votes is gathered in a
|
||||
transparent manner. Specifically, proposals of which changes to cherry-pick
|
||||
must be visible to everyone on perl5-porters so that the views of everyone
|
||||
interested may be heard.
|
||||
|
||||
It is not necessary for voting to be held on cherry-picking perldelta
|
||||
entries associated with changes that have already been cherry-picked, nor
|
||||
for the maint-release manager to obtain votes on changes required by the
|
||||
F<Porting/release_managers_guide.pod> where such changes can be applied by
|
||||
the means of cherry-picking from blead.
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 CONTRIBUTED MODULES
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=head2 A Social Contract about Artistic Control
|
||||
|
||||
What follows is a statement about artistic control, defined as the ability
|
||||
of authors of packages to guide the future of their code and maintain
|
||||
control over their work. It is a recognition that authors should have
|
||||
control over their work, and that it is a responsibility of the rest of
|
||||
the Perl community to ensure that they retain this control. It is an
|
||||
attempt to document the standards to which we, as Perl developers, intend
|
||||
to hold ourselves. It is an attempt to write down rough guidelines about
|
||||
the respect we owe each other as Perl developers.
|
||||
|
||||
This statement is not a legal contract. This statement is not a legal
|
||||
document in any way, shape, or form. Perl is distributed under the GNU
|
||||
Public License and under the Artistic License; those are the precise legal
|
||||
terms. This statement isn't about the law or licenses. It's about
|
||||
community, mutual respect, trust, and good-faith cooperation.
|
||||
|
||||
We recognize that the Perl core, defined as the software distributed with
|
||||
the heart of Perl itself, is a joint project on the part of all of us.
|
||||
From time to time, a script, module, or set of modules (hereafter referred
|
||||
to simply as a "module") will prove so widely useful and/or so integral to
|
||||
the correct functioning of Perl itself that it should be distributed with
|
||||
the Perl core. This should never be done without the author's explicit
|
||||
consent, and a clear recognition on all parts that this means the module
|
||||
is being distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. A module author
|
||||
should realize that inclusion of a module into the Perl core will
|
||||
necessarily mean some loss of control over it, since changes may
|
||||
occasionally have to be made on short notice or for consistency with the
|
||||
rest of Perl.
|
||||
|
||||
Once a module has been included in the Perl core, however, everyone
|
||||
involved in maintaining Perl should be aware that the module is still the
|
||||
property of the original author unless the original author explicitly
|
||||
gives up their ownership of it. In particular:
|
||||
|
||||
=over
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
The version of the module in the Perl core should still be considered the
|
||||
work of the original author. All patches, bug reports, and so
|
||||
forth should be fed back to them. Their development directions
|
||||
should be respected whenever possible.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Patches may be applied by the steering council without the explicit
|
||||
cooperation of the module author if and only if they are very minor,
|
||||
time-critical in some fashion (such as urgent security fixes), or if
|
||||
the module author cannot be reached. Those patches must still be
|
||||
given back to the author when possible, and if the author decides on
|
||||
an alternate fix in their version, that fix should be strongly
|
||||
preferred unless there is a serious problem with it. Any changes not
|
||||
endorsed by the author should be marked as such, and the contributor
|
||||
of the change acknowledged.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
The version of the module distributed with Perl should, whenever
|
||||
possible, be the latest version of the module as distributed by the
|
||||
author (the latest non-beta version in the case of public Perl
|
||||
releases), although the steering council may hold off on upgrading the
|
||||
version of the module distributed with Perl to the latest version
|
||||
until the latest version has had sufficient testing.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
In other words, the author of a module should be considered to have final
|
||||
say on modifications to their module whenever possible (bearing in mind
|
||||
that it's expected that everyone involved will work together and arrive at
|
||||
reasonable compromises when there are disagreements).
|
||||
|
||||
As a last resort, however:
|
||||
|
||||
If the author's vision of the future of their module is sufficiently
|
||||
different from the vision of the steering council and perl5-porters as a
|
||||
whole so as to cause serious problems for Perl, the steering council may
|
||||
choose to formally fork the version of the module in the Perl core from the
|
||||
one maintained by the author. This should not be done lightly and
|
||||
should B<always> if at all possible be done only after direct input
|
||||
from Larry. If this is done, it must then be made explicit in the
|
||||
module as distributed with the Perl core that it is a forked version and
|
||||
that while it is based on the original author's work, it is no longer
|
||||
maintained by them. This must be noted in both the documentation and
|
||||
in the comments in the source of the module.
|
||||
|
||||
Again, this should be a last resort only. Ideally, this should never
|
||||
happen, and every possible effort at cooperation and compromise should be
|
||||
made before doing this. If it does prove necessary to fork a module for
|
||||
the overall health of Perl, proper credit must be given to the original
|
||||
author in perpetuity and the decision should be constantly re-evaluated to
|
||||
see if a remerging of the two branches is possible down the road.
|
||||
|
||||
In all dealings with contributed modules, everyone maintaining Perl should
|
||||
keep in mind that the code belongs to the original author, that they may
|
||||
not be on perl5-porters at any given time, and that a patch is not
|
||||
official unless it has been integrated into the author's copy of the
|
||||
module. To aid with this, and with points #1, #2, and #3 above, contact
|
||||
information for the authors of all contributed modules should be kept with
|
||||
the Perl distribution.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, the Perl community as a whole recognizes that respect for
|
||||
ownership of code, respect for artistic control, proper credit, and active
|
||||
effort to prevent unintentional code skew or communication gaps is vital
|
||||
to the health of the community and Perl itself. Members of a community
|
||||
should not normally have to resort to rules and laws to deal with each
|
||||
other, and this document, although it contains rules so as to be clear, is
|
||||
about an attitude and general approach. The first step in any dispute
|
||||
should be open communication, respect for opposing views, and an attempt
|
||||
at a compromise. In nearly every circumstance nothing more will be
|
||||
necessary, and certainly no more drastic measure should be used until
|
||||
every avenue of communication and discussion has failed.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 DOCUMENTATION
|
||||
|
||||
Perl's documentation is an important resource for our users. It's
|
||||
incredibly important for Perl's documentation to be reasonably coherent
|
||||
and to accurately reflect the current implementation.
|
||||
|
||||
Just as P5P collectively maintains the codebase, we collectively
|
||||
maintain the documentation. Writing a particular bit of documentation
|
||||
doesn't give an author control of the future of that documentation.
|
||||
At the same time, just as source code changes should match the style
|
||||
of their surrounding blocks, so should documentation changes.
|
||||
|
||||
Examples in documentation should be illustrative of the concept
|
||||
they're explaining. Sometimes, the best way to show how a
|
||||
language feature works is with a small program the reader can
|
||||
run without modification. More often, examples will consist
|
||||
of a snippet of code containing only the "important" bits.
|
||||
The definition of "important" varies from snippet to snippet.
|
||||
Sometimes it's important to declare C<use strict> and C<use warnings>,
|
||||
initialize all variables and fully catch every error condition.
|
||||
More often than not, though, those things obscure the lesson
|
||||
the example was intended to teach.
|
||||
|
||||
As Perl is developed by a global team of volunteers, our
|
||||
documentation often contains spellings which look funny
|
||||
to I<somebody>. Choice of American/British/Other spellings
|
||||
is left as an exercise for the author of each bit of
|
||||
documentation. When patching documentation, try to emulate
|
||||
the documentation around you, rather than changing the existing
|
||||
prose.
|
||||
|
||||
In general, documentation should describe what Perl does "now" rather
|
||||
than what it used to do. It's perfectly reasonable to include notes
|
||||
in documentation about how behaviour has changed from previous releases,
|
||||
but, with very few exceptions, documentation isn't "dual-life" --
|
||||
it doesn't need to fully describe how all old versions used to work.
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 STANDARDS OF CONDUCT
|
||||
|
||||
The official forum for the development of perl is the perl5-porters mailing
|
||||
list, mentioned above, and its bugtracker at GitHub. Posting to the
|
||||
list and the bugtracker is not a right: all participants in discussion are
|
||||
expected to adhere to a standard of conduct.
|
||||
|
||||
=over 4
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Always be civil.
|
||||
|
||||
=item *
|
||||
|
||||
Heed the moderators.
|
||||
|
||||
=back
|
||||
|
||||
Civility is simple: stick to the facts while avoiding demeaning remarks,
|
||||
belittling other individuals, sarcasm, or a presumption of bad faith. It is
|
||||
not enough to be factual. You must also be civil. Responding in kind to
|
||||
incivility is not acceptable. If you relay otherwise-unposted comments to
|
||||
the list from a third party, you take responsibility for the content of
|
||||
those comments, and you must therefore ensure that they are civil.
|
||||
|
||||
While civility is required, kindness is encouraged; if you have any doubt about
|
||||
whether you are being civil, simply ask yourself, "Am I being kind?" and aspire
|
||||
to that.
|
||||
|
||||
If the list moderators tell you that you are not being civil, carefully
|
||||
consider how your words have appeared before responding in any way. Were they
|
||||
kind? You may protest, but repeated protest in the face of a repeatedly
|
||||
reaffirmed decision is not acceptable. Repeatedly protesting about the
|
||||
moderators' decisions regarding a third party is also unacceptable, as is
|
||||
continuing to initiate off-list contact with the moderators about their
|
||||
decisions.
|
||||
|
||||
Unacceptable behavior will result in a public and clearly identified
|
||||
warning. A second instance of unacceptable behavior from the same
|
||||
individual will result in removal from the mailing list and GitHub issue
|
||||
tracker, for a period of one calendar month. The rationale for this is to
|
||||
provide an opportunity for the person to change the way they act.
|
||||
|
||||
After the time-limited ban has been lifted, a third instance of
|
||||
unacceptable behavior will result in a further public warning. A fourth
|
||||
or subsequent instance will result in an indefinite ban. The rationale
|
||||
is that, in the face of an apparent refusal to change behavior, we must
|
||||
protect other community members from future unacceptable actions. The
|
||||
moderators may choose to lift an indefinite ban if the person in
|
||||
question affirms they will not transgress again.
|
||||
|
||||
Removals, like warnings, are public.
|
||||
|
||||
The list of moderators will be public knowledge. At present, it is:
|
||||
Karen Etheridge, Ricardo Signes, Sawyer X,
|
||||
Steffen Müller, Todd Rinaldo, Aaron Crane.
|
||||
|
||||
=head1 CREDITS
|
||||
|
||||
"Social Contract about Contributed Modules" originally by Russ Allbery E<lt>rra@stanford.eduE<gt> and the perl5-porters.
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user