+1

Regards
Felix

> Am 17.11.2016 um 07:22 schrieb Sam Ruby <ru...@intertwingly.net>:
> 
> Now that the discussion thread on the OpenWhisk Proposal has died
> down, please take a moment to vote on accepting OpenWhisk into the
> Apache Incubator.
> 
> The ASF voting rules are described at:
>   http://www.apache.org/foundation/voting.html
> 
> A vote for accepting a new Apache Incubator podling is a majority vote
> for which only Incubator PMC member votes are binding.
> 
> Votes from other people are also welcome as an indication of peoples
> enthusiasm (or lack thereof).
> 
> Please do not use this VOTE thread for discussions.
> If needed, start a new thread instead.
> 
> This vote will run for at least 72 hours. Please VOTE as follows
> [] +1 Accept OpenWhisk into the Apache Incubator
> [] +0 Abstain.
> [] -1 Do not accept OpenWhisk into the Apache Incubator because ...
> 
> The proposal is listed below, but you can also access it on the wiki:
>   https://wiki.apache.org/incubator/OpenWhiskProposal
> 
> - Sam Ruby
> 
> = OpenWhisk Proposal =
> 
> OpenWhisk is an open source, distributed Serverless computing platform
> able to execute application logic (Actions) in response to events
> (Triggers) from external sources (Feeds) or HTTP requests governed by
> conditional logic (Rules). It provides a programming environment
> supported by a REST API-based Command Line Interface (CLI) along with
> tooling to support packaging and catalog services.
> 
> Champion: Sam Ruby, IBM
> 
> Mentors:
> * Felix Meschberger, Adobe
> * Isabel Drost-Fromm, Elasticsearch GmbH
> * Sergio Fernández, Redlink GmbH
> 
> == Background ==
> 
> Serverless computing is the evolutionary next stage in Cloud computing
> carrying further the abstraction offered to software developers using
> Container-based operating system virtualization. The Serverless
> paradigm enables programmers to just “write” functional code and not
> worry about having to configure any aspect of a server needed for
> execution. Such Serverless functions are single purpose and stateless
> that respond to event-driven data sources and can be scaled on-demand.
> 
> The OpenWhisk project offers a truly open, highly scalable, performant
> distributed Serverless platform leveraging other open technologies
> along with a robust programming model, catalog of service and event
> provider integrations and developer tooling.
> Specifically, every architectural component service of the OpenWhisk
> platform (e.g., Controller, Invokers, Messaging, Router, Catalog, API
> Gateway, etc.) all is designed to be run and scaled as a Docker
> container. In addition, OpenWhisk uniquely leverages aspects of Docker
> engine to manage, load balance and scale supported OpenWhisk runtime
> environments (e.g., JavaScript, Python, Swift, Java, etc.), that run
> Serverless functional code within Invoker compute instances, using
> Docker containers.
> 
> OpenWhisk's containerized design tenants not only allows it to be
> hosted in various IaaS, PaaS Clouds platforms that support Docker
> containers, but also achieves the high expectation of the Serverless
> computing experience by masking all aspects of traditional resource
> specification and configuration from the end user simplifying and
> accelerating Cloud application development.
> In order to enable HTTP requests as a source of events, and thus the
> creation of Serverless microservices that expose REST APIs, OpenWhisk
> includes an API Gateway that performs tasks like security, request
> routing, throttling, and logging.
> 
> == Rationale ==
> 
> Serverless computing is in the very early stages of the technology
> adoption curve and has great promise in enabling new paradigms in
> event-driven application development, but current implementation
> efforts are fractured as most are tied to specific Cloud platforms and
> services. Having an open implementation of a Serverless platform, such
> as OpenWhisk, available and governed by an open community like Apache
> could accelerate growth of this technology, as well as encourage
> dialog and interoperability.
> 
> Having the ASF accept and incubate OpenWhisk would provide a clear
> signal to developers interested in Serverless and its future that they
> are welcome to participate and contribute in its development, growth
> and governance.
> 
> In addition, there are numerous projects already at the ASF that would
> provide a natural fit to the API-centric, event-driven programming
> model that OpenWhisk sees as integral to a Serverless future. In fact,
> any project that includes a service that can produce or consume
> actionable events could become an integration point with
> OpenWhisk-enabled functions. Apache projects that manage programming
> languages and (micro) service runtimes could become part of the
> OpenWhisk set of supported runtime environments for functions. Device
> and API gateways would provide natural event sources that could
> utilize OpenWhisk functions to process, store and analyze vast amounts
> of information immediately unlocking the potential of fast-growing
> computing fields offered in spaces as IoT, analytics, cognitive,
> mobile and more.
> 
> == Initial Goals ==
> 
> OpenWhisk is an open source community project which seeks to adopt the
> Apache way through the course of the incubator process and foster
> collaborative development in the Serverless space.
> 
> Currently, the OpenWhisk project's source repository is in GitHub
> using its associated project tooling, but we believe the open Apache
> processes, democratic project governance, along with its rich
> developer community and natural integrations with existing projects
> provide the ideal fit for the technology to grow.
> 
> Serverless will only reach its full potential and avoid fragmentation
> if it is grown in an environment that Apache can offer.
> 
> == Current Status ==
> 
> The OpenWhisk project was published as an open source project within
> GitHub (https://github.com/openwhisk) under the Apache v2.0 license in
> February 2016. The project consists of the “core” platform repository
> (https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk) code along with its family of
> repositories that include a “catalog” of OpenWhisk system and utility
> packages.
> 
> The project also includes repositories for:
> 
> *  JavaScript and Swift SDKs for client integration
> *  Docker SDK for user-created “blackbox” (Action) runtimes
> *  Graphical Command Line Tutorial (using NodeJS)
> *  Packages for popular service integrations (i.e., JIRA, Twilio,
> Slack, Kafka, RSS, etc.)
> 
> Issue tracking and project governance (milestones, epics) are also
> managed through GitHub Issues and visualized through ZenHub. All
> “pull” requests, once passing automated tests run by TravisCI, are
> reviewed by “core” contributors with “write” privileges. IBM has also
> setup private staging servers to “stress” test the platform
> performance under load and over extended periods of time before being
> merged into the main code branch. As part of the incubation process we
> would make these staging tests public and have them be run by Apache.
> 
> Currently, the project is not officially versioned and is considered
> an “experimental beta”, but is marching towards milestone 10 that
> aligns with what is considered to be a “beta” the end of October and
> another milestone 11 end of November 2016 which is considered “GA”
> content for the “core” platform. Again, we would very much like to
> adopt an Apache community system for deciding on milestones,
> constituent epics (features) along with dates a versioning plan and
> communicate effectively using email lists, IRC and a project homepage
> (which is currently lacking).
> 
> In addition to the OpenWhisk core runtime, IBM and Adobe plan to
> collaborate and contribute to the API Gateway component under an open
> framework with the Apache community. The API Gateway Framework
> component would provide essential support for a Serverless environment
> including container services, platform services and traditional
> runtimes and provides functionality for API security, request
> validation, request routing, rate limiting, logging, caching and load
> balancing.
> 
> == Meritocracy ==
> 
> The OpenWhisk project firmly believes in meritocracy from its
> inception. Issue, Feature and code submissions, to fix, improve or
> optimize the platform code, tooling and documentation, as well as
> contributions of new SDKs, Packages, Tutorials, etc. have all been
> welcomed after successful community input, consultation and testing.
> Contributions can be made by anyone as long as integration and staging
> (including stress and performance) tests pass. We are looking forward
> to talented individuals to progress the success of OpenWhisk and an
> open Serverless ecosystem surrounding it. It would be a pleasure to
> invite strong contributors to become committers in the project areas
> where they have shown a consistent track record.
> 
> == Community ==
> 
> OpenWhisk has made significant effort to build a community using all
> possible media and social outlets as possible, always asking for
> interested developers to join and contribute.
> 
> The following outlets have been created to engage the public in as
> many ways as we could conceive. Every single of these sources is
> monitored continually via OpenWhisk code that triggers events and
> messages to appropriate developer Slack channels where we seek to
> respond and engage as quickly as we can.
> 
> *  Twitter: https://twitter.com/openwhisk
> *  Slack: https://dwopen.slack.com/messages/openwhisk/
> *  StackOverflow: http://stackoverflow.com/search?q=OpenWhisk
> *  dwAnswers (developerWorks):
> https://developer.ibm.com/answers/smartspace/open/
> *  Blog site: https://developer.ibm.com/openwhisk/blogs/
> *  Google group: https://groups.google.com/forum/ - !forum/openwhisk
> 
> IBM has sought to promote OpenWhisk at every logical event worldwide
> where we are able.
> 
>    Events and Meetups:
>        20+ past events, 6 planned through YE 2016 (across 12 countries)
>        Event calendar: https://developer.ibm.com/openwhisk/events/
>    Stats (GitHub):
>        43+ contributors: https://github.com/orgs/openwhisk/people
>        Contribution Graphs:
> https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk/graphs/contributors
>    Stars:
>        623 (and growing ~10-20 per week on average):
> https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk/stargazers
> 
> == Core Developers ==
> 
> The following core developers, along with their credentials, are
> proposed; each have been committers within OpenWhisk since its initial
> development:
> 
> *  Stephen Fink, sjf...@us.ibm.com, original project architect
> *  Rodric Rabbah,  rab...@us.ibm.com, project's developer who has
> deepest knowledge who has been with the project since its inception.
> *  Markus Thommes, markus.thoem...@de.ibm.com, project build and
> deployment expert for all roles and environments (Mac, Linux, etc.
> either local/distributed).
> *  Jeremias Werner, jerew...@de.ibm.com, tooling and integration
> expert.  Understands all the build and runtime dependencies / external
> projects OpenWhisk relies upon.
> *  Perry Cheng, pe...@us.ibm.com, Performance and stress testing guru.
> 
> == Alignment ==
> 
> We have looked, from the earliest days of developing OpenWhisk, at
> Apache as a model for building a strong developer community and worked
> to adopt its spirit and its best practices.  From the outset, we have
> wished to have enough interest and momentum in order to have a robust
> pool of developers in order to adopt an Apache governance model for
> meritorious acknowledgement of committer and core contributors who can
> bring external knowledge to further grow the project.
> 
> We see immediate chances to leverage Apache projects such as Kafka,
> Camel, MQTT, ApacheMQ, etc. Wherever there is a collector, funnel or
> router of message data that can directly or indirectly generate
> events, we intend to link to OpenWhisk as an even provider. These and
> other projects are listed below and are just, we hope, “scratching the
> surface” of integration points for Serverless enabled applications.
> 
> In addition, we should note that we see immediate interest in
> leveraging the Apache relationship with the Linux foundation to
> integrate with the OpenAPI specification (f.k.a., Swagger) and seek to
> standardize API gateways that follow that spec. to formalize endpoints
> for services that can produce events.
> 
> = Known Risks =
> 
> == Orphaned products ==
> 
> OpenWhisk and its initial group of committers along with the community
> currently supporting the project will continue to promote and look for
> ways to engage new developers and provide linkage to other compatible
> open source projects. Serverless computing has a significant future in
> Cloud computing and an open source implementation of a platform, as
> OpenWhisk embodies, must success to provide competition and
> interoperability and provide a rich foundation for new Serverless
> technologies to rely upon.
> 
> == Inexperience with Open Source ==
> 
> OpenWhisk, as you can deduce from its name, has been an open source
> project from its public debut in February 2016.  As soon as a the
> initial code, developed within IBM research, was viable and provided
> the functionality expected of a Serverless platform, the project team
> open sourced it and sought to build an open community to evolve it.
> Most all current all current project team members have strong
> experience developing within open source projects with meritorious
> governance models. In fact, several of the current team members are
> committers on other Apache projects and are excited to reach out to
> and align with other project communities within Apache.
> 
> == Homogenous Developers ==
> 
> The current list of committers includes developers from two different
> companies. The current set of committers are geographically
> distributed across the U.S., Europe and China. All committers are
> experienced with working in a distributed environment and utilize many
> messaging and collaboration tools to continually communicate with each
> effectively to develop and review code regardless of location.
> 
> Additionally, the current project members are very focused on
> addressing comments, feedback and issue or feature requests as soon as
> we are able. In fact, we utilize OpenWhisk itself to intelligently
> notify project developers with the correct knowledge or expertise of
> any public posting to any community outlets (listed above).
> 
> == Reliance on Salaried Developers ==
> 
> All of the initial developers are currently salaried by either IBM or
> Adobe. With increasing awareness and interest in Serverless
> technologies, we expect this to change due to the addition of
> volunteer contributors.  We intend to promote and encourage
> participation whenever interest is shown in the project to build a
> robust community.
> 
> == Relationships with Other Apache Products ==
> 
> Some possible project intersections or potential connections are
> listed below.  We hope to identify many others through the course of
> incubation.
> 
>  * Kafka, http://kafka.apache.org/project, OpenWhisk has plans to use
> Kafka for an intelligent “message hub” service that can channel events
> to OpenWhisk triggers.
>  * Camel, http://camel.apache.org/message-bus.html, Any message bus
> naturally carries message data that may carry events directly or be
> used indirectly to derive events that developers can link to OpenWhisk
> actions.
>  * ActiveMQ, http://activemq.apache.org/, Again, a widely used
> message server, that supports MQTT and AMQP, which can provide trusted
> event data to OpenWhisk.
> 
> Some additional projects we would like to explore any connection with include:
> 
>  * CouchDB,  https://projects.apache.org/project.html?couchdb:
> OpenWhisk already supports use of CouchDB for its own storage needs
> (Actions, Bindings, etc.); however, there may be more integrations
> possible  as we develop a package manifest  to describe OpenWhisk
> entities reposited in document stores as pseudo-catalogs.
>  * Mesos, https://projects.apache.org/project.html?mesos: in effect,
> OpenWhisk also manages a “pool of nodes” that can run various Actions
> (functions). It would be interesting to see if any overlap or sharing
> of node resources could be achieved.
>  * Spark, https://projects.apache.org/project.html?spark : As with
> Mesos, OpenWhisk nodes could be leveraged to perform distributed
> data-processing with Spark.
> 
> and many others that we hope the community will help identify and
> prioritize for development work.
> 
> == An Excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand ==
> 
> The developers of OpenWhisk share a high appreciation of the Apache
> Software Foundation, and many have been active as users, contributors
> or committers to other Apache projects.
> 
> The main expectation for the developers is not the Apache brand, but
> the project governance and best practices established by the ASF,
> access to the Apache community and support and mentorship through
> senior Apache members.
> 
> == Documentation ==
> 
> OpenWhisk offers a comprehensive set of documentation (primarily in
> Markdown) for all parts of the project from installation and
> deployment (locally, remotely, distributed) on various platforms in
> order to get developers “up and running” as quickly as possible on
> multiple platforms (Mac, Windows, Ubuntu). In addition, OpenWhisk goes
> to great links to document its architecture and programming model and
> provide guided tutorials for the CLI. All SDKs and Packages that can
> be installed, besides installation and use cases descriptions, often
> include videos and blogs. OpenWhisk is dedicated to providing the best
> documentation possible and even has volunteers’ submissions for
> translations in some areas.
> 
> == Initial Source ==
> 
> The project is comprised of multiple repositories all under the
> primary openwhisk name. All initial source that would be moved under
> Apache control can be found in GitHub (by repository) here:
> 
>  * Primary Repositories:
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk
>            primary source code repository including run books, tests.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-catalog
>            Catalog of built-in system, utility, test and sample
> Actions, Feeds and provider integration services and catalog packaging
> tooling.
>  * Client (SDK) repos.:
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-client-js
>            JavaScript (JS) client library for the OpenWhisk platform.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-client-swift
>            Swift-based client SDK for OpenWhisk compatible with Swift
> 2.x and runs on iOS 9, WatchOS 2, and Darwin.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-podspecs
>            CocoaPods Podspecs repo for ‘openwhisk-client-swift’.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-sdk-docker
>            This is an SDK that shows how to create “Black box” Docker
> containers that can run Action (code).
>  * Package repos.:
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-pushnotifications
>             In-progress, Push notifications to registered devices.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-twilio
>            In-progress, Integration with Twilio.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-jira
>            In-progress, Integration with JIRA events.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-rss
>            Integration with RSS feeds.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-kafka
>            New, In-progress, Integration with Kafka
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-slackbot-poc
>            In-progress, deploy a Slackbot with the capability to run
> OpenWhisk actions
>  * Ecosystem repos.:
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-tutorial
>            Place to submit interactive tutorials for OpenWhisk, its
> CLI and packages. Currently, contains Javascript-based tutorial for
> learning the OpenWhisk CLI.
>        https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-vscode
>            This is a prototype extension for Visual Studio Code that
> enables complete round trip cycles for authoring OpenWhisk actions
> inside the editor.
>  * API Gateway Framework repositories:
> 
>        There are existing discussions between IBM and Adobe about
> creating a comprehensive API Gateway Framework that can support
> community contributions. We plan to move these discussions into the
> Apache community and invite participation in shaping this framework to
> ensure the best possible solution for Serverless.  At this time, the
> existing Adobe API Gateway provides a valuable set of modularized
> components that will be part of this framework and the initial
> submission:
> 
>        https://github.com/adobe-apiplatform/apigateway
>            The main API Gateway repository containing basic
> configuration files and a Dockerfile to build all modules into a
> single container.
> 
>        Under this repository, you will find complete and conformant
> code modules for the following functions:
>            * Request Validation (e.g., OAuth, API-KEY) and tracking,
>            * Configuration syncing with multiple Cloud storage solutions,
>            * API Request Caching and Mgmt.,
>            * Asynchronous logging (API traffic),
>            * ZeroMQ adapter with logger,
>            * NGINX extensions (i.e., AWS SDK)
>            * HMAC support for Lua (multiple algorithms, via OpenSSL)
> 
>        During the incubation, this code will likely be restructured
> to accommodate additional code from other sources as agreed to by
> Apache and the PPMC.
> 
> = Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan =
> 
> == External Dependencies ==
> 
> The OpenWhisk project code, documentation, samples (for all
> repositories) have been fully authored under the Apache 2 license with
> a comprehensive CLA requirements enforced for all committers from its
> inception. The code has been fully screened and evaluated to assure
> its code consists of original contributions not encumbered by any
> license that would be incompatible with Apache.
> 
> openwhisk-openwhisk
> 
> This repository is the primary repository for the OpenWhisk platform;
> it contains the implementations for all its component services, CLI
> and tooling.
> 
> * tooling and runtime dependencies:
>       Note: all dependencies are to latest version unless noted otherwise.
> 
> * Build and Deployment Tooling:
>        ansiblev2.* : GNU GPL
>            Primary Runbook (playbooks) tooling for deployment with
> configurations for multiple target environments (ppa:ansible/ansible).
> Installed by ansible.sh.
>        git : GPL 2
>            Command line for automation of “pulling” OpenWhisk
> repositories’ code from Git repos.  Installed by misc.sh.
>        zip : Info-ZIP (BSD style)
>            Tooling for decompressing files packaged in compressed ZIP
> format. Installed by misc.sh.
>        python-pip : MIT
>            Python installer. Installed by pip.sh
>        jsonschema : MIT
>            Python Library. JSON schema validation. Installed by pip.sh
>        argcomplete  : Apache
>            Python Library. Bash tab completion for ‘argparse’.
> Installed by pip.sh
>        oracle-java8-installer : Oracle Binary Code
>            Oracle Java 8 Installer (Ubuntu PPA archive), Installed by java8.sh
>        software-properties-common : GNU GPL v2
>            Manage your own PPAs for use with Ubuntu APT. Installed by
> ansible.sh
>        gradle 3.0: Apache 2
>            Build tool.
>        gradle-wrapper.jar : Apache 2
>            Gradle wrapper tool. Installed by gradle-wrapper.properties
>        One-JAR : One-JAR license (BSD-style)
>            package a Java application together with its dependency
> Jars into a single executable Jar file. Used by
> core/javaAction/proxy/build.gradle
>        npm  : Artistic License 2.0
>            Node Package Manager (NPM), core/nodejs6Action/Dockerfile
>    Application Services:
>        docker-engine, v1.9, moving to v1.12 : Apache 2
>            Runtime for Docker containers. Installed by docker.sh.
>        docker-py v1.9, Apache 2
>            Python API client. Installed by ansible.sh.
>        ntp : NTP (BSD 3-clause)
>            Network Time Protocol service started to sync.
> peer-computer times.  Note: UTC is default for all hosts.  Installed
> by misc.sh.
>        CouchDB : Apache 2
>            JSON document database. Vagrant / User installed.
>        Consul v0.5.2 : Mozilla v2
>            Consul Key-value data store. Installed by
> services/consul/Dockerfile.
>   * Runtime Libraries:
>        Scala v2.11 : Scala (3-clause BSD)
>            Primary language for OpenWhisk.  Specifically:
> org.scala-lang:scala-library, 2.11.6. Installed by scala.sh,
> (referenced by build.gradle).
>        Node v0.12.14: MIT
>            Node JavaScript Runtime. It also includes many NPM
> libraries. See core/nodejsAction/Dockerfile for a complete/current
> list.
>        Node v6.2: MIT
>            The NodeJS6 Runtime. It also includes many NPM libraries.
> See core/nodejs6Action/Dockerfile for a complete/current list.
>        Python Runtime, v2.7 (Python Std. Library) : Python
>            Python based Docker Images are used in a few places. For
> example, see core/ActionProxy/Dockerfile.  In addition, it is
> referenced by the Python CLI which is being deprecated as it is being
> replaced by a Go language CLI.
>        Java 8 JRE : Oracle
>            Java Language Runtime (Oracle Java 8 JDK). Referenced by
> common/scala/Dockerfile, core/javaAction/Dockerfile,
> services/consul/.classpath.
>        Akka 2.47 Libraries for Scala 2.11 : Apache 2
>            Specifically, the following: “com.typesafe.akka:” modules
> are used: akka-actor, akka-slf4j, akka-http-core,
> akka-http-spray-json-experimental. Installed by build.gradle.
>        argcomplete : Apache
>            Python library. Bash tab completion for argparse.
> Installed by tools/ubuntu-setup/pip.sh.
>        httplib : Python
>            Python library. HTTP protocol client. Installed by .
>        jsonschema : MIT
>            Python library. Installed by tools/ubuntu-setup/pip.sh.
>        spray (source) : Apache 2
>            Scala libraries for building/consuming RESTful web
> services on top of Akka. Installed by build.gradle. Specifically but
> not limited to: spray-caching, spray-json, spray-can, spray-client,
> spray-httpx, spray-io, spray-routing.
>        log4j:log4j:1.2.16
>            Java logging library. Installed by build.gradle.
>        org.apache.* Libraries : Apache 2
>            Including: org.apache.commons.*.
> org.apache.zookeeper:zookeeper, org.apache.kafka:kafka-clients,
> org.apache.httpcomponents:httpclient. See build.gradle for current
> list and versions.
>            Including low level HTTP transport component libraries:
> org.apache.http.*, org.apache.httpcomponents:
>            httpclient, . See whisk/common for current list and versions.
>            org.apache.jute.compiler.JString
>        urlparse : Python
>            Python library for URL string parsing. Referenced by
> tools/cli/wskutil.py
>            tools/build/citool.
>        swagger-ui 2.1.4 : Apache 2 * atypical license text
>            Collection of HTML, Javascript, and CSS assets that
> dynamically generate documentation from a Swagger-compliant API.  See
> core/controller/Dockerfile.
>    Optional Services and Tooling:
>        Cloudant : Apache 2
>            (Optional) Database service.  User may connect to instance
> from README.  CouchDB can be used otherwise.
>        Eclipse IDE : Eclipse Public License (EPL)
>            Tooling, IDE. (Optional). OpenWhisk supplies a .project
> and .pydevproject files for the Eclipse IDE.
>        emacs  : Emacs GPL
>            Tooling, Editor. (Optional) Installs Emacs editor.
> Installed by emacs.sh.
>  * Swift3 Runtime Dependencies:
>        The following Python libraries are installed in the
> core/swift3Action/Dockerfile:
>        Python 2.7 : Python
>            Python Std. Library.
>        python-gevent : MIT
>            Python proxy support.
>        python-distribute : PSF (or ZPL)
>             Supports the download, build, install, upgrade, uninstall
> of Python packages. See: http://pythonhosted.org/distribute. Note:
> this is a fork of: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools.
>        python-pip : MIT
>            PyPA recommended tool for installing Python packages.
>        python-flask : BSD
>            Python proxy support.
>        clang  : NCSA Open Source
>            'C' Library. Apple compiler front-end for ‘C’ (LLVM back-end).
>        libedit-dev  : BSD (3-clause)
>            Linux, BSD editline and hostry library.
>        libxml2-dev : MIT
>            Linux, Gnome XML library.
>        libicu52  : Unicode
>            Linux, Unicode support library.
>        Kitura : Apache 2
>            Web framework and web server that is created for web
> services written in Swift.
>        Kitura dependencies : BSD (BSD-like)
>            Linux libraries including: autoconf, libtool,
> libkqueue-dev, libkqueue0, libdispatch-dev, libdispatch0,
> libcurl4-openssl-dev, libbsd-dev.
>        apple/swift-corelibs-libdispatch : Apache 2
>            Enables Swift code execution on multicore hardware.
> 
> Adobe-API-Platform
> 
>        Openresty - Licensed under the 2-clause BSD license -
> https://github.com/openresty/ngx_openresty#copyright--license
>        NGINX License - http://nginx.org/LICENSE
>        Luajit - MIT License - http://luajit.org/luajit.html
>        PCRE - BSD license - http://www.pcre.org/licence.txt
>        NAXSI: GPL - is not compiled with the Gateway API code.
> Instead The API Gateway project contains instructions for developers
> on where to get NAXSI code (under GPL)
>        ZeroMQ / ØMQ - Linked Dynamically in separate module
>        libzmq - LGPL license with SPECIAL EXCEPTION GRANTED BY
> COPYRIGHT HOLDERS - https://github.com/zeromq/libzmq
>        czmq - High Level C binding for libzmq - MPL v2 license
> https://github.com/zeromq/czmq
> 
> 
> == Trademarks ==
> 
> IBM is pursuing trademarking of the OpenWhisk name in the following
> jurisdictions: Canada, France, WIPO (i.e., Australia, China, CTM
> (EUIPO), India, Mexico, Russian Federation, Switzerland, United States
> of America). IBM plans to transfer all filings and trademark ownership
> to ASF.
> 
> == Cryptography ==
> 
> Please note that the file
> https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk/blob/master/common/scala/src/main/scala/whisk/common/Crypt.scala
> makes use of the Java javax.crypto.* libraries to implement
> encrypt/decrypt functions. Primarily this is used to encrypt/decrypt
> user keys or secrets when being passed or stored between or by
> OpenWhisk components.
> 
> In addition, the API Gateway modules (api-gateway-hmac) relies on
> OpenSSL (openssl/evp.h, openssl/hmac.h).
> 
> == Required Resources ==
> 
> Resources that infrastructure will be asked to supply for this project.
> 
> Over the course of the incubator we would like to develop staging and
> playground server environments for testing and developer experience.
> The following environment would be desirable for an initial staging
> (and separate playground):
> 
> *  CI Test Cluster requirements:
>        3 VMs, Catalog (CouchDB/Cloudant), Router (Nginx), Registry
>        2 VMs, Master (Controller + Consul), Message Bus (Kafka)
>        10 VMs, Invokers
>        Each VM assumes 4 CPUs, 8GB Memory, 80GB additional storage
> *  Mechanics:
>        Scripts that invoke Ansible playbooks for build, deploy (run)
> and clean are provided.
>        The various architectural components are started via Docker
> containers (either natively, within a single Vagrant VM, or across
> multiple, designated VM roles) using user configured (or defaulted)
> endpoints and (guest) authorization credentials.
>        In addition, the user/developer may choose to use the default
> ephemeral CouchDB (via Docker container) for the OpenWhisk catalog or
> switch to use a native CouchDB or a remote Cloudant database.
> 
> In addition, we would like to host a VM with a Node.js server that
> provides Command Line Tutorials, along with demo samples.
> 
> == Mailing lists ==
> 
> Initially, we would start with the following recommended initial
> podling mailing lists:
> 
>    priv...@openwhisk.incubator.apache.org,
>    dev@{podling}.incubator.apache.org
> 
> We would add more as we transition off exiting mailings lists and
> through the course of incubation.
> 
> == Git Repository ==
> 
> As a community we would like to keep the master repository as well as
> issue tracking on GitHub. We will be working closely with ASF Infra.
> team to implement all the required pieces like ensure to send push and
> issue notifications through ASF controlled mailing lists. During
> incubation we will work closely with Infra to support GitHub master
> repositories. We also understand that we have to support a way of
> providing patches, which does not require a GitHub account for
> contributors who are not willing or not able abide by GitHub’s terms
> and conditions. It is our understanding that this approach has been
> signed off by Greg Stein, ASF’s Infrastructure Administrator.
>  gstein sez: the podling can only graduate within an approved
> repository system. The IPMC may have a differing opinion, but from an
> Infra perspective: the OpenWhisk podling can continue with their usage
> of a GitHub repository, but faces a clear obstacle: GitHub "as master
> [as allowed by the Foundation]" must be approved and working before
> the graduation, or they must migrate their primary to the Foundation's
> Git repository (at git-wip) before they graduate.
> 
> If we need to adapt our repo. paths to conform to Apache guidelines
> (and perhaps necessitated by a move the the Apache named repo.) It is
> conventional to use all lower case, dash-separated (-) repository
> names. The repository should be prefixed with incubator and later
> renamed assuming the project is promoted to a TLP.
> 
> If we need to move the project codebase from its existing GitHub repo.
> as part of incubation, we would like to preserve the directory names
> as they appear today and adopt the “apache” as part of the URI path as
> we have seen other projects adopt.
> 
> This would mean all existing repositories which are now of the form:
> 
> *  https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk
> *  https://github.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-catalog
> *  https://githun.com/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-rss
> *  etc.
> 
> would now take the form:
> 
> *  https://github.com/apache/openwhisk/openwhisk
> *  https://github.com/apache/openwhisk/openwhisk-catalog
> *  https://githun.com/apache/openwhisk/openwhisk-package-rss
> *  and so on ...
> 
> == Issue Tracking ==
> 
> We would like to explore the possibility of continuing to use GitHub
> issue tracking (as project milestones, epics and features are all
> nicely tracked via ZenHub boards) as we understand that this may now
> be possible. We will provide any linkage or support for JIRA issue
> tracking if that is required in order to track any “pull” requests
> within GitHub.
> 
> == Other Resources ==
> 
> We would like to preserve our existing automated TravisCI automated
> testing from GitHub. The project uses a continuous CD/CI process
> currently that we would like to continue to support via multiple
> stages that run progressive stress and performance tests that are also
> automated.
> 
> == Initial Committers ==
> 
> The following is the proposed list of initial committers, email
> address [, GitHub ID)]:
> 
> *  Bertrand Delacretaz, bdelacre...@apache.org, bdelacretaz
> *  Carlos Santana,  csant...@us.ibm.com, csantanapr
> *  Carsten Ziegeler, cziege...@apache.org, cziegeler
> *  Chetan Mehrotra, chet...@adobe.com, chetanmeh
> *  Christian Bickel, cbic...@de.ibm.com, christianbickel
> *  Daisy Guo, guoyi...@cn.ibm.com, daisy-ycguo
> *  David Liu, david....@cn.ibm.com, lzbj
> *  Dragos Dascalita Haut, ddas...@adobe.com, ddragosd
> *  Jeremias Werner, jerew...@de.ibm.com, jeremiaswerner
> *  Markus Thommes, markus.thoem...@de.ibm.com, markusthoemmes
> *  Matt Rutkowski, mrutk...@us.ibm.com, mrutkows
> *  Nicholas Speeter, nwspe...@us.ibm.com, nwspeete-ibm
> *  Paul Castro, cast...@us.ibm.com, paulcastro
> *  Perry Cheng, pe...@us.ibm.com, perryibm
> *  Philippe Sutor, psu...@us.ibm.com, psutor
> *  Rodric Rabbah, rab...@us.ibm.com, rabbah
> * Sergio Fernández, wik...@apache.org, wikier
> *  Stephen Fink, sjf...@us.ibm.com, sjfink
> *  Tony Ffrench, tffre...@us.ibm.com, tonyfrench
> *  Vincent Hou, s...@us.ibm.com, houshengbo
> * Edward J. Yoon, edward.y...@samsung.com, edwardyoon
> 
> Although this list of initial committers appears long, OpenWhisk is a
> complete platform which consists of many services supporting many
> environments, programming languages and integrations. This diversity
> in needs is reflected by the size of the initial committers group.
> OpenWhisk also supports an end user ecosystem including CLI, Tooling,
> Package Catalog, “curated” Packages, samples, etc. along with the
> intention of tying in API gateway (e.g., OpenAPI) and other event
> source integrations.
> 
> We hope to add many more committers who provide expertise and the
> various areas OpenWhisk uses to efficiently provide an exceptional
> Serverless platform with compelling content.
> 
> == Affiliations ==
> 
> Additional TBD during the proposal process
> 
> == Sponsors ==
> 
> Additional TBD during the proposal process.
> 
> == Sponsoring Entity ==
> 
> OpenWhisk would ask that the Apache Incubator be the sponsor.
> 
> 
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