Welcome to Kubernetes. We are excited about the prospect of you joining our community! The Kubernetes community abides by the CNCF code of conduct. Here is an excerpt:
As contributors and maintainers of this project, and in the interest of fostering an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.
We have full documentation on how to get started contributing here:
- Contributor License Agreement Kubernetes projects require that you sign a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) before we can accept your pull requests
- Kubernetes Contributor Guide - Main contributor documentation, or you can just jump directly to the contributing section
- Contributor Cheat Sheet - Common resources for existing developers
- Mentoring Initiatives - We have a diverse set of mentorship programs available that are always looking for volunteers!
The maintainers of this project (and often others who have official positions on the contributor ladder) are responsible for performing project management which oversees development and maintenance of the API, tests, tools, e.t.c. While we try to be generally flexible when it comes to the management of individual pieces (such as Issues or PRs), we have some rules and guidelines which help us plan, coordinate and reduce waste. In this section you'll find some rules/guidelines for contributors related to project management which may extend or go beyond what you would find in the standard Kubernetes Contributor Guide.
Maintainers are ultimately responsible for triaging new issues and PRs, accepting or declining them, deciding priority and fitting them into milestones intended for future releases. Bots are responsible for marking issues and PRs which stagnate as stale, or closing them if progress does not continue for a long period of time. Due to the nature of this community-driven development effort (we do not have dedicated engineering resources, we rely on the community which is effectively "volunteer time") not all issues can be accepted, prioritized or completed.
You may find times when an issue you're subscribed to and interested in seems to stagnate, or perhaps gets auto-closed. Prior to bumping or directly re-opening issues yourself, we generally ask that you bring these up for discussion on the agenda for one of our community syncs if possible, or bring them up for discussion in Slack or the mailing list as this gives us a better opportunity to discuss the issue and determine viability and logistics. If feasible we highly recommend being ready to contribute directly to any stale or unprioritized effort that you want to see move forward, as the best way to ensure progress is to engage with the community and personally invest time.
We (the community) aren't opposed to making exceptions in some cases, but when in doubt please follow the above guidelines before bumping closed or stale issues if you're not ready to personally invest time in them. We are responsible for managing these and without further context or engagement we may set these back to how they were previously organized.