Anyone who has been contributed to the repository by submitting a pull-request and have it reviewed, accepted, and merged by committers is a contributor.
Each contributor should comply with the Code of Conduct, this document (CONTRIBUTING.md), and the Linux Foundation's policies.
Every contributor is able and encouraged to review codes and to participate in other developmental activities.
A committer is responsible for reviewing incoming pull-requests and is able to reject or approve pull requests. Note that contributors may review pull-requests, but they cannot reject it or vote for approval.
A contributor may become a committer with approvals of more than half of the committers.
A committer may be retired by approvals of more than half of the committers.
Each committer is also a contributor and should comply with the Code of Conduct, this document (CONTRIBUTING.md), and the Linux Foundation's policies.
The committers are:
- Jijoong Moon @jijoongmoon 🍺 (maintainer)
- MyungJoo Ham @myungjoo 🍺
- Geunsik Lim @leemgs 🍺
- Jaeyun Jung @jaeyun-jung 🍺
- Sangjung Woo @again4you 🍺
- Wook Song @wooksong 🍺
- Dongju Chae @dongju-chae 🍺
- HyoungJoo Ahn @helloahn 🍺
- Parichay Kapoor @kparichay 🍺
- Gichan Jang @gichan-jang
- Yongjoo Ahn @anyj0527
- Jihoon Lee @zhoonit
How to Contribute # Merge Criteria describes how a pull-request may be merged or rejected by committers.
In the above list, committers with 🍺 have merging privilege.
Granting or revoking merging privileges require the same procedure of electing or retiring a committer.
Each sub-project may have its own Maintainers in the sub-project.
See How to Contribute for information about coding styles, making pull requests, and more.
- See Getting Started for information about building this software.
- See How to Run Examples for information about building and running examples applications.
- See How to Use Testcases for information about running test cases and writing ones.