DocumentCode
2796881
Title
Open Borders? Immigration in Open Source Projects
Author
Bird, Christian ; Gourley, Alex ; Devanbu, Prem ; Swaminathan, Anand ; Hsu, Greta
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., California Univ. - Davis, Davis, CA
fYear
2007
fDate
20-26 May 2007
Firstpage
6
Lastpage
6
Abstract
Open source software is built by teams of volunteers. Each project has a core team of developers, who have the authority to commit changes to the repository; this team is the elite, committed foundation of the project, selected through a meritocratic process from a larger number of people who participate on the mailing list. Most projects carefully regulate admission of outsiders to full developer privileges; some projects even have formal descriptions of this process. Understanding the factors that influence the "who, how and when" of this process is critical, both for the sustainability of FLOSS projects, and for outside stakeholders who want to gain entry and succeed. In this paper we mount a quantitative case study of the process by which people join FLOSS projects, using data mined from the Apache Web server, Postgres, and Python. We develop a theory of open source project joining, and evaluate this theory based on our data.
Keywords
public domain software; software engineering; FLOSS projects; meritocratic process; open source projects; open source software; Birds; Computer science; Data mining; Design engineering; Failure analysis; Hazards; Inhibitors; Open source software; Programming profession; Web server;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Mining Software Repositories, 2007. ICSE Workshops MSR '07. Fourth International Workshop on
Conference_Location
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2950-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MSR.2007.23
Filename
4228643
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