I would like to call a vote for accepting "Apache Lucy" for incubation in the Apache Incubator. The full proposal is available below. We ask the Incubator PMC to sponsor it, with myself (hossman) as Champion, and mattmann, upayavira, mikemccand, and hossman volunteering to be Mentors.

Please cast your vote:

[ ] +1, bring Lucy into Incubator
[ ] +0, I don't care either way,
[ ] -1, do not bring Lucy into Incubator, because...

This vote will be open for 72 hours and only votes from the Incubator PMC are binding.

http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/LucyProposal
------------------------------------
PREFACE
    Lucy is a sub-project which is being spun off from the Lucene TLP but is
    not yet ready for graduation.  We propose to address certain needs of the
    project by transitioning to an Incubator Podling, and assimilating the
    KinoSearch codebase.

ABSTRACT
    Lucy will be a loose port of the Lucene search engine library, written in
    C and targeted at dynamic language users.

PROPOSAL
    Lucy has two aims.  First, it will be a high-performance C search engine
    library.  Second, it will maximize its usability and power when accessed
    via dynamic language bindings.  To that end, it will present highly
    idiomatic, carefully tailored APIs for each of its "host" binding
    languages, including support for subclasses written entirely in the
    "host" language.

BACKGROUND
    Lucy, a "loose C" port of Java Lucene, began as an ambitious,
    from-scratch Lucene sub-project, with David Balmain (author of Ferret, a
    Ruby/C port of Lucene), Doug Cutting, and Marvin Humphrey (founder of
    KinoSearch, a Perl/C port) as committers.  During an initial burst of
    activity, the overall architecture for Lucy was sketched out by Dave and
    Marvin.  Unfortunately, Dave became unavailable soon after, and without a
    working codebase to release or any users, it proved difficult to replace
    him.  Still, Marvin carried on their work throughout a period of
    seemingly low activity.

    In the last year, that work has come to fruition: major technical
    milestones have been achieved and Lucy's underpinnings have been
    completed.  Additionally, other developers from the KinoSearch community
    have taken an interest in Lucy and have begun to ramp up their
    contributions.  The next steps for Lucy were articulated by the Lucene
    PMC in a recent review: make releases, acquire users, grow community.

    To implement the Lucene PMC's recommendations and get to a release as
    quickly as possible, the Lucy community proposes to assimilate the
    KinoSearch codebase, which has been retrofitted to use Lucy's core.  Lucy
    still lacks a number of important indexing and search classes; we wish to
    flesh these out via IP clearance work rather than software development.

    Because Lucene is working to move away from being an "umbrella project",
    a long term goal of the Lucy project is to graduate to an ASF TLP.  With
    that in mind, it seems more appropriate for the KinoSearch software grant
    to take place within the context of the Incubator, and that a Lucy
    podling and PPMC be established which will ultimately take responsibility
    for the codebase.

RATIONALE
    There is great hunger for a search engine library in the mode of Lucene
    which is accessible from various dynamic languages, and for one
    accessible from pure C.  Individuals naturally wish to code in their
    language of choice.  Organizations which do not have significant Java
    expertise may not want to support Java strictly for the sake of running a
    Lucene installation.  Developers may want to take advantage of C's
    interoperability and fine-grained control.  Lucy will meet all these
    demands.

    Apache is a natural home for our project given the way it has always
    operated: user-driven innovation, security as a requirement, lively and
    amiable mailing list discussions, strength through diversity, and so on.
    We feel comfortable here, and we believe that we will become exemplary
    Apache citizens.

INITIAL GOALS
    * Make a 1.0 stable release as quickly as possible.
    * Concentrate on community expansion.
    * Expose a public C API.

CURRENT STATUS
  Meritocracy
    Our initial committer list includes two individuals (Peter Karman and
    Nathan Kurz) who started off as KinoSearch users, demonstrated merit
    through constructive forum participation, adept negotiation, consensus
    building, and submission of high-quality contributions, and were invited
    to become committers.  Peter now rolls most releases.

    We look forward to continuing to operate as a meritocracy under the
    established traditions and rules of the ASF.

  Community
    Lucy's most active participants of late have been drawn from the
    KinoSearch and Lucene communities.  Having been focused on features and
    technical goals for a long time, we are considerably overdue for a stable
    release, and anticipate rapid growth in its wake.

  Core Developers
    * Marvin Humphrey is the project founder of KinoSearch, and co-founded
      the existing Lucy sub-project.  He is presently employed by Eventful,
      Inc.
    * Peter Karman has contributed to several open source projects since
      2001, including being a committer at http://swish-e.org/ (a search
      engine), http://code.google.com/p/rose/ (an ORM) and
      http://catalyst.perl.org/ (web framework).  He is employed by American
      Public Media.
    * Nathan Kurz is excited by the intersection of search and
      recommendations, and has been a KinoSearch committer since 2007.  As
      the owner of Scream Sorbet (http://screamsorbet.com), he divides his
      time between code and fruit.

  Alignment
    One Apache value which is particularly cherished by the Lucy community is
    codebase transparency.  We have developed institutions which enable us to
    measure and maximize usability (see
    http://wiki.apache.org/lucy/BrainLog), and we feel strongly that the
    bindings for Lucy must present APIs and documentation which are idiomatic
    to the host language culture so that end users can consume our work as
    easily as possible.

    The controlled competition of meritocratic community development is also
    very important to us.  There has been substantial cross-pollination of
    ideas between Lucene and Lucy, yielding considerable benefits for both
    projects.  The Lucy developers envision that our host-language
    sub-communities will approach using and extending the library in distinct
    ways; we hope to harness the creative tension between them to drive
    innovation, building productive relationships akin to the one that Lucene
    and Lucy have today.

    A third priority of ours is to be bound by existing Apache institutions,
    for the protection of all our stakeholders.

KNOWN RISKS
  Orphaned products
    All core developers have been associated with the project for several
    years across multiple jobs.  However, at this time, the project would
    probably not survive the departure of Marvin Humphrey, so there is a risk
    of being orphaned.  Marvin has no plans to leave, but we have been
    actively working to disperse his knowledge of the code base and
    administrative responsibilities in order to make him dispensable.  Having
    staggered badly after Dave Balmain's departure, we are keenly aware of
    this vulnerability and highly motivated to eliminate it.

  Inexperience with Open Source
    The core developers all have significant experience with open source
    development, and include one present Apache committer.  We recognize that
    we lack PMC experience and seek to address that deficiency by using the
    Incubator environment to educate ourselves and prepare for responsible
    self-governance.

  Homogenous Developers
    Our community is geographically dispersed, with members in San Diego,
    Oakland, and Minneapolis.  We all work for different organizations.

  Reliance on Salaried Developers
    Marvin Humphrey has a great job at Eventful working primarily on this
    project and supporting applications that use it.  Nevertheless, he is
    extremely dedicated to Lucy and is determined to see it through to the
    point where it becomes self-sustaining, regardless of work circumstances.

  Relationships with Other Apache Products
    Lucy's relationship with Lucene of cordial "coopetition" has produced
    benefits for Lucene users in terms of indexing speed, near-real-time
    search support, and more.  We expect this dynamic to continue delivering
    improvements for all parties involved.

  An Excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand
    Our desire to maintain Lucy's affiliation with Apache has less to do with
    the brand and more to do with our conviction that developing the project
    The Apache Way under Apache institutions is in Lucy's best interests.
    However, we have to acknowledge that during its time as a Lucene
    subproject, Lucy has not always fulfilled certain key requirements for an
    Apache project.  In particular, it has failed to "release early, release
    often", and it has made minimal progress in expanding its community.

    We attribute some of our difficulties to the what may have been excess
    ambition in the original Lucy plan, given the scope of the project and
    the size of the initial committer list:

        http://www.apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html#incubator

        The basic requirements for incubation are:

          * a working codebase -- over the years and after several failures,
            the foundation came to understand that without an initial working
            codebase, it is generally hard to bootstrap a community.

    By rebooting the project with a working codebase, we expect to avoid the
    trap that ensnared Lucy's first incarnation: we will release early,
    release often, accumulate users, nurture contributors, and grow our
    community.

DOCUMENTATION

    * Current Lucy website: http://lucene.apache.org/lucy/
    * Current Lucy Subversion repository:
      http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/lucene/lucy/
    * Current Lucy mailing lists:
      http://lucene.apache.org/lucy/mailing_lists.html
    * KinoSearch Subversion repository:
      http://www.rectangular.com/svn/kinosearch/
    * KinoSearch Perl API documentation:
      http://www.rectangular.com/kinosearch/docs/devel/
    * KinoSearch Discussion list:
      http://www.rectangular.com/mailman/listinfo/kinosearch/

INITIAL SOURCE
    The initial source will be a snapshot from the KinoSearch subversion
    repository.

SOURCE AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY SUBMISSION PLAN
    KinoSearch is currently under a GPL/Artistic license.  There are five
    individuals who have made multiple significant contributions to the
    codebase and whose participation is either essential or would be very
    helpful: Marvin Humphrey, Peter Karman, Nathan Kurz, Chris Nandor, and
    Father Chrysostomos.  All have been contacted and are amenable to
    re-licensing their work and contributing it to Apache.  We will contact
    as many other contributors as possible; if there are any that we cannot
    obtain permission from, we will refactor to expunge their work.

EXTERNAL DEPENDENCIES
    The Perl bindings for KinoSearch currently depend on a few CPAN modules
    which do not have Apache-compatible licenses.  It will be possible to
    eliminate all such dependencies if necessary.

REQUIRED RESOURCES
  Mailing lists
    * lucy-dev
    * lucy-private (with moderated subscriptions)
    * lucy-commits
    * lucy-users

    Lucy already has lucy-dev, lucy-users, and lucy-commits mailing lists
    under lucene.apache.org.  Perhaps these could be deactivated and the
    memberships migrated to the appropriate lists under incubator.apache.org,
    leaving the lucene.apache.org archives as read-only.

  Subversion Directory
    Lucy already has a Subversion directory at
    http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/lucene/lucy. In keeping with naming
    conventions, it could be moved to
    http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/lucy.

  Issue Tracking
    Lucy already has a JIRA tracker: Lucy (LUCY)

  Other Resources
    Lucy already has a MoinMoin wiki at wiki.apache.org/lucy.  It would be
    convenient to keep it, especially since its current location is also
    where it would end up upon TLP graduation, but we will defer to the
    wishes of the Incubator PMC if standard Incubator wiki placement is
    recommended.

INITIAL COMMITTERS
    NAME             EMAIL                     AFFILIATION             CLA
    Marvin Humphrey  marvin AT apache DOT org  Eventful                yes
    Peter Karman     peter AT peknet DOT com   American Public Media   yes
    Nathan Kurz      nate AT verse DOT com     Scream Sorbet           yes
    Simon Willnauer  simonw AT apache DOT org                          yes

SPONSORS
  Champion
    * Chris Hostetter (hossman AT apache DOT org)

  Nominated Mentors
    * Chris Mattmann (mattmann AT apache DOT org)
    * Upayavira (upayavira AT apache DOT org)
    * Mike McCandless (mikemccand AT apache DOT org) (pending IPMC membership)
    * Chris Hostetter (hossman AT apache DOT org) (pending IPMC membership)

  Sponsoring Entity
    Lucy is currently sponsored by Lucene as a sub-project. This proposal
    advocates changing Lucy's relationship with Apache from developing all
    new code as a Lucene sub-project, to instead assimilating existing code
    (KinoSearch) under the sponsorship of the Incubator.


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