+1 (binding) -- Andrei Savu / axemblr.com
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 10:19 PM, Doug Cutting <cutt...@apache.org> wrote: > Discussion about the Storm proposal has subsided, issues raised now > seemingly resolved. > > I'd like to call a vote to accept Storm as a new Incubator podling. > > The proposal is included below and is also at: > > https://wiki.apache.org/incubator/StormProposal > > Let's keep the vote open for four working days, until 18 September. > > [ ] +1 Accept Storm into the Incubator > [ ] +0 Don't care. > [ ] -1 Don't accept Storm because... > > Doug > > > = Storm Proposal = > > == Abstract == > > Storm is a distributed, fault-tolerant, and high-performance realtime > computation system that provides strong guarantees on the processing > of data. > > == Proposal == > > Storm is a distributed real-time computation system. Similar to how > Hadoop provides a set of general primitives for doing batch > processing, Storm provides a set of general primitives for doing > real-time computation. Its use cases span stream processing, > distributed RPC, continuous computation, and more. Storm has become a > preferred technology for near-realtime big-data processing by many > organizations worldwide (see a partial list at > https://github.com/nathanmarz/storm/wiki/Powered-By). As an open > source project, Storm’s developer community has grown rapidly to 46 > members. > > == Background == > > The past decade has seen a revolution in data processing. MapReduce, > Hadoop, and related technologies have made it possible to store and > process data at scales previously unthinkable. Unfortunately, these > data processing technologies are not realtime systems, nor are they > meant to be. The lack of a "Hadoop of realtime" has become the biggest > hole in the data processing ecosystem. Storm fills that hole. > > Storm was initially developed and deployed at BackType in 2011. After > 7 months of development BackType was acquired by Twitter in July 2011. > Storm was open sourced in September 2011. > > Storm has been under continuous development on its Github repository > since being open-sourced. It has undergone four major releases (0.5, > 0.6, 0.7, 0.8) and many minor ones. > > > == Rationale == > > Storm is a general platform for low-latency big-data processing. It is > complementary to the existing Apache projects, such as Hadoop. Many > applications are actually exploring using both Hadoop and Storm for > big-data processing. Bringing Storm into Apache is very beneficial to > both Apache community and Storm community. > > The rapid growth of Storm community is empowered by open source. We > believe the Apache foundation is a great fit as the long-term home for > Storm, as it provides an established process for community-driven > development and decision making by consensus. This is exactly the > model we want for future Storm development. > > == Initial Goals == > > * Move the existing codebase to Apache > * Integrate with the Apache development process > * Ensure all dependencies are compliant with Apache License version 2.0 > * Incremental development and releases per Apache guidelines > > == Current Status == > > Storm has undergone four major releases (0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8) and many > minor ones. Storm 0.9 is about to be released. Storm is being used in > production by over 50 organizations. Storm codebase is currently > hosted at github.com, which will seed the Apache git repository. > > === Meritocracy === > > We plan to invest in supporting a meritocracy. We will discuss the > requirements in an open forum. Several companies have already > expressed interest in this project, and we intend to invite additional > developers to participate. We will encourage and monitor community > participation so that privileges can be extended to those that > contribute. > > === Community === > > The need for a low-latency big-data processing platform in the open > source is tremendous. Storm is currently being used by at least 50 > organizations worldwide (see > https://github.com/nathanmarz/storm/wiki/Powered-By), and is the most > starred Java project on Github. By bringing Storm into Apache, we > believe that the community will grow even bigger. > > === Core Developers === > > Storm was started by Nathan Marz at BackType, and now has developers > from Yahoo!, Microsoft, Alibaba, Infochimps, and many other companies. > > === Alignment === > > In the big-data processing ecosystem, Storm is a very popular > low-latency platform, while Hadoop is the primary platform for batch > processing. We believe that it will help the further growth of > big-data community by having Hadoop and Storm aligned within Apache > foundation. The alignment is also beneficial to other Apache > communities (such as Zookeeper, Thrift, Mesos). We could include > additional sub-projects, Storm-on-YARN and Storm-on-Mesos, in the near > future. > > == Known Risks == > > === Orphaned Products === > > The risk of the Storm project being abandoned is minimal. There are at > least 50 organizations (Twitter, Yahoo!, Microsoft, Groupon, Baidu, > Alibaba, Alipay, Taobao, PARC, RocketFuel etc) are highly incentivized > to continue development. Many of these organizations have built > critical business applications upon Storm, and have devoted > significant internal infrastructure investment in Storm. > > === Inexperience with Open Source === > > Storm has existed as a healthy open source project for several years. > During that time, we have curated an open-source community > successfully, attracting over 40 developers from a diverse group of > companies including Twitter, Yahoo!, and Alibaba. > > === Homogenous Developers === > > The initial committers are employed by large companies (including > Twitter, Yahoo!, Alibaba, Microsoft) and well-funded startups. Storm > has an active community of developers, and we are committed to > recruiting additional committers based on their contributions to the > project. > > === Reliance on Salaried Developers === > > It is expected that Storm development will occur on both salaried time > and on volunteer time, after hours. The majority of initial committers > are paid by their employer to contribute to this project. However, > they are all passionate about the project, and we are confident that > the project will continue even if no salaried developers contribute to > the project. We are committed to recruiting additional committers > including non-salaried developers. > > === Relationships with Other Apache Products === > > As mentioned in the Alignment section, Storm is closely integrated with > Hadoop, > Zookeeper, Thrift, YARN and Mesos in a numerous ways. We look forward > to collaborating with those communities, as well as other Apache > communities (including Apache S4 which focuses on stateful low-latency > processing). > > === An Excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand === > > Storm is already a healthy and well known open source project. This > proposal is not for the purpose of generating publicity. Rather, the > primary benefits to joining Apache are those outlined in the Rationale > section. > > == Documentation == > > The reader will find these websites highly relevant: > * Storm website: http://storm-project.net > * Storm documentation: https://github.com/nathanmarz/storm/wiki > * Codebase: https://github.com/nathanmarz/storm > * User group: https://groups.google.com/group/storm-user > > == Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan == > > The Storm codebase is currently hosted on Github: > https://github.com/nathanmarz/storm. > This is the exact codebase that we would migrate to the Apache foundation. > > The Storm source code is currently licensed under Eclipse Public > License Version 1.0. Some source code was contributed under a > contributor agreement based on the Sun contributor agreement (v1.5). > More recent code has been contributed under an Apache style agreement > (see > https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/133901206/storm-apache-style-cla.txt). > > Upon entering Apache, Storm will migrate to an Apache License 2.0 with > all contributions licensed to the Apache Foundation. In certain cases > where individuals or organizations hold copyright, we will ensure they > grant a license to the Apache Foundation. Going forward, all commits > will be licensed directly to the Apache foundation through our signed > Individual Contributor License Agreements for all committers on the > project. > > storm-kafka, which lets one use Kafka as a source for Storm, will also > be submitted under the contrib folder for the Apache Storm project. > > Yahoo! is also willing to move Storm-on-YARN code from github to be a > subproject of Apache Storm project. Storm-on-YARN is currently > licensed under Apache License 2.0 and receive contribution under > Apache style CLA. Upon entering Apache, Yahoo! will sign over > copyright to Apache foundation. > > == External Dependencies == > > To the best of our knowledge, all of Storm dependencies (except > 0MQ/JMQ) are distributed under Apache compatible licenses. Upon > acceptance to the incubator, we would begin a thorough analysis of all > transitive dependencies to verify this fact and introduce license > checking into the build and release process (for instance integrating > Apache Rat). > > Storm has used 0MQ and JMQ as the default mechanism for internal > messaging layer, and 0MQ/JMQ is licensed under GNU Lesser General > Public License. Recently, we have made Storm messaging layer > pluggable, and plan to use Netty (which is licensed under Apache > License v2) as our default messaging plugin (while keep 0MQ as an > optional plugin). > > == Cryptography == > > We do not expect Storm to be a controlled export item due to the use > of encryption. > Storm enable encryptions via 2 plugins: > * SASL authentication plugins … Currently, we have provide “no-op” > authentication and digest authentication. In near future, we will > introduce Kerberos authentication. > * Tuple payload serialization plugins … Storm provides plugins for > plain-object serialization and blowfish encryption. > > == Required Resources == > > === Mailing lists === > > * storm-user > * storm-dev > * storm-commits > * storm-private (with moderated subscriptions) > > === Subversion Directory === > > Git is the preferred source control system: git://git.apache.org/storm > > > === Issue Tracking === > > JIRA Storm (STORM) > > == Initial Committers == > > * Nathan Marz <nathan at nathanmarz dot com> > * James Xu <xumingmingv at gmail dot com> > * Jason Jackson <jason at cvk dot ca> > * Andy Feng <afeng at yahoo-inc dot com> > * Flip Kromer <flip at infochimps dot com> > * David Lao <davidlao at microsoft dot com> > * P. Taylor Goetz <ptgoetz at gmail dot com> > > == Affiliations == > > * Nathan Marz - Nathan’s Startup > * James Xu - Alibaba > * Jason Jackson - Twitter > * Andy Feng - Yahoo! > * Flip Kromer - Infochimps > * David Lao - Microsoft > * P. Taylor Goetz - Health Market Science > > == Sponsors == > > > === Champion === > > * Doug Cutting <cutting at apache dot org> > > === Nominated Mentors === > > * Ted Dunning <tdunning at maprtech dot com> > * Arvind Prabhakar <arvind at apache dot org> > * Devaraj Das <ddas at hortonworks dot com> > * Matt Franklin <m.ben.franklin at gmail dot com> > * Benjamin Hindman <benjamin.hindman at gmail dot com> > > === Sponsoring Entity === > > The Apache Incubator > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org > >