+1 Accept On Mon, Aug 27, 2018, 10:04 AM Arpit Agarwal <aagar...@hortonworks.com> wrote:
> +1 (non-binding) > > > On 8/26/18, 8:14 PM, "Mick Semb Wever" <m...@apache.org> wrote: > > After a brief discussion¹ I would like to call a VOTE to accept Zipkin > into the Apache Incubator. > The full proposal is available on the wiki² and is pasted below in > text form as well. > > This vote will run at least 72 hours. Please VOTE as follows: > > [ ] +1 Accept Zipkin into the Apache Incubator > [ ] +0 No opinion > [ ] -1 Do not accept Zipkin into the Apache Incubator because… > > regards, > Mick > > [1] > https://lists.apache.org/thread.html/54798a5059db1d5716ed9910a15c92945509a25ec3b7ccb6b1215c53@%3Cgeneral.incubator.apache.org%3E > [2] https://wiki.apache.org/incubator/ZipkinProposal > > > > = Abstract = > Zipkin is a distributed tracing system. It helps gather timing data > needed to troubleshoot latency problems in microservice architectures. It > manages both the collection and lookup of this data. Zipkin’s design is > based on the Google Dapper paper. > > = Proposal = > Zipkin provides a defined data model and payload type for distributed > trace data collection. It also provides an UI and http api for querying the > data. Its server implements this api and includes abstractions for storage > and transport of trace payloads. The combination of these parts avoid > lock-in to a specific tracing backend. For example, Zipkin includes > integration with different open source storage mechanisms like Apache > Cassandra and Elasticsearch. It also includes bridges to convert collected > data and forward it to service offerings such as Amazon X-Ray and Google > Stackdriver. Ecosystem offering extend this portability further. > > While primarily focused on the system, Zipkin also includes tracing > libraries which applications use to report timing information. Zipkin's > core organization includes tracer libraries written in Java, Javascript, > Go, PHP and Ruby. These libraries use the formats mentioned above to report > data, as well "B3" which is a header format needed to send trace > identifiers along with production requests. Many Zipkin libraries can also > send data directly to other services such as Amazon X-Ray and Google > Stackdriver, skipping any Zipkin infrastructure. There are also more Zipkin > tracing libraries outside the core organization than inside it. This is due > to the "OpenZipkin" culture of promoting ecosystem work. > > = Background = > Zipkin began in 2012 at Twitter during a time they were investigating > performance problems underlying the "fail whale" seen by users. The name > Zipkin is from the Turkish word for harpoon: the harpoon that will kill the > failures! Incidentally, Zipkin was not the first tracing system, it had > roots in a former system at Twitter named BigBrotherBird. It is due to > BigBrotherBird that the de-facto tracing headers we still use today include > the prefix "X-B3". > > In 2015, a community of users noticed the project was not healthy in > so far as it hadn't progressed and often didn't accept pull requests, and > the Cassandra backend was stuck on an unmaintained library. For example, > the Apache Incubator H-Trace project started in some ways as a reaction to > the inability to customize the code. The root cause of this was Twitter > moving to internal storage (Manhattan) and also the project not being > managed as a product. By mid 2015, the community regrouped as OpenZipkin > and the codebase moved from Twitter to an org also named OpenZipkin. This > led to fast progress on concerns including initially a server rewrite and > Docker based deployment. > > In 2018, the second version of the data model completed, and along the > way, many new libraries became standard, including javascript, golang and > PHP. The community is dramatically larger than 2015, and Zipkin remains the > most popular tracing system despite heavy competition. > > = Rationale = > Zipkin is a de-facto distributed tracing system, which is more > important as architectures become more fine grained due to popularity of > microservice or even serverless architectures. Applications transition to > use more complex communication including asynchronous code and service > mesh, increasing the need for tools that visualize the behavior of requests > as they map across an architecture. > > Zipkin's server is focused only on distributed tracing. It is meant to > be used alongside existing logging and metrics systems. Generally, the > community optimizes brown field concerns such as interop over breaking > changes such as experimental features. The combination of code and > community make Zipkin a safe and easier choice for various sites to > introduce or grow their observability practice. > > = Initial Goals = > The initial goals are to mature OpenZipkin's community process. For > example, while OpenZipkin has a good collaborative process, it lacks > formality around project management functions defined in the Apache > Software Foundation (ASF). We also seek out help with brand abuse which is > becoming common practice in the competitive landscape, yet demotivates > volunteers. Towards volunteers, help with on boarding summer of code and > funding for those who cannot afford to get to conferences on their own > would be nice. Finally, we occasionally have organizations who are > constrained to only work with foundation projects: ASF is often mentioned, > and being in the ASF removes this collaboration roadblock. > > Zipkin will not move all existing code into Apache. In fact, most > Zipkin ecosystem exists outside our org! The goal is to start with the data > formats and server code. Possibly the java client-side libraries can move > initially as well, depending on community feedback. > > = Current Status = > == Meritocracy == > Zipkin is an active community of contributors who are encouraged to > become committers. A Zipkin committer understands the importance of seeking > community feedback, and the gravity of brown field concerns. Committers > express diverse interest by contributing beyond their sites immediate needs > and acknowledging features require diverse need before being merged into > the core repositories. A camaraderie between committers and not yet > committers exists and is re-inforced with face to face meetups where > possible. We expect this to continue and build with incubation and ideally > acceptance into the Apache Software Foundation (ASF). > > Zipkin encourages involvement from its community members, and the > issues are open and available to any developers who wish to contribute to > the project. The Zipkin team currently seeks help and asks for suggestions > utilizing zipkin-user and zipkin-dev Google groups and Gitter chat on > https://gitter.im/openzipkin/zipkin. While all contributions are > reviewed, generally a "rule of three" policy on diverse need must be met > before a feature is considered standard. > > == Community == > Zipkin has a highly active and growing community of users and > developers. The community is currently fostered on chat > https://gitter.im/openzipkin/zipkin and issues in their respective GitHub > repositories, notably the main server: > https://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin > > There are well over 1000 users in the chat room and hundreds who > contributed code to code in the main OpenZipkin GitHub org. Interest > metrics have grown dramatically: For example, in three years and a month > from when Zipkin began until the time OpenZipkin formed, its main > repository accumulated 2400 GitHub stars. In the same time after, it > accumulated over 6700. Other metrics such as blog count and community > meetings have similarly gone way up. We expect further growth as more learn > about Zipkin and can engage with Zipkin through the guidance of the Apache > Software Foundation (ASF). > > == Core Developers == > The core contributors are a diverse group comprised of both > unaffiliated developers and those hailing from small to large companies. > They are scattered geographically, and some are highly experienced industry > as well as open source developers. Though their backgrounds may be diverse, > the contributors are united in their belief in community driven software > development. > > More detailed information on the core developers and contributors in > general can be found under the section on homogeneous developers. > > == Alignment == > Zipkin adoption is growing, and it is no longer feasible for it to > remain as an isolated project. Apache is experienced in dealing with > software that is very widely accepted and has a growing audience. The > proposers believe that the Zipkin team can benefit from the ASF's > experience and its broad array of users and developers. > > Zipkin supports several Apache projects and options exist for > integration with others. Apache CXF, Apache Camel, Apache Incubator > SkyWalking and Apache Incubator HTrace all utilize Zipkin APIs in their > core repositories. Many more do via community extensions. Apache Maven is > primarily use by Zipkin, and can be used by projects who build upon Zipkin > projects. > > == Known Risks == > === Orphaned products === > Zipkin is already being utilized at multiple companies that are > actively participating in improving the code. The thriving community > centered around Zipkin has seen steady growth, and the project is gaining > traction with developers. The risks of the code being abandoned are minimal. > > === Inexperience with Open Source === > Zipkin rebooted its community in July 2015 and grown there for over > three years. Additionally, many of the committers have extensive experience > with other open source projects. Zipkin fosters a collaborative and > community-driven environment. > > In the interest of openly sharing technology and attracting more > community members, several of our developers also regularly attend > conferences in North America and Europe to give talks about Zipkin. Zipkin > meetups are also planned every few months for developers and community > members to come together in person and discuss ideas. > > === Homogenous Developers === > At the time of the writing, OpenZipkin's core 12 developers all work > at different companies around the globe. Most operate their own tracing > sites, but some no longer operate sites at all: staying for the community > we've built. Our ASF champion, Mick Semb Wever, is both a committer and an > experienced ASF member. > > The Zipkin developers thrive upon the diversity of the community. The > Zipkin gitter channel is always active, and the developers often > collaborate on fixes and changes in the code. They are always happy to > answer users' questions as well. > > Zipkin is interested in continuing to expand and strengthen its > network of developers and community members through the ASF. > > === Reliance on Salaried Developers === > Zipkin has one full time salaried developer, Adrian Cole. Though some > of the developers are paid by their employer to contribute to Zipkin, many > Zipkin developers contribute code and documentation on their own time and > have done so for a lengthy period. Given the current stream of development > requests and the committers' sense of ownership of the Zipkin code, this > arrangement is expected to continue with Zipkin' induction into the ASF. > > === Relationships with Other Apache Products === > Zipkin, Apache Incubator Skywalking and Apache Incubator HTrace > address similiar use cases. Most similarities are between Zipkin and > HTrace: Zipkin hopes to help serve the community formerly served by HTrace, > but understands the data services focus of HTrace may require different > tooling. SkyWalking addresses more feature surface than Zipkin. For > example, metrics collection is not a goal of Zipkin, yet it is a goal of > SkyWalking. SkyWalking accepts Zipkin formats and can be used as a > replacement server. SkyWalking PPMC member, Sheng Wu, has been a routine > member of Zipkin design discussions and has offered to help Zipkin through > ASF process. > > While Zipkin does not directly rely upon any Apache project, zipkin > supports several Apache projects. Apache CXF, Apache Camel, Apache > Incubator SkyWalking, Apache Incubator Dubbo, Apache Incubator ServiceComb > and Apache Incubator HTrace all utilize Zipkin APIs in their core > repositories. Many more do via community extensions. Apache Maven is > primarily use by Zipkin, and can be used by projects who build upon Zipkin > projects. > > === A Excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand === > Zipkin recognizes the fortitude of the Apache brand, but the > motivation for becoming an Apache project is to strengthen and expand the > Zipkin community and its user base. While the Zipkin community has seen > steady growth over the past several years, association with the ASF is > expected to expedite this pattern of growth. Development is expected to > continue on Zipkin under the Apache license whether or not it is supported > by the ASF. > > == Documentation == > The Zipkin project documentation is publicly available at the > following sites: > > * https://zipkin.io: project overview > * http://zipkin.io/zipkin-api/#/: swagger specification > * https://github.com/openzipkin/b3-propagation: header formats > * https://zipkin.io/zipkin/: Javadocs for the Zipkin server > > == Initial Source == > The initial source is located on GitHub in the following repositories: > > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/zipkin.git > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/zipkin-dependencies.git > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/zipkin-api.git > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/b3-propagation.git > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/docker-zipkin.git > * git://github.com/OpenZipkin/docker-zipkin-dependencies.git > * git://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin-reporter-java > * git://github.com/openzipkin/brave > * git://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin-aws > * git://github.com/openzipkin/docker-zipkin-aws > * git://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin-azure > * git://github.com/openzipkin/docker-zipkin-azure > * git://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin-gcp > * git://github.com/openzipkin/docker-zipkin-gcp > * git://github.com/openzipkin/brave-cassandra > * git://github.com/openzipkin/docker-jre-full > * git://github.com/openzipkin/brave-karaf > > Depending on community progress, other repositories may be moved as > well > > == Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan == > Zipkin's initial source is licensed under the Apache License, Version > 2.0. https://github.com/openzipkin/zipkin/blob/master/LICENSE > > All source code is copyrighted to 'The OpenZipkin Authors', to which > the existing core community(members list in Initial Committers) has the > rights to re-assign to the ASF. > > == External Dependencies == > This is a listing of Maven coordinates for all of the external > dependencies Zipkin uses. All of the dependencies are in Sonatype and their > licenses should be accessible. > > == Cryptography == > Zipkin contains no cryptographic algorithms. > > = Required Resources = > == Mailing Lists == > * Zipkin-dev: for development discussions > * Zipkin-user: for community discussions > * Zipkin-private: for PPMC discussions > * Zipkin-commits: for code changes > > == Git Repositories == > The Zipkin team is experienced in git and requests to transfer GitHub > repositories(list in Initial Source) to Apache. > > == Issue Tracking == > The community would like to continue using GitHub Issues. > > = Initial Committers = > * Zoltán Nagy > * Adrian Cole, Pivotal > * Bas van Beek > * Brian Devins > * Eirik Sletteberg > * Jeanneret Pierre-Hugues > * Jordi Polo Carres > * José Carlos Chávez > * Kristof Adriaenssens > * Lance Linder > * Mick Semb Wever, > * Tommy Ludwig > > = Champion = > * Michael Semb Wever, m...@apache.org > > = Mentors = > * Michael Semb Wever, m...@apache.org > * Andriy Redko, r...@apache.org > * John D. Ament, johndam...@apache.org > * Willem Ning Jiang, ningji...@apache.org > > = Sponsoring Entity = > We are requesting the Apache Incubator to sponsor this project. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org >