[this announcement, along with accompanying charts, are available online at 
https://s.apache.org/1BsV ]

FOUNDATION OPERATIONS SUMMARY 

First Quarter+, Fiscal Year 2017 (May-August 2016) 

"The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) has established itself as a positive yet 
impartial guardian, steward and evangelist for the greater good of the Apache 
software projects and its supporting and ancillary technology streams. Building 
a communicative platform of trust that links a decentralized software community 
this expansive is no small task. The ASF continues to be the ‘voice’ of Apache 
in an accessible, open and pragmatic way." 
--Adrian Bridgwater, developer-centric technology writer for Computer Weekly, 
Forbes, The Register and others. 


> President's Statement: This last quarter I have focused on expanding our 
> operations capacity. Our mission is to provide software for the public good. 
> We do this by providing services and support for many like-minded software 
> project communities of individuals who choose to join the ASF. Those services 
> and support are overseen by a team of volunteers who in turn are supported by 
> a number of paid staff an contractors. The volunteers are the ones that make 
> us less dependent on paid staff and thus keep our costs low and thus help us 
> maintain the foundations independence from any financial source. However, as 
> volunteers there are limitation on what we can expect in terms of time 
> commitment. This is why our team of paid operations staff are so important. 

We recently expanded our paid staff by appointing our first Infrastructure 
Administrator. This is a part time role aimed at assisting in the management of 
our infrastructure. This role will report to our volunteer VP of 
Infrastructure. This addition will help us maintain our excellent 
infrastructure uptime record (http://status.apache.org/) while keeping our 
expenditure to a minimum. It’s amazing that our infra team manage many hundreds 
of commits and pull requests and many thousands of emails each day. Not to 
mention hosting one of the top 1000 websites in the world 
(http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/apache.org). All on a budget that is a tiny 
fraction of what most people would expect. 

As a foundation we continually evaluate our ability to scale. With each new 
project we accept we increase our overheads. With each increase in overheads we 
make it harder to maintain our independence from sources of finance. Yet it is 
this independence that makes us successful as an open source software 
foundation. We remain in a very healthy financial position, however, it never 
hurts to take the opportunity to ask for your support. As an individual you can 
donate to the foundation (http://www.apache.org/foundation/contributing.html), 
as a corporation you can become a sponsor 
(http://www.apache.org/foundation/sponsorship.html). 


> Events and Community: Since our last quarterly report, we have not held any 
> additional ApacheCon events. We do, however, have one coming up very soon, 
> and another in the beginning stages of planning. 

We will hold Apache Big Data Europe 2016, and ApacheCon Europe 2016, in 
Seville, Spain, November 14-18th, at the Melia Sevilla hotel. The we will be 
announcing the schedules for these events mid September. Details about these 
events may be found on the ApacheCon Website, at http://apachecon.com/ . In 
2007, we plan to hold ApacheCon North America in Miami, May 15-19, at the 
Intercontinental Miami. Details will be published to the ApacheCon Website very 
soon. Sponsorship opportunities are still available for both events. 

Meanwhile, we continue, as a larger community, to plan and attend an enormous 
number of meetups and other small events. You can see the weekly list of 
meetups at http://apache.org/events/meetups.html or by searching for your 
favorite Apache project on meetup.com. 


> Committers and Contributions: Over the past quarter, 1,649 contributors 
> committed 50,849 changes that amount to 53,203,721 lines of code across 
> Apache projects. The top 5 contributors during this timeframe are: Mark 
> Thomas (576 commits), Gary Gregory (573 commits), Andrea Cosentino (559 
> commits), and Reynold Xin and Claus Ibsen (473 commits each). 


[please refer to chart at https://s.apache.org/1BsV ]
Part of onboarding new Apache committers is handled the ASF Secretary, who 
processes their paperwork so that they can continue contributing to our 
projects. All individuals who are granted write access to the Apache 
repositories must submit an Individual Contributor License Agreement (ICLA). 
Corporations that have assigned employees to work on Apache projects as part of 
an employment agreement may sign a Corporate CLA (CCLA) for contributing 
intellectual property via the corporation. Individuals or corporations donating 
a body of existing software or documentation to one of the Apache projects need 
to execute a formal Software Grant Agreement (SGA) with the ASF. 

The Secretary processed 249 ICLAs, plus 12 Corporate CCLAs, and 5 Software 
Grants during this timeframe. The activity of Apache committers, and the 
community of contributors they serve, can be seen at 
http://status.apache.org/#commits 


> Brand Management: Our Foundation-wide educational and policy improvement work 
> continues to pay off, as more Apache projects are getting organized about 
> maintaining and promoting their brands in a more organized fashion. Some 
> projects are continuing work on their own detailed how-to guides for 
> companies that want to *properly* use valuable Apache brands as part of their 
> products or Web presences. However the rapid growth in new projects in the 
> Incubator means that more help spreading the education to new communities is 
> still needed. 

Our detailed list of resources, both Apache policies as well as pointers to 
other valuable open source branding guidelines and information is improving our 
ability to respond, as seen by the more detailed questions we get from third 
parties, as well as by the ability of some experienced projects to handle brand 
enforcement more independently. 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/resources 

While Open Source and the project communities are well understood in industry 
these days, open source *governance* and brand management are becoming more 
important topics. The ASF is seen as a leader in governance and brand policing, 
and our example is helping other FOSS communities as well as companies better 
understand how we can work together fairly and productively. 

On the registration front, we continue to get some projects who request 
registration of names or beloved logos in the US and internationally. We 
continue to exercise financial care with our budget by working with the 
relevant project communities to detail why registration is important for them 
to attract new project contributors around the world. 

With the continued rise of prominent Apache brands and projects that power more 
business every year, we look to the many companies that profit from Apache 
software products to help respect Apache brands. While many companies continue 
to properly give credit to our volunteer communities, sadly some companies 
continue to --or have started to-- take advantage of our non-profit work by 
unfairly co-opting Apache project brands.  Reviewing and correcting these 
mis-uses is an ongoing effort for the ASF and all Apache projects. 

You can always ask the Apache Brand Management team private questions at 
[email protected] 


> Infrastructure: The Infrastructure team continues to focus on retiring 
> technical debt and improving the resiliency of the services we provide. We've 
> spent a lot of the quarter restructuring our Buildbot and Jenkins 
> infrastructure. This has made a noticeable effect in the uniformity of our 
> build services, as well as the ease with which our projects are able to 
> modify their build environments. 

We're continuing to spend time recruiting additional help, and one of the first 
results of that is placing Greg Stein as the Infrastructure Administrator. (we 
should have a blog post for this in the coming days) 

Additionally, our Github experiment has earned the 'uneventful' status this 
quarter, which we regard as a nice milepost pointing towards maturity. In the 
coming months we hope to be able to move this from experiment status to 
production workload. We expect this to have a large effect on a number of our 
project communities. 


[please refer to chart at https://s.apache.org/1BsV ] 
A complete view of the status of our infrastructure, with up-time graphs, can 
always be viewed at http://status.apache.org/ 


> Financial Statement: 


[please refer to chart at https://s.apache.org/1BsV ] 


> Fundraising: The Apache Software Foundation continues to grow in a number of 
> areas, as reflected in other areas of this report. On the Fundraising side we 
> continue our efforts to keep an open channel with the current sponsors and as 
> reaching out to new, potential sponsors that recognize the value of the ASF 
> projects to the industry. The ASF achievements are outstanding, especially if 
> we consider the relatively small budget that powers these achievements. Given 
> our 501(c)(3) status, we heavily rely on the generosity of our sponsors for 
> our operations. 

The ASF enjoys the support of 7 Platinum Sponsors: Cloudera, Facebook, Google, 
LeaseWeb, Microsoft, Pivotal, and Yahoo; 8 Gold Sponsors: ARM, Bloomberg, 
Comcat, Hortonworks, HP, IBM, ODPi, and PhoenixNap; 13 Silver Sponsors: Alibaba 
Cloud Computing, Capital One, Cerner, Confluent, Budget Direct, Huawei, 
InMotion Hosting, iSIGMA, Private Internet Access, Produban, Red Hat, Serenata 
Flowers, and Wandisco. The number of Bronze sponsors has also increased, 
currently at 19 Bronze Sponsors and we continue to benefit from the generous 
help of our 11 Infrastructure Sponsors. 

Given the growth of the Foundation, the VP of Fundraising is working on a few 
initiatives in collaboration with the VP of Marketing and Publicity meant to 
increase awareness of what we do. They will be announced in the upcoming 
quarterly reports as they get implemented. 

As always, we want to take this opportunity again to express our gratitude to 
our sponsors for believing in and supporting the ASF mission. We wouldn't be 
where we are without the sponsor's generosity and for that they deserve our 
most sincere thanks! 

# # #

Report prepared by Sally Khudairi, Vice President Marketing & Publicity, with 
contributions by Ross Gardler, ASF President; Rich Bowen, Executive Vice 
President; Shane Curcuru, Vice President Brand Management; David Nalley, Vice 
President Infrastructure; Tom Pappas, ASF Member and Vice President, Finance & 
Accounting at Virtual, Inc.; and Hadrian Zbarcea, Vice President Fundraising. 

For more information, subscribe to the [email protected] mailing list and 
visit http://www.apache.org/, the ASF Blog at http://blogs.apache.org/, and the 
@TheASF on Twitter. 

(c) The Apache Software Foundation 2016.

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