If you would like to self-nominate for the TSC, please list your name, represented group, a short biography and statement of intent for running.

For details on eligibility and mechanics, please see this page.

The nomination period will end December 17th, 2018.

The TSC is responsible for:

  1. Setting high level architecture goals and coordinating overall project architecture and technical direction
  2. Selecting technology stack, software features and supported hardware including
  3. approving project or system proposals (including, but not limited to, incubation, deprecation, and changes to a sub-project’s scope);
  4. organizing sub-projects and removing sub-projects;
  5. Developing Project use cases;
  6. Defining and monitoring Project technical processes and interfaces with third party code and external projects including creating sub-committees or working groups to focus on cross-project technical issues and requirements;
  7. Overseeing the Infrastructure Working Group other TSC working groups;
  8. Appointing representatives to work with other open source or open standards communities;
  9. Establishing community norms, workflows, issuing releases, and security issue reporting policies;
  10. Approving and implementing policies and processes for contributing (to be published in the CONTRIBUTING file) and coordinating with other project committees to resolve matters or concerns that may arise as set forth in Section 7 of this Charter;
  11. Engaging in discussions, seeking consensus, and where necessary, voting on technical matters relating to the code base that affect multiple projects;
  12. Setting target dates for software development and testing;
  13. Coordinating any marketing, events, or communications regarding the Project with the Manager of LF Projects and the Marketing Advisory Council of the LF Networking Fund of The Linux Foundation (“LFN”);
  14. Establishing a vetting process for maintaining security and integrity of new and/or changed code base and documentation, including vetting for malicious code and spyware; and
  15. Establishing a security issue reporting policy and resolution procedure.

Template:

Name: <>

Nominations:

Name: Randy Bias

Name: Paul Carver


Name: Sukhdev Kapur

Name: Prabhjot Singh Sethi


Name: Joseph Gasparakis

Name: Liza Fung

Represented Group – Community Committee

Short Biography – I am a current member of the Tungsten Fabric Community Committee.  I have been involved with the Tungsten Fabric community since the community “reboot” as a founding member.  I have contributed to the technical charter, governance doc, community name selection, press release, etc.  I have also participated in the weekly community committee meeting and many of the community events.   My background is in network architecture and design in the areas of IP/MPLS network and cloud networking.

Statement of Intent – I would like to continue to help grow Tungsten Fabric into a diverse community of both users and developers.   


Name: Ian Rae


Represented Group – Community Committee

Short Biography – I put up my hand at an OpenContrail meetup and volunteered to help marshall the project into an open source foundation, culminating in the relatively recently accepted Tungsten Fabric project under the LFN. I am the founder and CEO of CloudOps, which just might be the oldest independent cloud engineering firm that helps service providers build and operate clouds, and helps large enterprises and software firms adopt public clouds. CloudOps team members have been ambassadors for projects under the Apache Foundation, OpenStack, and CNCF.  We run countless meetups and workshops helping educate and support open source software. My personal background is leading engineering at tech startups, running enterprise IT, and studying evolution using genetics. I sit on the board of directors of the non-profit Genome Canada, and the publicly traded airline Air Transat. Also I love ultimate (frisbee).

Statement of Intent – My goal with TF is to help the community achieve escape velocity in terms of market adoption. Our mission at CloudOps is helping our customers own their destiny in the cloud(s) and we believe open source based software is the key. We also believe networking is the hardest problem, especially in a multi-cloud world. I will focus on helping increase the accessibility of TF and building a diverse community by spreading with word about the project and encouraging contributions of all kinds (especially documentation!), all the while establishing and protecting the independence of this important open source project.


Name: Valentin Sinitsyn

Represented Group – Technical Committee

Short biography – I'm leading the Overlay Networking Group at Yandex Cloud, a public cloud platform Yandex (NASDAQ: YNDX) launched in September 2018. My team is committed to deliver next-generation SDN platform using Tungsten Fabric as a foundational building block. I'm currently a member of Tungsen Fabric TSC and an author of several blueprints. Besides, I wrote a new contributor's guide and was pushing forward things related to the TF developer environment. I also serve as TF Ambassador for Russia.

Statement of Intent – Being in an unique position of using Tungsten Fabric with a custom cloud management system, I would ensure that TF stays interoperable with a wider orchestrators ecosystem. This includes being scalable to tens of thousands nodes and modular, so vendors may choose which features go into the product depending on their setting. Another goal for me would be to maintain Tungsten Fabric's presence and recognition within Russian networking community.


Name: Jim St. Leger

Represented Group - Community Committee

Short Biography: My day job is working at Intel in the Network Platforms Group driving open source strategy and marketing.  My work is predominantly focused on networking projects that align to or support NFV and SDN including virtualization and container implementations as well as the network edge. I've been working on open source projects and in open source communities for nine years. Projects include DPDK (dpdk.org) which I was part of the original creation team and where I chair the governing board, Hyperscan (hyperscan.io, a high perf pattern matcher) which I helped transition from commercial SW to open source SW, Fast Data (FD.io) which I helped co-launch with Cisco, and several other projects where I've provided guidance, direction, and community and marketing assistance (SPDK, OVS-DPDK, etc.)

Statement of Intent: I want to help grow Tungsten Fabric as an open source project with a robust and diverse community. I feel that project growth is needed in the area of getting the TF consumers to be more vocal and involved in the community, the demand side, but also to build and expand the developer community including committers, reviewers, testers, and architects. One of my overarching themes will be to drive both awareness of TF but also to expand an improved out of the box experience to entice network engineers and developers to try TF.