Team
JHipster is developed by a team of people around the world. We have a lot of contributors (top 100 list here), but members of the core team are listed here. If you want to join the team, or see how we work, our community rules are at the end of this page.
Governing Body
Board of developers
Retired members of the board of developers
JHipster is an Open Source project, we don’t ask anything from our members: they can leave the project or stop contributing at any time. But as members of the board have more rights than other people (including write access to the project), we need them to be active.
JHipster streams
JHipster supports a wide range of technology choices for your application and as it keeps growing we have come up with technology streams with specific leads to ensure smooth maintenance of the particular technology. Everything else will be lead by project leads.
The updated spreadsheet can be found here JHipster streams spreadsheet
- AngularLeader: William Marques
- ReactLeader: Sendil Kumar N
- VueJS
- JHipster RegistryLeader: Pierre Besson
- JHipster core/JDLLeader: Mathieu Abou-Aichi
- JHipster KotlinLeader: Sendil Kumar N
- JHipster IDELeader: Serano Colameo
- JDL studioLeader: Deepu K Sasidharan
- JHipster onlineLeader: Julien Dubois
- Continuous Integration and DeliveryLeader: Pascal Grimaud
- GradleLeader: Frederik Hahne
- MavenLeader: Daniel Franco
- JHipster server-side librariesLeader: Julien Dubois
- Spring BootLeader: Daniel Franco
- OIDC/OAuthLeader: Matt Raible
- Blueprints & modules systemLeader: Marcelo Shima
- HerokuLeader: Joe Kutner
- GCP/GAELeader: Ray Tsang
- KubernetesLeader: Pierre Besson
- IstioLeader: Ray Tsang
- InfinispanLeader: Srinivasa Vasu
- ReactiveLeader: Christophe Bornet
- JavaLeader: Julien Dubois
- DockerLeader: Pascal Grimaud
- CassandraLeader: Cedrick Lunven
- OpenAPILeader: Christophe Bornet
Where does the development team work?
We do most of our work on the project’s GitHub page.
Internal team discussions happen in the following channels:
Those discussion channels are publicly viewable, as everything we do in JHipster is public, but only the board of developers can participate. The mailing list archives can be found on the Google groups page and the chat archives are available on Gitter.
How to join the board of developers?
- Participate regularly in the project (commits, PRs, etc)
- Ask someone from the current board, with some bio and background information, and that person will submit a vote on the dev mailing list
- Everybody on the dev mailing list can vote (+1 if they agree, -1 if they don’t)
- One “-1” vote will decline adding the new member, but the person who votes “-1” will need to explain why
What do people in the board of developers gain?
- Write access to the main repository, and to most of the projects under the JHipster organization.
- Costs associated with the project (for example travel costs to come to a JHipster conference) can be paid by our OpenCollective account. This depends on the money available on the account, and this is decided and validated by the project leads.
- Free licenses and free quotas that the project regularly gets from friendly companies.
Community
JHipster is Open Source, and all development is done on GitHub. If you use JHipster, consider becoming a sponsor or a backer. If you want to code with us, feel free to join! If you like the project, please give us a ⭐️ on GitHub.
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