Is there some archive of the discussion that brought on this effort and the considerations of the committee itself? I wish I had seen the earlier announcements in 2016 as I would have definitely participated.
Another more specific factual question - have there been incidents within the active Postgresql community where behaviour by individuals who are participants in the community have conducted themselves in a manner that brought on the actual need for such a code of conduct to exist in the first place? I'm curious about the specific impetus that brought about Postgresql's efforts to consider one. I've read the other comments in the general list but I'm more interested in the specifics motivations and efforts by the CoC committee.
thanks,
-- Ben Scherrey
On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 1:29 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Two years ago, there was considerable discussion about creating a
Code of Conduct for the Postgres community, as a result of which
the core team announced a plan to create an exploration committee
to draft a CoC [1]. That process has taken far longer than expected,
but the committee has not been idle. They worked through many comments
and many drafts to produce a version that seems acceptable in the view
of the core team. This final(?) draft can be found at
https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Code_of_Conduct
We are now asking for a final round of community comments.
Please send any public comments to the pgsql-general list (only).
If you wish to make a private comment, you may send it to
coc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
The initial membership of the CoC committee will be announced separately,
but shortly.
Unless there are substantial objections, or nontrivial changes as a result
of this round of comments, we anticipate making the CoC official as of
July 1 2018.
regards, tom lane
[1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/56A8516B.8000105@ agliodbs.com