This repo holds HIPEs (Hyperledger Indy Project Enhancements, pronounced like "hype" for short) for chunks of technology or process that are important to standardize across the Indy ecosystem.
Many changes, including bug fixes and documentation improvements, can just be implemented and reviewed via the normal GitHub pull request workflow. Some changes, though, are "substantial"; these are the ones where a HIPE helps to produce consensus and a shared understanding in the community. The HIPE process is documented below.
Note: this repo and the enhancement proposal process it embodies has a special relationship with sovrin-sip and possibly similar layered standards. Please see derivative networks for details.
- When you need to follow this process
- Before creating a HIPE
- What the process is
- The HIPE lifecycle
- Reviewing HIPEs
- Implementing a HIPE
- HIPE Postponement
- Help this is all too informal!
- License
You need to follow this process if you intend to make "substantial" changes to Indy, Indy-SDK, or the HIPE process itself. What constitutes a "substantial" change is evolving based on community norms and varies depending on what part of the ecosystem you are proposing to change.
Some changes do not require a HIPE:
- Rephrasing, reorganizing, refactoring, or otherwise "changing shape does not change the meaning."
- Additions that strictly improve objective, numerical quality criteria (warning removal, speedup, better platform coverage, more parallelism, trap more errors, etc.)
- Additions only likely to be noticed by other developers-of-indy, invisible to users-of-indy.
If you submit a pull request to implement a new feature without going through the HIPE process, it may be closed with a polite request to submit a HIPE first.
A hastily proposed HIPE can hurt its chances of acceptance. Low quality proposals, proposals for previously rejected features, or those that don't fit into the near-term roadmap, may be quickly rejected, which can be demotivating for the unprepared contributor. Laying some groundwork ahead of the HIPE can make the process smoother.
Although there is no single way to prepare for submitting a HIPE, it is generally a good idea to pursue feedback from other project developers beforehand, to ascertain that the HIPE may be desirable; having a consistent impact on the project requires concerted effort toward consensus-building.
The most common preparations for writing and submitting a HIPE include talking the idea over on #indy and #indy-sdk, discussing the topic on our community calls (see the []Hyperledger Community Calendar](https://wiki.hyperledger.org/community/calendar-public-meetings)), and occasionally posting "pre-HIPEs" on the mailing lists. You may file issues on this repo for discussion, but these are not actively looked at by the teams.
As a rule of thumb, receiving encouraging feedback from long-standing project developers, and particularly members of the relevant sub-team is a good indication that the HIPE is worth pursuing.
In short, to get a major feature added to Indy, one must first get the HIPE merged into the HIPE repository as a markdown file. At that point, the HIPE is "active" and may be implemented with the goal of eventual inclusion into Indy.
- Fork the HIPE repo.
- Pick a descriptive name for your feature. Use kebab case ("my-cool-feature"). Do not assign a HIPE number.
- Create a folder under
text/
for your feature, using the chosen name. Copy0000-template.md
totext/<your folder name>/README.md
. - Fill in the HIPE. Put care into the details: HIPEs that do not present convincing motivation, demonstrate an understanding of the impact of the design, or are disingenuous about the drawbacks or alternatives tend to be poorly received. You can add supporting artifacts such as diagrams and sample data, in the HIPE's folder.
- Submit a pull request. As a pull request, the HIPE will receive design feedback from the larger community, and the author should be prepared to revise it in response.
- Build consensus and integrate feedback. HIPEs that have broad support are much more likely to make progress than those that don't receive any comments. Feel free to reach out to the HIPE assignee, in particular, to get help identifying stakeholders and obstacles.
- The maintainers will assign your HIPE a number. You will need to update your
PR to change the name from
<my-cool-feature-name>
to something like0097-my-cool-feature-name
. HIPEs rarely go through this process with only a number assignment, especially as alternatives and drawbacks are shown. You can make edits, big and small, to the HIPE to clarify or change the design, but make changes as new commits to the pull request, and leave a comment on the pull request explaining your changes. Specifically, do not squash or rebase commits after they are visible on the pull request. - At some point, a maintainer will propose a "motion for Final
Comment Period" (FCP), along with a disposition for the HIPE (merge, close,
or postpone).
- This step is taken when enough of the tradeoffs have been discussed that maintainers are in a position to make a decision. That does not require consensus amongst all participants in the HIPE thread (which is usually impossible). However, the argument supporting the disposition on the HIPE needs to have already been clearly articulated, and there should not be a strong consensus against that position. Maintainers use their best judgment in taking this step, and the FCP itself ensures there is ample time and notification for stakeholders to push back if it is made prematurely.
- For HIPEs with a lengthy discussion, the motion to FCP is usually preceded by a summary comment trying to lay out the current state of the discussion and major tradeoffs/points of disagreement.
- The FCP lasts ten calendar days, so that it is open for at least 5 business days. It is also advertised widely, e.g. on mailing lists and slack. This way all stakeholders have a chance to lodge any final objections before a decision is reached.
- In most cases, the FCP period is quiet, and the HIPE is either merged or closed. However, sometimes substantial new arguments or ideas are raised, the FCP is canceled, and the HIPE goes back into development mode.
Once a HIPE becomes "active" then authors may implement it and submit the feature as a pull request to the Indy repo. Being "active" is not a rubber stamp, and in particular still does not mean the feature will ultimately be merged; it does mean that in principle all the major stakeholders have agreed to the feature and are amenable to merging it.
Furthermore, the fact that a given HIPE has been accepted and is "active" implies nothing about what priority is assigned to its implementation, nor does it imply anything about whether an Indy developer has been assigned the task of implementing the feature. While it is not necessary that the author of the HIPE also write the implementation, it is by far the most effective way to see a HIPE through to completion: authors should not expect that other project developers will take on responsibility for implementing their accepted feature.
Modifications to "active" HIPEs can be done in follow-up pull requests. We strive to write each HIPE in a manner that it will reflect the final design of the feature; but the nature of the process means that we cannot expect every merged HIPE to actually reflect what the end result will be at the time of the next major release.
In general, once accepted, HIPEs should not be substantially changed. Only very minor changes should be submitted as amendments. More substantial changes should be new HIPEs, with a note added to the original HIPE. Exactly what counts as a "very minor change" is up to the maintainers to decide.
While the HIPE pull request is up, the maintainers may schedule meetings with the author and/or relevant stakeholders to discuss the issues in greater detail, and in some cases, the topic may be discussed at a sub-team meeting. In either case, a summary of the meeting will be posted back to the HIPE pull request.
Maintainers make final decisions about HIPEs after the benefits and drawbacks are well understood. These decisions can be made at any time. When a decision is made, the HIPE pull request will either be merged or closed. In either case, if the reasoning is not clear from the discussion in the thread, the maintainers will add a comment describing the rationale for the decision.
Some accepted HIPEs represent vital features that need to be implemented right away. Other accepted HIPEs can represent features that can wait until some arbitrary developer feels like doing the work. Every accepted HIPE has an associated issue tracking its implementation in indy's jira; thus that associated issue can be assigned a priority via the triage process that the team uses for all issues in the Indy repository.
The author of a HIPE is not obligated to implement it. Of course, the HIPE author (like any other developer) is welcome to post an implementation for review after the HIPE has been accepted.
If you are interested in working on the implementation of an "active" HIPE, but cannot determine if someone else is already working on it, feel free to ask (e.g. by leaving a comment on the associated issue).
Some HIPE pull requests are tagged with the "postponed" label when they are closed (as part of the rejection process). A HIPE closed with "postponed" is marked as such because we want neither to think about evaluating the proposal nor about implementing the described feature until some time in the future, and we believe that we can afford to wait until then to do so. Historically, "postponed" was used to postpone features until after 1.0. Postponed pull requests may be re-opened when the time is right. We don't have any formal process for that, you should ask members of the relevant sub-team.
Usually, a HIPE pull request marked as "postponed" has already passed an informal first round of evaluation, namely the round of "do we think we would ever possibly consider making this change, as outlined in the HIPE pull request, or some semi-obvious variation of it." (When the answer to the latter question is "no", then the appropriate response is to close the HIPE, not postpone it.)
The process is intended to be as lightweight as reasonable for the present circumstances. As usual, we are trying to let the process be driven by consensus and community norms, not impose more structure than necessary.
This repository is licensed under an Apache 2 License.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
The structure and a lot of the initial language of this repository was borrowed from Rust RFC . Their good work has made the setup of this repository much quicker and better than it otherwise would have been. If you are not familiar with the Rust community, you should check them out.