Community

Open-Falcon is developed in the open. Here are some of the channels we use to communicate and contribute:

Mailing lists:

Issue tracker: Use the GitHub issue tracker for the various Open-Falcon repositories to file bugs and features request. If you need support, please send your questions to the openfalcon-users mailing list rather than filing a GitHub issue.

Please do not ask individual project members for support. Use the channels above instead, where the whole community can help you and benefit from the solutions provided. If community support is insufficient for your situation, please refer to the Commercial Support section below.

Contributing

We welcome community contributions! Open-Falcon uses GitHub to manage reviews of pull requests.

  • If you have a trivial fix or improvement, go ahead and create a pull request, addressing (with `@...`) the maintainer of this repository in the description of the pull request.
  • If you plan to do something more involved, first discuss your ideas on our mailing list. This will avoid unnecessary work and surely give you and us a good deal of inspiration.

Acknowledgements

Open-Falcon was initially started by Xiaomi. We would also like to acknowledge early contributions by engineers from these companies.

Special thanks to WiFire for providing hosting resources.

The Open-Falcon logo and website were contributed by Cepave Design Team.

Commercial Support

This is a list of third-party companies and individuals who provide support or consulting services for Open-Falcon. Open-Falcon is an independent open source project which does not endorse any company.

Project Governance

Open-Falcon is an independent open-source project and not controlled by any single company. To emphasize this and clarify our governance structure, we joined the Golang Foundation China in 2016.

Code of Conduct

To make Open-Falcon a welcoming and harassment-free experience for everyone, we follow the CNCF Code of Conduct.