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List of Debian project leaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a chronologicallist of Debian project leaders.Debian is a computeroperating system composed of software packages released asfree and open-source software primarily under theGNU General Public License,[1] developed by a group of individuals known as the Debian project. The Project Leader is a role defined in theDebian Constitution, and is elected once per year by the Debian developers.

Leaders

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Ian Murdock

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Ian Murdock
Main article:Ian Murdock

Ian Murdock, the first Debian project leader and the "ian" in "Debian", was an Americansoftware engineer. He founded the Debian project in August 1993, naming it after his then-girlfriend and later wife, Debra Lynn, and himself (Deb and Ian). He later startedProgeny Linux Systems, a commercialLinux company.He was the Chief Technology Officer of theFree Standards Group and elected chair of theLinux Standard Base workgroup, CTO of theLinux Foundation when the group was formed from the merger of theFree Standards Group andOpen Source Development Labs.He left the Linux Foundation to joinSun Microsystems leading theProject Indiana makingOpenSolaris distribution withGNU userland.From 2011 until 2015, Murdock was Vice President of Platform and Developer Community atSalesforce Marketing Cloud.From November 2015 until his death, Murdock worked for Docker, Inc.

Bruce Perens

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Main article:Bruce Perens

Bruce Perens is an Americancomputer programmer, an advocate of thefree software movement and author ofBusyBox. He createdThe Open Source Definition and published the first formal announcement and manifesto ofopen source. He co-founded theOpen Source Initiative (OSI) withEric S. Raymond andSoftware in the Public Interest.He represented Open Source at the United NationsWorld Summit on the Information Society at the invitation of theUnited Nations Development Programme in 2005.He was the Debian project leader from April 1996 to December 1997, replacing Ian Murdock.

Ian Jackson

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Main article:Ian Jackson (computer programmer)

Ian Jackson is a long-timefree software author andDebian developer. He wrotedpkg, SAUCE (Software Against Unsolicited Commercial Email), userv anddebbugs. He used to maintain theLinux FAQ. He was the Debian project leader between 1998 and 1999. Debian GNU/Linux 2.0 (hamm) was released during his term. He was also a vice-president and then president ofSoftware in the Public Interest in 1998 and 1999. He was a member of the Debian Technical Committee until November 2014 when he resigned[2] as a result of controversies around the migration of Debian tosystemd.[3]

Wichert Akkerman

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Wichert Akkerman is a Dutch computer programmer who has contributed toDebian,dpkg,Plone andstrace. He was elected for two terms as the Debian project leader and served from January 1999 to March 2001. He has also served as the Secretary toSoftware in the Public Interest.

Ben Collins

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Ben Collins is an American programmer,Linux developer and system administrator. From April 2001 to April 2002[4][5][6] Collins acted as the Debian project leader. During his tenure, he specialised on the UltraSPARC port and advocated for proactive security and testing policies.[7][8] Collins had stood for Debian project leader two times prior to being elected. When he took up the role he commented that when he joined the project Ian Jackson, who was at the end of his term as Debian project leader, was "very inactive". Jackson was followed by Wichert Akkerman for two terms, and according to Collins "did an excellent job keeping Debian going". Once elected Collins declared his intent to get Debian moving and during his tenure he sought to provide strategic leadership to build the Debian movement.[7][8]

Bdale Garbee

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Main article:Bdale Garbee

Bdale Garbee is an American computer specialist who works withLinux, particularlyDebian. He is also anamateur radio hobbyist, a member ofAMSAT,Tucson Amateur Packet Radio (former vice-president)and theAmerican Radio Relay League and a member of the board of directors of theLinux Foundation andFreedomBox Foundation's board of directors.He was the Debian project leader for one year between 2002 and 2003.

Martin Michlmayr

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Main article:Martin Michlmayr

Martin Michlmayr is afree and open-source software advocate andDebian developer. Michlmayr completed adoctorate in technology management at theUniversity of Cambridge in 2007. The focus of this research was onquality improvement infree software and open source projects, and particularly on release management processes and practices. Between 2008 and 2014, he served on theboard of directors of theOpen Source Initiative and is a member ofSoftware Freedom Conservancy's evaluation committee. In the past he acted as an advisor toSoftware in the Public Interest.He was elected as Debian project leader in 2003 and re-elected to that position in 2004.

Branden Robinson

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G. Branden Robinson is known for his contributions to the packaging of theX Window System and his tenure as the Debian project leader from April 2005 to April 2006.[9][10] He has contributed to Debian since 1998. His most visible contribution is his long-time maintenance of the X Window System packages, which he took over from Mark W. Eichin by uploading the 3.3.2 release of theXFree86 packages on 1998-03-25. Robinson was elected by his fellow developers in 2005 after running for the position five times between 2001 and 2005. He succeededMartin Michlmayr, who had been elected project leader in 2003 and 2004. During Branden Robinson's term as a leader, the project achieved some incremental successes, such as a stable point release ofstable by new release managers for that distribution, havingAMD64 added totesting, and the inclusion of modularX in unstable.

Anthony Towns

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Anthony Towns is a computerprogrammer who was a long-timeDebian release manager,ftpmaster team member and later the Debian project leader (from 17 April 2006 until 17 April 2007). He ran for Debian project leader in 2005, but was defeated by Branden Robinson by a margin of 23 effective votes.[11] He ran again in 2006, and was elected as the new Debian project leader on 9 April 2006, beginning his term on 19 April 2006.[12] Towns was elected by the second-narrowest-ever margin[13] and was the first project leader to face a recall vote while in office.[14] Towns was also the first project leader whose support by Debian Developers was reaffirmed through a General Resolution.[15] Since a great deal of Debian work takes place in Europe,Queensland-based Towns created the post of "Debian Second in Charge" (2IC) to lead discussion, support developers, and represent the project in locations which could more easily be reached by the runner-up candidate, Steve McIntyre, than himself.[13]

In September 2006, theDunc-tank project started a fund-raising programme to help Debian release its next distribution,Etch, on the scheduled date of 4 December 2006.[16] Towns's involvement with Dunc-Tank came under severe criticism, including hitherto-unseen calls to end his Debian project leadership to make clear that the Dunc-Tank project was not officially supported by Debian project members. Some developers slowed down their unpaid work on Debian in response to the programme. Debian "Etch" was not released in December 2006 as hoped; instead its release happened in April 2007. Nonetheless, Towns views the outcome of the Dunc Tank project as positive,[17] highlighting that Dunc-Tank opposition helped to improve quality of Debian Etch.

Sam Hocevar

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Main article:Sam Hocevar

Samuel "Sam" Hocevar is a Frenchsoftware andvideo game developer,author of theWTFPL version 2, apermissive free software license.Hocevar was aWikimedia France board member from 2005 to 2006.He is known for his contributions to theVideoLAN project and his expertise inreverse engineering andimage processing and for authoring the firstCAPTCHA decoder framework to defeat multiple CAPTCHAs.He was the Debian project leader from 17 April 2007 to 16 April 2008.

Steve McIntyre

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Steve McIntyre is asoftware engineer and a long-timeDebian developer, known for his contributions in the field of creating DebianCD/DVD images; he is thedebian-cd team leader and is responsible for generating the official images. McIntyre ran for the post of Debian project leader in 2006 and 2007 but was defeated. During the 2006 term, he acted as "Second in charge" of the Debian Project.[13] In 2008 he was elected the Debian project leader,[18] and was re-elected in 2009.[19] He chose not to run in the 2010 election.[20]

Stefano Zacchiroli

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Main article:Stefano Zacchiroli

Stefano Zacchiroli is an Italian-Frenchacademic andcomputer scientist who lives and works inParis.He became a Debian Developer in 2001 involved mainly in theOCaml packaging and in thequality assurance team.He was the Debian project leader between April 2010 and April 2013.

Lucas Nussbaum

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Nussbaum in 2013

Lucas Nussbaum is aFrenchcomputer scienceengineer andassistant professor atUniversity of Lorraine, researcher at LORIA laboratory. Nussbaum was elected leader of theDebian project in April 2013.[21] He has been a Debian Developer since 2007.[22] Since then, he has been active, amongst other things, as a DebianRuby packager, with theUniversal Debian Database or the full rebuilds of the Debian Archive.[23]During the 2012 election, outgoing leaderStefano Zacchiroli announced that this would be the last term for which he would run; thus, in the 2013 election, the election did not include the incumbent. Nussbaum ran for the first time, opposite Gergely Nagy and Moray Allan.His term started on April 17, 2013.[21]He was re-elected on April 14, 2014.[24]

Neil McGovern

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Neil McGovern, an Executive Director at the Gnome Foundation, was elected in April 2015,[25] after running for the second time in a row.[26]

Mehdi Dogguy

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Mehdi Dogguy, a Tunisian-French technical manager atÉlectricité de France,[27] was elected in April 2016,[28] running without opponents.

Chris Lamb

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Chris Lamb, a British freelancer,[29] was elected in April 2017,[30] running against the incumbent leader Mehdi Dogguy. He was re-elected in April 2018.[31]

Sam Hartman

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Sam Hartman served as DPL from April 2019 to April 2020.Hartman worked as the Chief Technologist at the MIT Kerberos Consortium and asa Security Area Director of the Internet Engineering Taskforce, and joined Debian in 2000.[32] He was elected running against Joerg Jaspert, Jonathan Carter and Martin Michlmayr[33] and focused his term on resolving conflicts in Debian and facilitating project-wide discussions and decision-making on contentious technical issues.[34]

Jonathan Carter

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Jonathan Carter was elected in April 2020, running against Sruthi Chandran and Brian Gupta.[35][36]Carter was re-elected in April 2021, running against Sruthi Chandran[37] and in April 2022, running against Felix Lechner and Hideki Yamane.[38]In April 2023, he was re-elected without opponents.[39]

Andreas Tille

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Andreas Tille was elected in April 2024, running against Sruthi Chandran.[40][41] This was his first time running for the position after being a Debian Developer for more than 25 years.[42]

Comparison

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This box:
1993 —
1994 —
1995 —
1996 —
1997 —
1998 —
1999 —
2000 —
2001 —
2002 —
2003 —
2004 —
2005 —
2006 —
2007 —
2008 —
2009 —
2010 —
2011 —
2012 —
2013 —
2014 —
2015 —
2016 —
2017 —
2018 —
2019 —
2020 —
2021 —
2022 —
2023 —
2024 —
2025 —
Wichert Akkerman
Ben Collins
Branden Robinson
Anthony Towns
Steve McIntyre
Lucas Nussbaum
Neil McGovern
Mehdi Dogguy
Sam Hartman
Jonathan Carter
Andreas Tille
LeaderFirst yearTotal yearsAge at first term
Murdock, Ian19933a20
Perens, Bruce19962b38
Jackson, Ian19981c
Akkerman, Wichert19992
Collins, Ben2001129
Garbee, Bdale20021
Michlmayr, Martin20032
Robinson, Branden20051
Towns, Anthony2006127
Hocevar, Sam2007128
McIntyre, Steve2008234
Zacchiroli, Stefano2010331
Nussbaum, Lucas20132
McGovern, Neil20151
Dogguy, Mehdi20161
Lamb, Chris20172
Hartman, Sam20191
Carter, Jonathan2020438
Tille, Andreas2024current56
  • ^a From August to March
  • ^b From April to December
  • ^c From January to March

References

[edit]
  1. ^"What Does Free Mean? or What do you mean by Free Software?".official Debian site. The Debian Project. Retrieved2009-12-01.
  2. ^Jackson, Ian (19 November 2014)."Resignation". Debian Mailing List. Retrieved19 November 2014.I am resigning from the Technical Committee with immediate effect. While it is important that the views of the 30-40% of the project who agree with me should continue to be represented on the TC, I myself am clearly too controversial a figure at this point to do so. I should step aside to try to reduce the extent to which conversations about the project's governance are personalised.
  3. ^Hoffman, Chris (3 December 2014)."Meet Devuan, the Debian fork born from a bitter systemd revolt".PCWorld. Retrieved20 June 2016.A Debian systemd maintainer and others have resigned, a splinter group threatened to fork Debian if the controversial init system was made mandatory, and a Debian Technical Comitttee vote chose systemd as Debian's default init system.
  4. ^Zacchiroli, Stefano (2011-03-21).Since then — 12 Debian Project Leaders (DPL)(slides). Software Liberty Association of Taiwan (SLAT).Debian: 17 years of Free Software, "do-ocracy", and democracy. Taipei. p. 7. Retrieved2012-02-11.
  5. ^Bretton, A.J. (2001-04-02)."Debian Gets New Chef".Client Server News. G2 Computer Intelligence. Archived fromthe original on November 18, 2018. Retrieved2012-02-11.
  6. ^Debian Documentation Team (2005-08-10)."Leadership"(PDF).A Brief History of Debian. 2.5. Archived fromthe original(slides) on 2014-11-29.
  7. ^ab"Interview with Ben Collins, the new Debian Project Leader".Linux Gazette (66). May 2001.
  8. ^ab"Ben Collins".Corporate Information. SwissDisk. 2011. Retrieved2012-02-11.
  9. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2005". Retrieved2011-11-27.
  10. ^Krafft, Martin F. (2005).The Debian system: concepts and techniques. No Starch Press. p. 34.ISBN 978-1-59327-069-8. Retrieved16 June 2011.
  11. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2005". Debian.org. 2005-04-17. Retrieved2011-12-10.
  12. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2006". Debian.org. 2006-04-17. Retrieved2011-12-10.
  13. ^abcTowns, Anthony (2006-04-23)."Bits from the DPL".
  14. ^Barbier, Denis."General Resolution: Recall the project leader".Archived from the original on 5 February 2007. Retrieved2007-02-23.
  15. ^"General Resolution: Re-affirm support to the Debian Project Leader". Debian.org. Retrieved2011-12-10.
  16. ^"Announcement of Dunc-Tank.org". Archived fromthe original on 2 March 2007. Retrieved2007-02-23.
  17. ^Tay, Liz."Dunc-Tank: Success or failure?".Computerworld (Australia). Retrieved2007-02-23.
  18. ^"Debian Project Leader Election 2008 Results". Retrieved2011-11-26.
  19. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2009". 2009-04-17. Retrieved2011-11-26.
  20. ^"Debian Project Leader Election 2010 Results". Retrieved2010-04-19.
  21. ^ab"Results for Debian Project Leader 2013 Election". 2013-04-14. Retrieved2013-04-14.
  22. ^"New Member page for Lucas Nussbaum". 2013-04-14.
  23. ^Nussbaum, Lucas (2013-03-18)."DPL Platform for Lucas Nussbaum". Retrieved2013-04-14.
  24. ^"Results for the 2014 Debian Project Leader election". Archived fromthe original on 2014-12-02.
  25. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2015".
  26. ^McGovern, Neil."DPL Platform for Neil McGovern".
  27. ^Dogguy, Mehdi."DPL Platform for Mehdi Dogguy".
  28. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2016".
  29. ^Lamb, Chris."DPL Platform for Chris Lamb".
  30. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2017".
  31. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2018".www.debian.org. Retrieved2018-05-23.
  32. ^Hartman, Sam."DPL Platform for Sam Hartman".
  33. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2019".
  34. ^Hartman, Sam."Opposite of a Platform for DPL 2020".
  35. ^Carter, Jonathan."DPL Platform for Jonathan Carter".
  36. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2020".
  37. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2021".www.debian.org.
  38. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2022".www.debian.org.
  39. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2023".www.debian.org.
  40. ^Roeckx, Kurt (22 April 2024)."Debian Project Leader Election 2024 Results".debian-vote (Mailing list).
  41. ^"Debian Project Leader Elections 2024".
  42. ^Tille, Andreas."DPL Platform for Andreas Tille".
  43. ^"Chapter 2 – Leadership".A Brief History of Debian. Debian. 2013-05-04.Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved2014-07-05.
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