This landscape is intended as a map to explore the OSPO Ecosystem, and also shows the member companies of the TODO Group. It is modelled after the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) landscape and based on the same open source code.
Please see landscape.todogroup.org.
We welcome contributors who are willing to include new entries of organizations that have an OSPO (Open Source Program Office) or a similar open source initiative in the OSPO Adopter category, as well as open source projects that assist OSPOs in the Tools category.
An OSPO does NOT need to be a TODO Member to be in the OSPO Landscape as an OSPO Adopter, every organization with an OSPO (governments, companies, academic institutions) can apply.
To submit a new entry, please take note of the following guidelines:
- Organizations with an OSPO or open source initiative must have a public facing site (e.g., https://opensource.google, https://ospo.ucsc.edu/ or https://github.com/aiven)
- Projects must be open source and hosted in a source code management system, like GitLab, GitHub, etc.
- The project or organization needs a logo and the logo needs to include the name.
- We are unlikely to create a new category for projects as we'd rather find the best home with the current options.
If you think your organization or project should be included, please open a pull request to add it to landscape.yml. For the logo, you can either upload an SVG to the hosted_logos
directory or put a URL as the value, and it will be fetched.
Netlify will generate a staging server for you to preview your updates. Please check that the logo and information appear correctly and then add LGTM
to the pull request confirming your review and requesting a merge.
The following rules will produce the most readable and attractive logos:
- We require SVGs, as they are smaller, display correctly at any scale, and work on all modern browsers. If you only have the logo in another vector format (like AI or EPS), please open an issue and we'll convert it to an SVG for you, or you can often do it yourself at https://cloudconvert.com/. Note that you may need to zip your file to attach it to a GitHub issue. Please note that we require pure SVGs and will reject SVGs that contain embedded PNGs since they have the same problems of being bigger and not scaling seamlessly. We also require that SVGs convert fonts to outlines so that they will render correctly whether or not a font is installed. See Proper SVGs below.
- When multiple variants exist, use stacked (not horizontal) logos. For example, we use the second column (stacked), not the first (horizontal), of CNCF project logos.
- Don't use reversed logos (i.e., with a non-white, non-transparent background color). If you only have a reversed logo, create an issue with it attached and we'll produce a non-reversed version for you.
- Logos must include the company, product or project name in English. It's fine to also include words from another language. If you don't have a version of your logo with the name in it, please open an issue and we'll create one for you (and please specify the font).
- Match the item name to the English words in the logos. So an Acme Rocket logo that shows "Rocket" should have product name "Rocket", while if the logo shows "Acme Rocket", the product name should be "Acme Rocket". Otherwise, logos looks out of place when you sort alphabetically.
- Google images is often the best way to find a good version of the logo (but ensure it's the up-to-date version). Search for grpc logo filetype:svg but substitute your project or product name for grpc.
- You can either upload an SVG to the
hosted_logos
directory or put a URL as the value, and it will be fetched.
SVGs need to not rely on external fonts so that they will render correctly in any web browser, whether or not the correct fonts are installed. If you have the original AI file, here are the steps in Illustrator to create a proper SVG:
- Open file in Illustrator
- Select all text
- With the text selected, go to Object > Expand in the top menu
- Export file by going to File > Export > Export As in top menu
- Select SVG from the format drop down and make sure that "Use Artboards" is checked
- This will open a SVG options box, make sure to set Decimal to 5 (that is the highest possible, so to ensure that sufficient detail is preserved)
- Click Okay to export
Please open a pull request with edits to landscape.yml.
This repository contains data received from Crunchbase. This data is not licensed pursuant to the Apache License. It is subject to Crunchbase’s Data Access Terms, available at https://data.crunchbase.com/v3.1/docs/terms, and is only permitted to be used with this Landscape Project which is hosted by the Linux Foundation.
Everything else is under the Apache License, Version 2.0, except for project and product logos, which are generally copyrighted by the company that created them, and are simply cached here for reliability. The trail map, static landscape, serverless landscape, and landscape.yml file are alternatively available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.
You can install and run locally with the install directions. It's not necessary to install locally if you just want to edit landscape.yml. You can do so via the GitHub web interface.
Please open an issue or, for sensitive information, email info@cncf.io.
The file src/components/MainContent2.js describes the key elements of a landscape big picture. It specifies where to put these sections: App Definition and Development, Orchesteration & Management, Runtime, Provisioning, Cloud, Platform, Observability and Analyzis, Special. Also it specifies where to locate the link to the serverless preview and an info with a QR code.
All these elements should have top
, left
, width
and height
properties to
position them. rows
and cols
specify how much columns or rows we expect in a
given horizontal or vertical section.
When we see that those elements can not fit the sections, we need to either increase the width of all the horizontal sections, or increase height and amount of rows in a single horitzontal section and adjust the position of sections below.
Beside that, we have to adjust the width of a parent div (1620), the width in a
src/components/BigPicture/FullscreenLandscape.js
(1640) and the width in a
tools/renderLandscape.js
(6560, because of x4 zoom and margins)
Sometimes the total height is changed too, then we need to adjust the height the same way as we adjust the width.
We have an experimental fitWidth
property, it is good when you want to get rid of
an extra space on the right of a section.
The best way to test that layout is ok, is to visit /landscape
, and if it looks ok, run PORT=3000 babel-node tools/renderLandscape
and see the rendered png files, they are in src/images folder.