




























This March, thirty-one people from Rust Project leadership and the Rust Foundation came to the Google London office for a two-day summit. The summit included notable appearances by:
The schedule included a mix of scheduled roundtable discussions, invited talks, and a handful of "unconference" discussions whose topics were decided at the summit.
The Rust Project has not had an in-person gathering that spans across teams since the last Rust All Hands at Mozilla Berlin in early 2019. Since then there have been major changes to Rust. The Rust Foundation was formed in early 2021 and now has a staff of ten. The Rust Core Team was dissolved in favor of a new Leadership Council. The open source project has grown and many new faces have joined its leadership ranks.
The Rust Project itself has also grown, which has made the prospect of another Rust All Hands less feasible. Holding a smaller event focused on Project leadership allowed us to bring people together from across the project on a much smaller budget.
One of the primary goals of the summit was building trust: between leads, between different parts of the project, and between the project and the foundation. By many reports, this was a smashing success. Many of the attendees had not met face-to-face before, and there's something about sitting in a room and talking about common interests that isn't easily replicated online.
There were productive discussions around a number of topics, including how the Rust Project can better leverage the Foundation's resources to support its work. A full list of sessions is presented below.
Finally, it's said that the first step to finding a solution is identifying the problem. There was broad agreement around some of the biggest challenges the Rust project faces, like its ability to make project-wide decisions. The group built consensus around Project Goals as a way to make some important kinds of decisions.
By design, the leads summit was not a place for making final decisions – the Rust Project already has mechanisms like RFCs for that. However, it was intended as a place to share ideas and build consensus that will be used to accelerate future RFCs.
All of the participants surveyed said that the leads summit served a needed purpose for the project. We hope there will be more events like the leads summit in the future, and that they can grow to include more of the Rust project and its leadership.
For this event to be valuable, it's important for us to follow through on the ideas that we talked about. We've already seen one RFC on Project Goals and hope to see similar RFCs in the coming months. The Leadership Council has also started offering experimental travel funding to project members.
We also collected some great feedback from attendees. In future events, participants said it would be ideal to identify concrete next steps during the summit discussions. Some also commented on the structured schedule, which was designed to get as much as we could out of a 1.5 day event: Several attendees wished for more time for unstructured "getting to know you" discussions, which we think would be great to include in future, longer events.
A big thanks to the Rust Foundation and Google and for sponsoring the event,1 as well as to every employer who paid for travel to the conference.2
A huge thanks to those who helped plan and execute the event and to our guest speakers, including:
Finally, thank you to everyone who made an effort to show up and participate. This event would not have been successful without you.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。