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The chart combines two data sets with a line chart that helps you compare the total number of active contributors affiliated with organizations compared to independent developers.
On the chart, you can analyze the following data:
Hover over the chart to see the comparison between corporate contributors and independent contributors for the selected month.
The annotation box shows the percent change value of the total corporate and the total independent compared to the previous period.
The dashboard shows the top 10 organizations based on the number of commits pushed across all monitored repositories during the selected time period.
The different sizes of the bar chart vary based on the number of commits pushed by the respective organization for the project. Hover over the chart to see the organization's name and the total commits pushed across all monitored repositories.
Commits will appear on the contributions graph if they meet all of the following conditions:
The commits were made within the past year.
The email address used for the commits is associated with your GitHub account.
The dashboard shows the top 10 organizations that contributed the most to a project or a project group during the selected time period. These organizations are actively engaged in commits, pull requests, issues, and so on. The table lists the organization name, organization logo, their organization name, contributors, activities, commits, PR activities, issues, and so on.
To know more about the active organizations, see Glossary.
Click Order by drop-down on the dashboard to select the order of the table based on your priorities from the drop-down.
The number of contributors in the table list is the total number of contributors who are active during the selected time period.
To get the data, click VIEW ALL to view the Community Management > Organization > Technical Contributors > Most Active dashboard.
The dashboard shows the following two matrices:
If you want to go back to the dashboard from any other screen, simply click the tab on the Dashboard to toggle between dashboards.
The chart combines two data sets with a line chart that helps you compare the count of the total number of organizations that were identified to be participating in the project for the first time with those organizations that have been participating since before the selected time period.
On the chart, you can analyze the following data:
Hover over the chart to see the new organizations vs. existing organizations for the selected month.
The annotation box shows the percent change value of the total new organizations and the total existing organizations compared to the previous period.
An organization qualifies to be a new organization if either all its employees (contributors affiliated with this organization) are first-time contributors or if this organization was newly affiliated (contributors moving to a new company) during the selected time period.
The bar chart shows the total number of organizations whose employees are identified as drifting away and have not participated in any technical activity since the last 6 months but have been active at some point in the last 1 year.
On the chart, you can analyze the following data:
Hover over the chart to see the drifted away organizations for the selected month.
The annotation box shows the percent change value of the total drifted away organizations compared to the previous period.
An organization is considered to be drifting away only if all its affiliated employees have drifted away.
If the affiliation of an individual changes from one organization to another and the individual is still active, the old organization is considered to be drifting away.
When an individual ends their affiliation with an organization, the organization's contribution to that project also ends if this individual was the only active contributor from that organization in the project.
The doughnut chart shows the segregation of the total number of organizations by their membership status. Hover over a color to view the number of organizations by their membership status.
Members are the organizations that have become official members of the Linux Foundation.
Non-members are organizations who have not become official members of the Linux Foundation.
For more information, see active membership.
The dashboard shows the top 10 organizations based on the number of pull requests across all monitored repositories during the selected time period.
Pull request activities include PRs submitted, commented, reviewed (review comments + approved + requested changes), merged, and rejected.
The different sizes of the bar vary based on the number of PRs by the respective organization for the project. Hover over the chart to see the organization's name and the total PRs across all monitored repositories.
The dashboard shows the top 10 organizations based on the number of issues submitted and assigned, resolved or rejected across all monitored repositories during the selected time period.
The different sizes of the bar vary based on the number of issues by the respective organization for the project. Hover over the chart to see the organization's name and the total number of bugs across all monitored repositories.
The dashboard shows a doughnut chart that displays the segregation of the organizations based on their employee strength. You can analyze the newly participating organizations by the cohorts of their current employee strength.
If the organization's employee strength is less than 100, then the organization is considered small.
If the organization's employee strength is between 100 and 999, then the organization is considered medium.
If the organization's employee strength is greater than 1,000, then the organization is considered large.
The dashboard shows a doughnut chart that segregates the active organizations based on the technologies that are associated with these organizations.
Hover over the chart to see the technology and the number of active organizations.
For the current release, GitHub and Git are the two data sources that are supported across all monitored repositories during the selected time period.
The analysis is done based on the following parameters:
The organization name, ID , logo, industry type , and the total number of employees.
Technical contributor ID, commits SHA , email IDs, message IDs, etc.
The organization's industry types.