whatisgithub

What is community?

kubernetes/community — explained in plain English

Analysis updated 2026-06-24

12,860Jupyter NotebookAudience · developerComplexity · 1/5Setup · easy

In one sentence

The central documentation and governance hub for the Kubernetes open-source community, covering contributor guides, Special Interest Group structures, and how to get involved in the project.

Mindmap

mindmap
  root((K8s Community))
    Structure
      Special Interest Groups
      Working Groups
      Committees
    Contributing
      Contributor guide
      File issues
      Open pull requests
    Getting involved
      Mailing lists
      Slack channels
      SIG meetings
    Membership
      Open to all
      Responsibility levels
      Governance docs
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Code map

Detail Auto

An interactive map of this repo's files and how they connect — its source is parsed live in your browser. Click Visualize to build it.

filefunction / class

What do people build with it?

USE CASE 1

Find the right Special Interest Group to contribute to based on your area of interest in Kubernetes.

USE CASE 2

Follow the contributor guide to submit your first pull request to the Kubernetes project.

USE CASE 3

Attend a SIG meeting or join a Kubernetes mailing list to engage with maintainers directly.

What is it built with?

MarkdownJupyter Notebook

How does it compare?

kubernetes/communitychenyuntc/pytorch-bookfacebookresearch/dinov2
Stars12,86012,83712,835
LanguageJupyter NotebookJupyter NotebookJupyter Notebook
Setup difficultyeasymoderatemoderate
Complexity1/53/53/5
Audiencedeveloperresearcherresearcher

Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.

How do you get it running?

Difficulty · easy Time to first run · 5min

So what is it?

This repository is the central hub for the Kubernetes open-source community. Kubernetes is a widely used system for managing containerized software deployments across many computers at once. This particular repo does not contain the core software itself: instead, it holds the documents, guidelines, and organizational records that govern how thousands of contributors around the world collaborate on the project. The community is organized into groups with different scopes. Special Interest Groups, called SIGs, are the primary unit: each one owns a particular area of the project (such as networking, storage, or the command-line tools) and operates transparently with open meetings and public channels. Working Groups are temporary and form when a problem crosses the boundaries of multiple SIGs. Committees handle sensitive topics like security and governance, and may operate with some private communication when necessary. For anyone interested in contributing to Kubernetes, this is the right starting point. It explains how to find an area to work on, how to attend SIG meetings, how to join mailing lists and Slack channels, and how to submit code or documentation changes. There is also a contributor guide covering the mechanics of filing issues and opening pull requests. Membership in the community is open to anyone who contributes regularly, and the repo explains what responsibilities come with different levels of membership.

Copy-paste prompts

Prompt 1
I want to contribute to Kubernetes networking. Show me how to find the right SIG, join their mailing list, and attend a meeting based on the kubernetes/community guide.
Prompt 2
Walk me through the Kubernetes contributor membership ladder: what are the levels, what responsibilities does each have, and how do I move up?
Prompt 3
How do Working Groups in the Kubernetes community differ from Special Interest Groups, and when should I propose a new one?
Prompt 4
What are the steps to get my first pull request merged into a Kubernetes SIG repository as a new contributor?

Frequently asked questions

What is community?

The central documentation and governance hub for the Kubernetes open-source community, covering contributor guides, Special Interest Group structures, and how to get involved in the project.

What language is community written in?

Mainly Jupyter Notebook. The stack also includes Markdown, Jupyter Notebook.

How hard is community to set up?

Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.

Who is community for?

Mainly developer.

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