| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> | 
 | <project> | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - This example is annotated to be instructive. In order to be instructive, the | 
 |      - example is a mish-mash of information from a variety of projects. Obviously,  | 
 |      - when you write the project-info.xml file for your project, the file will  | 
 |      - contain information only about your one project. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Unless otherwise specified, all URLs are to be specified using rooted relative | 
 |      - paths. In other words: | 
 |      -    CORRECT: "/webtools/foo/bar.php" | 
 |      -    INCORRECT: "foo/bar.php" | 
 |      -    INCORRECT: "http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/foo/bar.php" | 
 |     --> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project as an official name, e.g.,  | 
 |      - "AJDT - AspectJ Development Tools Project" and a foundation database  | 
 |      - key, e.g., "technology.ajdt". These are stored in an Eclipse Foundation | 
 |      - database; You can override the name stored on the database by filling  | 
 |      - the <name/> tag | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <name>Phoenix Project</name> | 
 |      | 
 |   <!--      | 
 |      - Each project can also have a short name to be used in HTML lists and  | 
 |      - other horizontally challenged places. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <short-name>Phoenix</short-name> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project has one or more Bugzilla products and components. | 
 |      - Some projects also have a separate web page describing how to submit | 
 |      - a bug, how bugs are prioritized, and other useful information. | 
 |      - The <bugzilla> collects this information. | 
 |      -  | 
 |      - <bugzilla url="..."> <product name="..."/> ... </bugzilla> | 
 |      - The url is optional; if absent, the url will default to the Bugzilla | 
 |      - page of the first product. Multiple <product>s are allowed. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <bugzilla> | 
 |     <product name="Phoenix"/> | 
 |   </bugzilla> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Committers and non-committer Contributors are the raison d'etre of  | 
 |      - an Eclipse project, thus each project should list and acknowledge these | 
 |      - developers. Some of the Committers are 'special' in the sense that | 
 |      - they are the project leaders.  The <team> element contains the  | 
 |      - URL of the project's pages listing these important people. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <team url="/phoenix/about.php" /> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - The source code of each Eclipse project is stored in CVS. Eclipse maintains | 
 |      - a number of CVS repositories, thus the <cvs> element specifies which | 
 |      - CVS repository and (if applicable) which root path stores this project's | 
 |      - source code. | 
 |      - | 
 |      - A top-level project typically specifies only the repository: | 
 |      -     <cvs repository="/cvsroot/tptp"/> | 
 |      - A sub-project includes the root path as well: | 
 |      -     <cvs repository="/cvsroot/technology/"> | 
 |      -       <module path="org.eclipse.higgins" /> | 
 |      -     </cvs> | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <cvs repository="/cvsroot/technology/"> | 
 |     <module path="org.eclipse.phoenix" />  | 
 |   </cvs> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - The description of an Eclipse project shows up in many places: the | 
 |      - project's home page, perhaps the /projects/ page listing all the | 
 |      - top-level projects, in the Roadmap, and so on. Some of the descriptions | 
 |      - are separate HTML files (such as those described in  | 
 |      - http://phoenix.eclipse.org/projects/dev_process/project-status-infrastructure.php). | 
 |      - It would be nice  | 
 |      - This <description> element contains two additional descriptions. | 
 |      -    1. The optional <description url="..."> points to a web page with a larger | 
 |      -       description of the entire project.  | 
 |      -    2. The required <description paragraph-url="..."> points to a file | 
 |      -       containing a couple of simple HTML paragraphs describing the project.  | 
 |      -       This file is often stored in the /project-info/ directory, thus the | 
 |      -       url would be something like "/tptp/project-info/description.html". | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <description url="/phoenix/about.php" | 
 |      paragraph-url="/phoenix/project-info/project-page-paragraph.html"/> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - In addition to the description, each Eclipse project is also required to | 
 |      - provide an up-to-date status summary. "Up to date" means revised at least | 
 |      - quarterly.  | 
 |      - The required <summary paragraph-url="..."> points to a file | 
 |      - containing a number of simple HTML paragraphs with an executive summary | 
 |      - of the project status. | 
 |      - This file is often stored in the /project-info/ directory, thus the | 
 |      - url would be something like "/technology/project-info/executive-summary.html". | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <summary paragraph-url="/technology/phoenix/project-info/executive-summary.html"/> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - It is important to help new users get started with an Eclipse project | 
 |      - because most Eclipse projects are solving some difficult technical | 
 |      - problem and thus are somewhat complex. The <getting-started> element | 
 |      - points to a web page on the project's site that describes how to | 
 |      - get started using and extending the project's tools and frameworks. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <getting-started url="/phoenix/docs/" /> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - It is also important to help new contributors get started with an Eclipse project. | 
 |      - Most Eclipse projects have interesting/complex development environment | 
 |      - setups or to-do lists. The <contributing> element | 
 |      - points to a web page on the project's site that describes how to | 
 |      - get started developing on, and contributing to, the project. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <contributing url="/phoenix/docs/" /> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project is required to maintain a current Project IP Log. | 
 |      - See http://www.eclipse.org/projects/dev_process/project-log.php | 
 |      - The <ip-log> contains the URL of that log.  If the project has | 
 |      - other legal information as well, it can use the <legal> element | 
 |      - instead and then include the IP Log information on the Legal web page. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <ip-log url="" />  | 
 |   <legal url="" />  | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project has one or more mailing lists. | 
 |      - Some projects also have a separate web page describing these lists | 
 |      - while others rely on the main Eclipse mailing lists page. | 
 |      -  | 
 |      - <mailing-lists url="..."> <list name="..."/> ... </mailing-lists> | 
 |      - The url is optional; if absent, the url will default to the Eclipse | 
 |      - mailing lists page. Multiple <lists>s are allowed. | 
 |      - | 
 |      - Note that currently mailing lists must be redundantly listed in | 
 |      - the separate project-info/maillist file as well. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <mailing-lists> | 
 |     <list name="phoenix-dev"/> | 
 |   </mailing-lists> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project has one or more newsgroups. | 
 |      - Some projects also have a separate web page describing these lists | 
 |      - while others rely on the main Eclipse newsgroups page. | 
 |      -  | 
 |      - <newsgroups url="..."> <newsgroup name="..."/> ... </newsgroups> | 
 |      - The url is optional; if absent, the url will default to the Eclipse | 
 |      - newsgroups page. Multiple <newsgroups>s are allowed. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <newsgroups> | 
 |     <newsgroup name="eclipse.technology.phoenix" /> | 
 |   </newsgroups> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - The dashboard attempts to measure the liveness of a project in many | 
 |      - ways including the traffic on the mailing lists and newsgroups. There | 
 |      - are other places where significant project-related traffic can occur | 
 |      - including blogs and articles. When listed here, the dashboard incorporates | 
 |      - them into the liveness measure (or rather, "will incorporate"). | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <articles> | 
 |   </articles> | 
 |    | 
 |   <blogs> | 
 |   </blogs> | 
 |    | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project needs to have a plan both for its internal purposes | 
 |      - (to guide development and resource allocation) and for the larger Eclipse | 
 |      - community and ecosystem to understand what will be delivered and when | 
 |      - it will be delivered. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <project-plan url="" /> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- | 
 |      - Each Eclipse project creates (optional) nightly builds and milestone builds, | 
 |      - but the important builds of a project are the releases. This section of the | 
 |      - status file records the completed (past) and scheduled (future) releases of | 
 |      - the project.  | 
 |      - The status, name, and date are required attributes. The download is optional | 
 |      - and only valid for completed releases; the plan is optional and valid for | 
 |      - all releases.  The three valid types of releases are, in order of ascending  | 
 |      - uncertainity: "completed", "scheduled", and "tentative".  Dates can be | 
 |      - specified as particular day DD/MM/YYYY (e.g., 22/03/2005) or a particular | 
 |      - month MM/YYYY (e.g., 10/2005), or a quarter NQYYYY (e.g., 3Q2005). Obviously | 
 |      - completed releases should include the exact day the release was completed. | 
 |      - | 
 |      - In the following example, we have three completed, two scheduled, and one  | 
 |      - tentative release. | 
 |     --> | 
 |   <releases> | 
 |   </releases> | 
 | </project> |