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<?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>