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Donations of time (to develop new packages, maintain existing packages, or provide user support), resources (to mirror the package and WWW archives), and money (to pay for new testbeds as well as hardware for the archives) can help the project. See also How can you help Debian?.
The development of Debian is open to all, and new users with the right skills and/or the willingness to learn are needed to maintain existing packages which have been "orphaned" by their previous maintainers, to develop new packages, to write documentation, to do translation work, to help with the Debian website, to provide user support, etc.
Volunteers can participate in the project as Debian contributor, Debian maintainer, or as a Debian developer (with or without uploading privileges):
Debian contributors participate in many tasks, such as: writing documentation, maintaining the website, translating, supporting users, reviewing bug reprots, or participating in different teams. It is an unofficial role and it is usually the starting point for many people.
Debian maintainers maintain one or more specific packages and can upload these packages directly to the archive without requiring another Debian developer (or maintainer) to sponsor them.
Debian developers is the full membership role in Debian. A developer can participate in Debian elections, can log into most of the systems Debian manages, and can upload any package to the archive. This role is provided after a strict and thorough process.
The website provides more information on how to join the project. The description of becoming a Debian maintainer can be found at the New Member's Corner at the Debian web site.
Debian uses Salsa (salsa.debian.org), a GitLab instance, for collaborative development where anyone can sign up and send Merge Requests.
Since the project aims to make a substantial body of software rapidly and easily accessible throughout the globe, mirrors are needed. It is desirable but not absolutely necessary to mirror all of the archive. Please visit the Debian mirror size page for information on the disk space requirements.
Most of the mirroring is accomplished entirely automatically by scripts, without any interaction. However, the occasional glitch or system change occurs which requires human intervention.
If you have a high-speed connection to the Internet, the resources to mirror
all or part of the distribution, and are willing to take the time (or find
someone) who can provide regular maintenance of the system, then please contact
<[email protected]>
.
Donations from sponsors allow Debian to have machines, as well as other hardware, organise conferences and development sprints, amongst other things. For more information please visit Debian Donations. The page also lists the different methods that can be used to donate.
One can make individual donations to organizations that are critical to the development of the Debian project. The main organization is Software in the Public Interest, incorporated in the United States, but there are others.
Software in the Public Interest (SPI) is an IRS 501(c)(3) non-profit organization based in the United States. The purpose of the organization is to develop and distribute free software.
It encourages programmers to use the GNU General Public License or other licenses that allow free redistribution and use of software, and hardware developers to distribute documentation that will allow device drivers to be written for their product.
SPI acts as a fiscal sponsor to many free and open source projects. The Debian project has been an associate project since the organization's creation.
SPI can be reached at: https://www.spi-inc.org/.
There are a number of organizations created in different countries that hold assets in trust for Debian. The donations page lists the trusted organizations individuals can donate to. At the time of this writing there are two of them: the Debian France Association (in France), and debian.ch (Switzerland and the Principality of Liechtenstein). Additional affiliate organizations in other countries are listed in Organizations page in the Debian Wiki.