Repository dedicated to test EasyCLA.
CLA stands for Contributor License Agreement.
Some groups use a CLA to define the terms under which contributions are licensed to the project.
If your project uses CLA, typically the project needs to ensure that a CLA is signed before a new contribution can be accepted by the project.
For someone that contributes to the project on their own behalf, they need to sign the Individual Contributor License Agreement (ICLA).
For those that contribute to the project on behalf of their own companies, they need to sign the Corporate Contributor License Agreement (CCLA).
It is expected than in this case the contributor might not be authorized to sign legal agreements like a CLA on behalf of their company. The CCLA workflow has in consideration these restrictions.
The Linux Foundation built EasyCLA to help projects to automate the process by which corporates and individuals contribute to a project.