Hello Ezio and others,

Sorry about the blank message.

I'm happy to help informally for GSOC if needed. Rachel would be great as a supporting mentor (or whatever the correct wording is).

Thoughts on projects and focus are in line.

Thanks, Ezio, for mentoring :-)

Carol

On 13/03/2015 09:29, Brett Cannon wrote:


My areas of focus would be:

* workflow simplification in the issue tracker like what R. David outlined previously
This one, while valuable, seems less focused for a student since likely there will be different opinions on the earlier outlined stuff by R. David.
* Push button patch generation from a GitHub repo
This looks like a well bounded project for a student.
* Some tool that will update a checkout (or somehow make sure a clone is clean for patching), grab a patch from an issue, apply it, run the test suite, and then ask if the committer wants to commit the patch and submit it (assuming everything else worked out in favour of committing the patch);
This looks like a good student project with valuable experience for the user.
essentially script what the fancy workflows being proposed using Phabricator/Kallithea do with the assumption the code was already reviewed in the issue tracker and deemed worthy of being committed


    Understanding in which direction we want to go will allow me to put
    together a project that, once completed, will have long-term benefits
    for our workflow.
    Perhaps I should post this to python-dev too and get feedback from a
    wider audience.


If you want, but I would assume everyone who cares is here at least for an initial discussion.


    > Sure, we're likely to stop using Rietveld in favour of the winner of
    > the forge.python.org <http://forge.python.org> analysis at some
    point in the future, but that
    > point is likely to be quite some time away where CPython is
    concerned.
    >

    Having a student investigating how Kallithea and Phabricator will
    interact with Roundup and start developing a proof-of-concept
    integration and/or tools that we already know will be needed might
    also be an idea.


Yes, especially if I can make a decision fast enough to know which one to focus on.

-Brett

    Best Regards,
    Ezio Melotti

    > Cheers,
    > Nick.
    >
    > --
    > Nick Coghlan   | [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     |   Brisbane, Australia



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--
*Carol Willing*
Developer | Willing Consulting
https://willingconsulting.com
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