Welcome to the community! Thomas, do we also have a list with the students and ? Maybe it was mentioned somewhere else, since on http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/GoogleSummerOfCode/#HSelectedProjectsforGSoC201728029 it's not updated.
Thanks, Caty On Fri, May 5, 2017 at 11:13 AM, Thomas Mortagne <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello community, Hello Google Summer of Code students, > > First of all, congratulations on your applications and your activity during > the selection period, and welcome in the XWiki development team. > > Before guiding the accepted students to their next steps, we'd like to > thank again all those who showed interest in XWiki for this Summer of Code. > We had a lot of good applications this year, with professional approaches > and interesting ideas, and it was very difficult to choose. Unfortunately, > some very good students, with great potential, were not accepted. So, to > those interested in getting involved anyway, without Google's implication, > I renew the invitation to put your ideas in practice under the guidance of > the community. Even though the money will be missing, you can still take > advantage of the other GSoC benefits: learning new things, gaining > experience, earning recognition, etc [1]. If you would like to do that, > please let us know by replying to this mail. > > For the accepted students, here are some getting started hints: > > = Community bonding period = > > According to the program timeline [2], the next month (until - May 29th) is > to be used for community bonding. > > The first thing to do, sometime this week, is to present yourself and your > project on the dev list, so that everyone knows who you are and > what to expect from you (a precondition is to be subscribed to the list, > which you *need to do ASAP* if you haven't already). > > Also, you should continue getting acquainted with the code, the practices > and the developers. Please make sure you all read and understand the > following - very useful - documents: > - [3] http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Community/ > - [4] http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/DevGuide/ > - [5] http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Features/ > > = Mentorship = > > We prefer open mentorship. While your assigned mentor is the one officially > in charge with your guidance, almost all interaction should be done 'in the > open' as much as possible, on the IRC channel or on the mailing list. You > should choose the communication medium according to the importance of the > matters to be discussed: naturally, the less important issues are to be > discussed on IRC, while the design decisions, important progress > announcements and testing/feedback requests go on the list. This way, the > community is informed on the evolution of your project, and other > developers can come up any time with useful ideas and suggestions. > Moreover, if your mentor is hit by a bus (the bus factor [6]), another > developer can take his place with little effort. > > = Communication = > > Sitting alone in your room, working secretly on your project is definitely > a bad approach. However, please keep in mind that too much communication > can also be harmful, as it distracts the others from their own work. You > need to be able to communicate just right: > - provide meaningful information about your progress, > - ask the community's opinion on non-trivial design or implementation > decisions > - avoid wasting a lot of time on a problem, when a more experienced > developer (or a student that fought the same problem) could quickly provide > you an answer; however, do try to find the answer yourself at first. > > Wrong: "Where do I start? What do I do now? And how do I do that? Is this > good? It doesn't work, help me!" > > Right: "Since a couple of hours ago I get a strange exception when building > my project, and googling for a solution doesn't seem to help. Looking at > the error, I think that there's a wrong setting for the assembly plugin, > but nothing I tried works. Can someone please take a look?" > > Subscribe to the devs list (if you didn't do this already), and start > monitoring the discussions. It is also recommended to subscribe to the > users list, but not mandatory. The notifications list is a little too high > volume and technical for the moment, but it is a great knowledge > source. > > = Development process = > > The project's lifecycle is NOT design -> implementation -> testing -> > documentation. [7] > > We invite you to adopt a test driven development [8][9][10] approach and to > experience agile development [11]. After the first coding week, you must > have some code that works. It won't do much, of course, but it will be the > seed of your project. Every functionality will be validated by tests. The > code must be properly tested and commented at the time of the writing > (don't think you'll do that afterwards, because in most cases you won't). > > Since our code is hosted on GitHub [12], you should register an account > there and fork some xwiki repositories, so that you can try to build XWiki > from sources, and be able to contribute bugfixes. We'll add you to the > xwiki-contrib organization [13], and we'll create dedicated repositories > for each project. We encourage you to do __at least__ weekly commits > (ideally, if you are well organized, you should be able to commit code that > works daily, so try to aim at daily commits). This way, the code can be > properly reviewed, and any problems can be detected before they grow into > something too difficult to fix. One big code blob committed at the end, no > matter how good it may seem, is a failure at several levels. > > A simple way of having something functional in the first week is to prepare > the maven build for your modules, which will give you the first unit test > for the first class. > > = Next steps, in a nutshell = > > - Get more familiar with the code and development process and try to master > Maven, JUnit, Selenium, component driven development, ... > - Continue fixing a few small issues, chosen so that they are __related to > your project__. You can ask on IRC for help selecting good issues, or you > can pick from the (non-comprehensive) list of easy issues [14] > -~- This will help you get more familiar with the code your project needs > to interact with. > - Refine and organize the ideas concerning your project (you can use the > Drafts space [15]), and write several use case scenarios. > - Start writing the first piece of code for your project. > > At the end of the community bonding period, you should have a clear vision > of the project, well documented on the xwiki.org wiki, you should have the > build infrastructure ready, and you should be pretty familiar with the > existing code you will need to interact with. And, of course, you should be > familiar with the community and the way we communicate. > > Good luck, and may we all have a great Summer of Code! > > -The XWiki Development Team > > ---------- > [1] http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/homesteading/ > [2] https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/dashboard/timeline/ > [3] http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Community/ > [4] http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/DevGuide/ > [5] http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Features/ > [6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_factor > [7] http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ > [8] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test-driven_development > [9] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0321146530/ > [10] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0201485672/ > [11] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0596527675/ > [12] https://github.com/xwiki/ > [13] https://github.com/xwiki-contrib/ > [14] > https://jira.xwiki.org/secure/IssueNavigator.jspa?mode=hide& > requestId=10510 > [15] http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Drafts/ >

