Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-30 Thread Kai Blin
On Friday 30 November 2007 12:30:56 Francois Gouget wrote:
 On Thu, 22 Nov 2007, Kai Blin wrote:
 [...]
  I know some projects did an introductory quiz to figure out the student's
  coding skills, I'm not convinced the knowledge needed for Wine can be
  tested in a quiz. What do you think?

 Maybe just asking them to compile Wine and submit their include/config.h
 or make test results. This can be used to check that their config does
 not have big problems like a bad fontforge or 64/32bit issues that could
 cause them problems when they start their project.

Well, that's something we should take care of, ideally in the one-month period 
after being accepted and before the student is supposed to start working on 
SoC code.

 Asking them to submit conformance tests is an interesting idea too, but
 depending on the area it can be quite a bit of work. For some projects
 it may also not be possible to write relevant tests (e.g. we cannot test
 ExitWindows() or KDE/Gnome theme integration). But for those projects
 where it makes sense it could be a good idea.

Well, the way I'd like it to work is like this:

1. Student sends application draft to mailing list for review.
2. Wine developers with experience in the area covered by the application 
review the draft giving feedback. (Repeat steps 1 and 2 until application is 
suitable)
3. Students apply via Google web-app.
4. We contact students with request for a test case or the like.
5. Students send test case
6. Mentors review test cases, possibly asking for improvements (back to 5).

Of course, I'm afraid it's unlikely that it actually will work like that, at 
least if we define test case as something that will fit right into the wine 
test suite. But I think a test case like a simple program that will use parts 
of the API that should be implemented and works on windows should be 
sufficient, and people will want to have something like that anyway later.

I think it's also worth investing some time to help people get the initial 
code submission right. That's a point where we can teach people about code 
style, dos and don'ts, etc. If we get this right, it will benefit all the 
developers starting off with Wine, not only the SoC students.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
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Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-30 Thread Francois Gouget
On Thu, 22 Nov 2007, Kai Blin wrote:
[...]
 I know some projects did an introductory quiz to figure out the student's 
 coding skills, I'm not convinced the knowledge needed for Wine can be tested 
 in a quiz. What do you think?

Maybe just asking them to compile Wine and submit their include/config.h 
or make test results. This can be used to check that their config does 
not have big problems like a bad fontforge or 64/32bit issues that could 
cause them problems when they start their project.

Asking them to submit conformance tests is an interesting idea too, but 
depending on the area it can be quite a bit of work. For some projects 
it may also not be possible to write relevant tests (e.g. we cannot test 
ExitWindows() or KDE/Gnome theme integration). But for those projects 
where it makes sense it could be a good idea.

The other ideas, public git repository, public blog / more frequent 
public updates, all seem like good ideas that could address the relative 
opacity of past SoCs.

-- 
Francois Gouget [EMAIL PROTECTED]  http://fgouget.free.fr/
 You can have my guns when you pry them from my kids cold, dead hands.




Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-27 Thread Kai Blin
On Thursday 22 November 2007 11:38:19 Kai Blin wrote:

 Comments?

Thanks for the comments so far. I'll just go and flesh out the wiki page some 
more during next week, then we can talk about the individual steps if people 
think they need discussion.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
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Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Kai Blin
Hi folks,

from what we discussed at the last WineConf, we wanted to work on our 
procedures for the Google Summer of Code a little.
I'm sending this email in hope to start some discussion about this, so we have 
it out of the way until the 2008 version is announced so we can talk about 
proposed projects then.

The goal of Wine's SoC procedures should be to get high-quality proposals that 
can be completed by the student proposing the project in the time allocated 
for GSoC, so both scope and difficulty should be checked.
I haven't been on the mentoring side of things, but my understanding from the 
WineConf side of things was that we had some problems getting this right the 
past years.

I was thinking about strongly encouraging people to post their project 
proposal to wine-devel prior to applying, so more developers can have a look 
at it and see if it's doable or not and offer suggestions.

I know some projects did an introductory quiz to figure out the student's 
coding skills, I'm not convinced the knowledge needed for Wine can be tested 
in a quiz. What do you think?

Another thing that didn't turn out too well last time is that it was really 
hard to figure out what was going on during the summer. I have a few ideas on 
how we could address this.

Lots of other projects had their student write a weekly public progress 
report. I think we should require the same. This will probably help keeping 
people updated, and might help spotting problems early.

According to the wiki page, we already require a post-mortem report on the 
project, however I can't remember seeing much of those this year. We should 
make sure those are written next time. We might think of a better name for 
the report, post-mortem sounds like the project is dead after the summer, we 
want people to keep working.

Last year, some of the students set up a public git repo on repo.or.cz. I was 
thinking about making that a requirement for next year. This would allow 
people to review work in progress.

Comments?
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
Will code for cotton.


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Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Maarten Lankhorst
Hi Kai,

Kai Blin schreef:
 I was thinking about strongly encouraging people to post their project 
 proposal to wine-devel prior to applying, so more developers can have a look 
 at it and see if it's doable or not and offer suggestions.
   
Sounds like a good idea, the work you have to do in a SoC is usually
underestimated by a factor of 2. :-)
 I know some projects did an introductory quiz to figure out the student's 
 coding skills, I'm not convinced the knowledge needed for Wine can be tested 
 in a quiz. What do you think?
   
I don't like the idea of a quiz as well, what would be a better test is
to get a small patch into wine, perhaps adding a testcase to the
component they want to work on. It shouldn't be big, but it proves they
can get code into wine.
 Another thing that didn't turn out too well last time is that it was really 
 hard to figure out what was going on during the summer. I have a few ideas on 
 how we could address this.

 Lots of other projects had their student write a weekly public progress 
 report. I think we should require the same. This will probably help keeping 
 people updated, and might help spotting problems early.
   
Personal experience here, it might be good for some people, but for me I
just told when I made some progress. Perhaps setting up a wine SoC blog
where you post every week what you're doing?
 According to the wiki page, we already require a post-mortem report on the 
 project, however I can't remember seeing much of those this year. We should 
 make sure those are written next time. We might think of a better name for 
 the report, post-mortem sounds like the project is dead after the summer, we 
 want people to keep working.
   
I'm all for it. Perhaps call it reflection report?
 Last year, some of the students set up a public git repo on repo.or.cz. I was 
 thinking about making that a requirement for next year. This would allow 
 people to review work in progress.
   
Agreed, I'm for a public git repo. If it's needed I can write some
instructions on how to set a repo up in the wine wiki.

Cheers,
Maarten.




Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Kai Blin
On Thursday 22 November 2007 11:48:10 Maarten Lankhorst wrote:

 Sounds like a good idea, the work you have to do in a SoC is usually
 underestimated by a factor of 2. :-)

That is common industry practice. I want to prevent factor 10 or worse.. ;)

 I don't like the idea of a quiz as well, what would be a better test is
 to get a small patch into wine, perhaps adding a testcase to the
 component they want to work on. It shouldn't be big, but it proves they
 can get code into wine.

This probably could work, provided we have enough people to give feedback we 
tend to have to give all new comitters. Might really be worth the effort, 
though.


  Lots of other projects had their student write a weekly public progress
  report. I think we should require the same. This will probably help
  keeping people updated, and might help spotting problems early.

 Personal experience here, it might be good for some people, but for me I
 just told when I made some progress. Perhaps setting up a wine SoC blog
 where you post every week what you're doing?

There's multiple options for that. There's http://planet-soc.com/, student's 
could use their own blogs, or send a weekly email to wine-devel. Personally 
I'd like to collect that stuff and give a short weekly digest of those posts 
to give the students some more exposure. WWN GSoC edition or the like. Unless 
someone reanimates WWN anyway, that we could just piggyback there.

  Last year, some of the students set up a public git repo on repo.or.cz. I
  was thinking about making that a requirement for next year. This would
  allow people to review work in progress.

 Agreed, I'm for a public git repo. If it's needed I can write some
 instructions on how to set a repo up in the wine wiki.

I think a tutorial for setting that up would be a good thing. We just need to 
make sure they still submit their stuff to wine-patches early and often.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
Will code for cotton.


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Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Jesse Allen
On Nov 22, 2007 3:38 AM, Kai Blin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi folks,

 from what we discussed at the last WineConf, we wanted to work on our
 procedures for the Google Summer of Code a little.
 I'm sending this email in hope to start some discussion about this, so we have
 it out of the way until the 2008 version is announced so we can talk about
 proposed projects then.

 The goal of Wine's SoC procedures should be to get high-quality proposals that
 can be completed by the student proposing the project in the time allocated
 for GSoC, so both scope and difficulty should be checked.


From my understanding, the SoC site specifically says that you do not
have to work on a project that has to be completed in the allotted
time. I think the idea is that google wants to encourage people that
were already working on a project before to apply and to encourage
people to continue working in the community after the session is
complete. Now the mentoring organization could set their own
requirements, based on difficulty and scope, but I would be concerned
with making time a limiting factor.

 I haven't been on the mentoring side of things, but my understanding from the
 WineConf side of things was that we had some problems getting this right the
 past years.

 I was thinking about strongly encouraging people to post their project
 proposal to wine-devel prior to applying, so more developers can have a look
 at it and see if it's doable or not and offer suggestions.

 I know some projects did an introductory quiz to figure out the student's
 coding skills, I'm not convinced the knowledge needed for Wine can be tested
 in a quiz. What do you think?


The best alternative to the quiz would be to have the student begin
working on the project before the application. He can discuss it on
the the mailing list and hopefully show some code. This would be a
good way to judge coding skill and the project's scope. Now in order
for this to work well, we would have to encourage people to get
started early, which really hasn't happened before right?


 Another thing that didn't turn out too well last time is that it was really
 hard to figure out what was going on during the summer. I have a few ideas on
 how we could address this.

 Lots of other projects had their student write a weekly public progress
 report. I think we should require the same. This will probably help keeping
 people updated, and might help spotting problems early.

I did write a weekly progress, but only to my mentor. Now if there was
a website, then I could have submitted it there.


 According to the wiki page, we already require a post-mortem report on the
 project, however I can't remember seeing much of those this year. We should
 make sure those are written next time. We might think of a better name for
 the report, post-mortem sounds like the project is dead after the summer, we
 want people to keep working.


Maybe I misunderstood that. I only submitted my final report to google/mentors.

 Last year, some of the students set up a public git repo on repo.or.cz. I was
 thinking about making that a requirement for next year. This would allow
 people to review work in progress.


This is probably the most important thing, and then the web log.


Jesse




Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Kai Blin
On Thursday 22 November 2007 17:44:09 Jesse Allen wrote:

 From my understanding, the SoC site specifically says that you do not
 have to work on a project that has to be completed in the allotted
 time. I think the idea is that google wants to encourage people that
 were already working on a project before to apply and to encourage
 people to continue working in the community after the session is
 complete. Now the mentoring organization could set their own
 requirements, based on difficulty and scope, but I would be concerned
 with making time a limiting factor.

I'm not saying that we stop people from working on their stuff afterwards, nor 
forcing them to e.g. implement the full dll if their project is Start an 
implementation of dll x. I was talking about shrinking their proposal so 
they can actually manage to implement all the features they promise in their 
proposal in the proposed timeframe. I know that this was really hard for me.

 The best alternative to the quiz would be to have the student begin
 working on the project before the application. He can discuss it on
 the the mailing list and hopefully show some code. This would be a
 good way to judge coding skill and the project's scope. Now in order
 for this to work well, we would have to encourage people to get
 started early, which really hasn't happened before right?

Well, depends on how you want to do this. I think this is overly restrictive, 
unless you're just talking about a patch or two like Maarten proposed.

 I did write a weekly progress, but only to my mentor. Now if there was
 a website, then I could have submitted it there.

Yes, that's the idea. :)

  According to the wiki page, we already require a post-mortem report on
  the project, however I can't remember seeing much of those this year. We
  should make sure those are written next time. We might think of a better
  name for the report, post-mortem sounds like the project is dead after
  the summer, we want people to keep working.

 Maybe I misunderstood that. I only submitted my final report to
 google/mentors.

In 2006, students were asked to send the reports to wine-devel, and there was 
some WWN coverage of the projects. That really made it really easy for people 
to follow.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
Will code for cotton.


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Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Jesse Allen
On Nov 22, 2007 10:00 AM, Kai Blin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Thursday 22 November 2007 17:44:09 Jesse Allen wrote:

  From my understanding, the SoC site specifically says that you do not
  have to work on a project that has to be completed in the allotted
  time. I think the idea is that google wants to encourage people that
  were already working on a project before to apply and to encourage
  people to continue working in the community after the session is
  complete. Now the mentoring organization could set their own
  requirements, based on difficulty and scope, but I would be concerned
  with making time a limiting factor.

 I'm not saying that we stop people from working on their stuff afterwards, nor
 forcing them to e.g. implement the full dll if their project is Start an
 implementation of dll x. I was talking about shrinking their proposal so
 they can actually manage to implement all the features they promise in their
 proposal in the proposed timeframe. I know that this was really hard for me.

  The best alternative to the quiz would be to have the student begin
  working on the project before the application. He can discuss it on
  the the mailing list and hopefully show some code. This would be a
  good way to judge coding skill and the project's scope. Now in order
  for this to work well, we would have to encourage people to get
  started early, which really hasn't happened before right?

 Well, depends on how you want to do this. I think this is overly restrictive,
 unless you're just talking about a patch or two like Maarten proposed.



Well then it sounds like we want better written proposals. Yeah the
goals for my project were very broad. I didn't intentionally do it
that way, but it was more like at first, get it to work, sort of
thing. And the design wasn't complete until a month in. The only way I
could have done better was to have started earlier. Mind you, I
actually did start in April almost two months early. If I get to do it
again, I will probably have a much more interesting proposal and have
goals that I will know will have specific results in the timeframe.
This is what I'm already considering, but that is because I am
experienced in the program already. For new people, we will have to
reach out to them and help them get ready early because they won't
know what to do. Maybe we need pre-SoC mentors?

Jesse




Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread mark cox
the FFMpeg project was very successful with it's qualification tasks
http://guru.multimedia.cx/googles-summer-of-code-2007/

regards,
mark

On Nov 23, 2007 6:30 AM, Jesse Allen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Nov 22, 2007 10:00 AM, Kai Blin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Thursday 22 November 2007 17:44:09 Jesse Allen wrote:
 
   From my understanding, the SoC site specifically says that you do not
   have to work on a project that has to be completed in the allotted
   time. I think the idea is that google wants to encourage people that
   were already working on a project before to apply and to encourage
   people to continue working in the community after the session is
   complete. Now the mentoring organization could set their own
   requirements, based on difficulty and scope, but I would be concerned
   with making time a limiting factor.
 
  I'm not saying that we stop people from working on their stuff
 afterwards, nor
  forcing them to e.g. implement the full dll if their project is Start
 an
  implementation of dll x. I was talking about shrinking their proposal
 so
  they can actually manage to implement all the features they promise in
 their
  proposal in the proposed timeframe. I know that this was really hard for
 me.
 
   The best alternative to the quiz would be to have the student begin
   working on the project before the application. He can discuss it on
   the the mailing list and hopefully show some code. This would be a
   good way to judge coding skill and the project's scope. Now in order
   for this to work well, we would have to encourage people to get
   started early, which really hasn't happened before right?
 
  Well, depends on how you want to do this. I think this is overly
 restrictive,
  unless you're just talking about a patch or two like Maarten proposed.
 


 Well then it sounds like we want better written proposals. Yeah the
 goals for my project were very broad. I didn't intentionally do it
 that way, but it was more like at first, get it to work, sort of
 thing. And the design wasn't complete until a month in. The only way I
 could have done better was to have started earlier. Mind you, I
 actually did start in April almost two months early. If I get to do it
 again, I will probably have a much more interesting proposal and have
 goals that I will know will have specific results in the timeframe.
 This is what I'm already considering, but that is because I am
 experienced in the program already. For new people, we will have to
 reach out to them and help them get ready early because they won't
 know what to do. Maybe we need pre-SoC mentors?

 Jesse






Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Kai Blin
On Thursday 22 November 2007 20:30:46 Jesse Allen wrote:


 Well then it sounds like we want better written proposals. Yeah the
 goals for my project were very broad. I didn't intentionally do it
 that way, but it was more like at first, get it to work, sort of
 thing. And the design wasn't complete until a month in. The only way I
 could have done better was to have started earlier. Mind you, I
 actually did start in April almost two months early.

That's what I was talking about. We can't expect the students to know this. 
They're just starting out working on real projects. But we as mentoring 
organization should have more clue about how hard a project could actually 
be.

 If I get to do it 
 again, I will probably have a much more interesting proposal and have
 goals that I will know will have specific results in the timeframe.
 This is what I'm already considering, but that is because I am
 experienced in the program already. For new people, we will have to
 reach out to them and help them get ready early because they won't
 know what to do. Maybe we need pre-SoC mentors?

Well, that's why I'm beginning to discuss this now, and not a week before the 
deadline. :) Thanks for your feedback so far.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
Will code for cotton.


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Re: Some thoughts about next GSoC

2007-11-22 Thread Kai Blin
On Thursday 22 November 2007 21:26:49 mark cox wrote:
 the FFMpeg project was very successful with it's qualification tasks
 http://guru.multimedia.cx/googles-summer-of-code-2007/

If we want to do this, I think the only sane approach is to have people write 
tests. That's a good idea anyway, and will get them to dig into the windows 
api.

Cheers,
Kai

-- 
Kai Blin
WorldForge developer  http://www.worldforge.org/
Wine developerhttp://wiki.winehq.org/KaiBlin
Samba team member http://www.samba.org/samba/team/
--
Will code for cotton.


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