Google summer of code

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The latest presentation on the Google Summer of Code, based on my experience as a Google Summer of Code student and mentor with the open source communities AbiWord and OGSA-DAI.

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Summer of Code Summer of Code 20122012

Kathiravelu PradeebanKathiravelu Pradeeban

AbiWordAbiWord

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Contents

➢ Why GSoC? ➢ Before you begin..➢ Right Project?➢ Shout!➢ Apply.➢ Code.➢ Conclude/Continue.➢ What Else?

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Google Summer of Code (GSoC)

Code for your preferred open source organization for 3 months.

University students of age 18 and more. Google coordinates and rewards you!

– 3 milestones.• Getting Accepted.• Mid-Evaluations.• Final Evaluations.

– A certificate, an awesome t-shirt, and gifts!– {500, 2250, 2250} USD.

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Some statistics of 2011

175 Organizations– 2096 mentors and co-mentors.

Submitted– 3,731 students, from 97 countries.

– 5,651 proposals.

Accepted– 1115 students/projects

• 68 countries.• 595 universities.

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Success Rate..is pretty high!

Passed the mid evaluations– Success rate up to mid – 90%+

Passed the final evaluations– Success rate – 88%

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Why Google Summer of Code?

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What do you need?

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Timeline (2012)

Feb 4th : Program Announced. Feb 27th – March 9th : Organizations apply. March 16th : List of Accepted Organizations. March 17th – 25th : Students discussing project

ideas. March 26th – April 6th : Students application

period.

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Timeline.. After getting accepted

April 23rd : Accepted Students announced.– Community Bonding Period Begins.

May 21st : Coding Begins. July 9th – July 13rd : Mid Evaluations. Aug 13rd : Suggested Pencils Down.

– Tests, Documentation improvements, etc.

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Timeline.. Concluding

Aug 20th : Firm Pencils Down.– Stop Work!

Aug 24th : Final Evaluation Deadline. Aug 29th : Final Results. Aug 31st : Begin Code Submission to Google.

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Before you begin..

Google Summer of Code is all about being Open Source.

Get your basics and motives right. Netiquettes. Sign up to the lists. Join the relevant channel.

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Technologies..

Version Control Systems– SVN, CVS, GIT, Mercurial, ..

Build Tools– Ant, Maven, ..

IDEs (Integrated Development Environments)– IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse, ..

– Microsoft Visual Studio, Anjuta, ..

Issue Tracker– Bugzilla, Jira, Trac, ..

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Mailing Lists– Dev, User, Commit lists, sub-groups, ..

Internet Relay Chat (IRC) Issue Tracker Forums and wiki Blogs Skype, Personal Mails, gtalk, conference

calls, .. [with the mentors, if that is preferred.]

Communicating with the team.. and the mentor, over the Internet

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Network Etiquettes

Be Specific and clear. Research (google.. ;)) before asking. Be helpful to others. Be ethical; respect. NO CAPS! (UNLESS YOU ARE SHOUTING!) Don't take messages personally. Dn't snd ur sms msgs to thrds or lsts. Language/English

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Proper Addressing..over the lists/irc/..

Address the devs and users properly.– First Name or Preferred calling name.

– NO Sir, Madam, bro, sis, pal..• Even if you know them, personally.

– No Mr., Dr., or Prof. either.

– Be gender neutral.• “Folks” over “Guys and Girls”.

– Not too personal.• Use “Hi”, instead of “Dear”.

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Mailing lists

Post only to the relevant list. Check the mail archives first. Avoid HTML mails. No [URGENT]/[IMPORTANT] tags. No unnecessary attachments. No Cross Posting. Don't hijack threads. Don't post off-topic.

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IRC Etiquettes

Be an observer first. Refer to others using their irc nick. Don't expect immediate replies; wait. Don't post bulk of text into irc.

– Post error logs to http://pastebin.com/ or http://paste.ubuntu.com/ and share the url instead.

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Find a mentoring organization..

Have a look at the list of GSoC2011. 175 Last year! New Organizations. Google as the mentoring organization. Introduce GSoC to an organization (Sounds

Smart!).

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Find THE right project..

Go through the organizations' projects list.– Some organizations publish pretty soon.

– Refer to the projects list of 2011 of the organizations till the GSoC 2012 is announced.

• AbiWord• PhpMyAdmin• Kubuntu• DocBook Wiki

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Get to know more..about the projects

Talk to the mentor(s)– Assigned by the organization

– for each project idea.

Mailing lists and archives. Issue Tracker

– Open issues or tickets• New features/enhancements (RFE)• Bugs (easy/difficult and normal/critical)

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What makes you special?

Experience– Being a great user doesn't mean that you can be a

good developer.

Your interests and motivation– Pick something you really enjoy doing.

– Being a great developer doesn't mean that you can be a good contributor.

Opportunities– What makes you the right person?

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Are you willing to contribute further?

Willingness– To contribute to the community

– Beyond the time frame of GsoC.

We want committers and long time volunteers!– Not just students!

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Experience

Language– Java, C++, C, ..

– Not much time to learn a new language (?)

Prove It!– Patches.

– Assist other students!!!

– Project expertise• Bug reports and fixes.• Go through the archives, wikis, and web sites.

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Opportunities..

Project that matches your previous work experience.

Choose the right project. Timezone Difference

– Use it effectively

– e.g., For Sri Lanka,GMT + 0530.

Multiple Applications (20!) Preferences!

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Shout!

Communicate early. Communicate often. Ask questions. Most importantly,

Answer others' questions!

Mentor is your friend!(respect)

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Be Known..

Be heard! Be visible! Be responsive! Be quick!

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Apply

Register as a student for GSoC. Use the project's wiki for draft proposal

– if applicable.

Apply on Google's melange.– Can edit later, till the last minute!

– Get the mentors' opinions and improve.

Check often for the mentors' comments– attend to them.

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Propose.. ♡

How to impress.. – the mentor/developers?

Stick to the organization's template. Abstract. Introduce yourself properly.

– Focus on the relevant facts.

– Why do you fit? Your skill sets.

– List of the patches (if any) you have submitted.

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Propose..

Project Goals– Proves you got them correct.

Deliverables– Code, Documentation, test cases, ..

Description– Benefits to the organization and other projects.

– Can also be given along with the timeline.

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Propose..

Timeline– Finer details.

– Break upto periods of 3 - 4 days.

– Testing takes time.

– Don't be over-optimistic.

– Some organizations require considerable work hrs/week (40 ?).

Links– References and additional details.

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Application Template Name: Email: Project Title: Synopsis:

– A short description of your project.

Benefits to the organization/project – and/or other project(s):

Deliverables:– Quantifiable results.

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• e.g.: “At the end of my project, AbiWord’s piece table will be 50 times faster.”

Project Details:– A more detailed description of your project:

Project Schedule:– How long will the project take?

– When can you begin work?

– Do you know of any planned absences or other major conflicts

• summer classes, vacations, etc.

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Bio:– Who are you?

– What makes you the best person to work on this project?

Additional Requirements:– Patches / Specific requirements for the project.

Further Related Information:

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After the submission..

Don't go invisible!– Evaluation is still going on.. ;)

You may be asked to provide– additional information.

• Patches.• Screenshots.

Start coding on your project.– only if you didn't apply for multiple projects.

Be motivated.

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Got Selected? \yay/

Don't Panic. You have one more month

– just to mingle with the developers and the code base.

Mentors are there to help you! Keep touch with the developers. Users.

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Community Bonding Period

Learn the project– Go through the code base

– Documentation.• Coding styles and coding guide lines.

Communicate often Understand the project idea more.

– Come up with a design.

– Start with simple hacks.

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Coding.. Easiest task of all.. ;)

Commit often, if given committership.– Send daily patches otherwise.

– Meaningful Commit messages.

Get feedback from the mentor(s). Keep the community updated

– Daily (?).

Plan for the mid and final evaluations early, with the mentor.

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Conclude/Continue..

Pencils Down Date Firm Pencils Down Date

– GSoC Coding ends here.

Get a tarball of all the diff files to submit to Google.

Focus on becoming a committer– if not already given committership.

Keep contributing.

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What else?

More FOSS? Annual? Stipend? Student? Country/Location?

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More Open Source programs/contests..

OpenOffice.org Internship

Ubiquiti RouterStation UI/Firmware

Wesnoth Summer Art Scholarship

Umit Summer of Code (USoC)

Season of KDE (SoK)

The OpenMRS Internship Program (OIP)

Joomla! Student Outreach Program

Ruby Summer of Code

Fedora Summer Coding

– http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010

– https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_coding_ideas_for_2011

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Are you ready?

Have a look at the successful projects.– Proposals available online - Wikis, blogs, ..

Apache Software Foundation– More slots and more choices.

• Tomcat, Derby, Axis2, and more ..

Join the projects' mailing lists and IRC.– AbiWord

• abiword-dev@abisource.com

• abiword-user@abisource.com

• #abiword at irc.gnome.org

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For more Information ..

Join your local GSoC Google Group – For e.g., Group for Sri Lankan students:

http://groups.google.com/group/gsoc-srilanka

Local GSoC IRC channel– For e.g., Sri Lanka - #gsoc-lk at irc.freenode.net.

Drop me a line. ;)– kk.pradeeban@gmail.com | kkpradeeban.blogspot.com

Logos used in the presentation are owned by the respective open source organizations or the individuals, and used for the particular non - commercial informative purpose only.

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Questions?..Questions?..

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Wish you all the best..Wish you all the best..

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