3. Step 3 : Find some work 1. Fix your pet peeve 2. Fix bugs
identified by mozilla 3. Bugs Ahoy ! 4. Use
whatcanidoformozilla.org
4. Fix your pet peeve 1. Search bugzilla : For relevant
keywords 2. Figure out the bugzilla component : Find where pet
peeve is implemented 3. Ask for help : #introduction or #developers
in irc.mozilla.org
5. Fix bugs identified by mozilla 1. Mentored Bugs Your mentor
helps you in every step. 2. Good First Bugs Bit stale. But good
starting point. 3. Student Projects Large projects, good enough for
your university project.
6. Bugs Ahoy !
7. whatcanidoformozilla.org
8. 1. Gecko The engine that drives Firefox. 2. Boot2Gecko The
operating system for Android phones built on web technologies. 3.
Thunderbird The open source email client. C++
9. 4. Seamonkey The open source web productivity suite. 5.
v8monkey Implementing the v8 API on top of Spidermonkey. 6.
emscripten Creating a LLVM-to-JS system to allow porting native
code to the web. C++
10. 7. SVG Project Help with the implementation and testing of
Mozilla's Scalable Vector Graphics engine. 8. Windows 8 Integration
The Metro-style enabled desktop browser for Windows 8. 9. MathML
Display and represent math formulas on the web. C++
11. C 1. NSS The network security pieces of Firefox.
12. JavaScript 1. Firefox All of the UI is written in JS. 2.
Mobile Firefox It's the Gecko engine, with an Android-specific UI.
No Android device required. 3. pdf.js A PDF viewer written entirely
in JavaScript.
13. JavaScript 1. Firefox All of the UI is written in JS. 2.
Mobile Firefox It's the Gecko engine, with an Android-specific UI.
No Android device required. 3. pdf.js A PDF viewer written entirely
in JavaScript.
14. JavaScript 4. Shumway A Flash player written entirely in
JavaScript. 5. The addon SDK The foundation upon which all new
kick-ass addons are built. 6. Gaia The default UI for the web-based
mobile operating system Boot2Gecko.
15. JavaScript 7. DXR The intelligent source code indexing
system. 8. Thunderbird The open source email client. 9. Seamonkey
The open source web productivity suite.
16. JavaScript 10. Web development Many large, complicated
projects that use JavaScript. 11. Popcorn Create interactive media
pages that seamlessly integrate video, audio, and traditional web
technologies
17. JavaScript 12. Windows 8 Integration The front end for the
Metro-style enabled desktop browser for Windows 8. 13. Persona
Implement a new way to safely and easily sign into websites.
18. Java 1. Mobile Firefox It's the Gecko engine, with an
Android-specific UI. No Android device required. 2. Rhino It's
Spidermonkey in Java. Java
19. Python 1. Firefox Lots of code is generated by python
scripts. 2. Web development There are many large, complicated
projects written in Python.
20. Python 3. DXR The intelligent source code indexing system.
4. Tools & Automation Various projects to facilitate easier
automated testing of products.
21. PHP 1. WordPress The code that runs our blogs 2.
Marketplace The PHP client for Marketplace. 3. The
Mediawiki-Bugzilla plugin The Bugzilla plugin for Mozilla's
MediaWiki.
22. Rust Rust is an experimental, multi-paradigm, compiled
programming language developed by Mozilla Research. It visually
resembles the C language family, but differs significantly in
syntactic and semantic details.
23. Step 4 : Fix the bug 1. Check out the Developer Guide :
https://developer.mozilla.org/En/Developer_Guide 2. Ask for help :
#introduction and #developers 3. Notify the docs team : Add
dev-doc-needed keyword if your bug is likely to require
documentation.
24. Step 5 : Get your code reviewed Once you fix the bug,
attach a patch to the bug, and ask for review. Do this by setting
the review flag to ?
25. Step 6 : Respond to the review The reviewer may ask to fix
some issues. An r+ would mean that your bug fix is accepted into
the tree.
26. Step 7 : Get the code into the tree Ask your mentor or mark
your commit with a checkin-needed keyword.