On Mon, 2016-04-25 at 00:06 +0200, Kelong Cong wrote: > Some of you may already know, but I've been selected to participate in > GSoC. So I'm looking forward to working with the team this summer! > > From now until 23rd of May is the community bounding period. Thus I'm > thinking of doing the following to prepare. Please let me know if I > should add anything. > - Become more proficient in Rust, possibly by choosing Rust for some of > my upcoming university assignments. > - Learn more about GNUnet, esppecially the parts that are relevant to > GSoC. > > There are also some things that I'd like to clarify. > - Is it confirmed that we'll use gj going forward?
I think either gj or eventual. It's ultimately your call. :) All my comments favoring gj in the mail you're replying to still hold. And they seemingly do come up : https://github.com/dwrensha/gj/issues/7#issuecomment-211936766 You'll noticed that I just sent a mail about gj dropping mio though. I already felt like eventual might give us more access to tools like timers in mio, but now those features no longer exist under the hood, so maybe that changes the balance. > - What's the development process going to be like? Is it making pull > requests on the gnunet-rs repository? I doubt it as that'd impose reviewing on Andrew. We've four people interested, you, Andrew, Gabor, and I, with you probably doing the most. I've take it you are kc1212 on github? I've taken the liberty to give everyone admin access to https://github.com/GNUnet/gnunet-rs Appears admin access is just write access plus the ability to add someone else. I did not set up a "team" which github might prefer somehow. Alternatively, we could always just treat your github fork of gnunet-rs as the main repository for your GSoC project of course, or even use gnunet.org. Jeff
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