> > Date: Tue, 28 Mar 2017 17:35:43 -0700 > From: Bryce Lelbach <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: [hpx-users] Interested in GSoC project Stack Overflow > Detection on Linux. > To: Abhimanyu Rawat <[email protected]> > Cc: [email protected] > Message-ID: > <CAK785vUCEW8HnTuUWZvWEFVSByo=XziDZUmfRWq+6u_bUTmTew@mail. > gmail.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 > > Hey Abhimanyu, > > It sounds like you've got a good grasp of the problem and the right > skill set for this project. > > It sounds to me like you've done plenty of research into the project, > so my only suggestion would be to spend a little bit of time looking > at HPX (documentation, examples, etc). If you haven't done so already, > it might be good to take an hour or two and try building HPX and > playing around with some of the examples. >
Thanks Bryce, I received your mail and I am glad that you find this projects interesting, and your warm reply already makes me feel home with the community. I have already built it on my host, and done some sample thread programs as well. I have been digging around the problem and been though 100's of resources from HN (HackerNews) to StackOverflow (the website) and been through Stellar Org's. previous projects, its very facinating work. Also been through the guide to contribute, from commit messages to coding conventions, all coverd up. Besides as the date for submitting the proposal is closing in I have a few questions about that too. 1. How do you want me to submit a proposal, the level of granulity i.e. detail, I should write. 2. I have a few approaches around but I need your go ahead to affirm which ones you guys want, or shall I mentions a few and then later decide as mentioned on the website that even after proposal submission we should stay sync 3. Is there any thing I can start doing right now to increase my chances to be accepted? write a patch ? doing some contribution or something? Last but not the least, as it's just 5 days left to submit a proposal, so I would need a lot of your guidance to make a promising proposal. Kindly bear with me for writing late to you guys and making this such a hurry in last minute. I am very excited about the work and can't wait to get started this summer. Cheers, Abhi Given that this is an ambitious project, it might be helpful for you > to send a proposed work plan to this mailing list before you submit so > we can provide feedback. > > Overall, sounds good! > > On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 2:08 PM, Abhimanyu Rawat > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello Bryce, > > > > I am Abhimanyu Rawat, final year computer science student at Birla > Institute > > of Technology and Science (BITS, Pilani Campus). I hope I am not too late > > showing an interest to you guys regarding the Stack Overflow Detection on > > Linux project. > > > > Earlier I was guiding my junior Arpan for the same, but due to some > > unavoidable issue, he won't be taking part this time. Currently, I am an > > intern at EMC^2 for a couple of more weeks, I am working on operating > system > > tools for the company. I have ample experience in operating system and > > design, I have been using C and C++ for more than 5 years now. In > college, I > > have taught certified course on Operating system( where Arpan was > enrolled), > > spearheaded an inter-university project with Stanford along with Head of > > Computer Science Department of BITS Pilani, Lab instructor of Computer > > Network session and in charge of HCI lab, developed various course > projects > > among which an OpenMP related where I used parallel threads to exchange > the > > data between processes resulting in the weighted graph showing file > > association and more. I am also a fast sudoku solver, loves to teach kids > > and helps my friends with their university projects as well. > > > > I have already been though Gaurd pages, GNU libsigsegv and done a lot of > > research ( all legacy techniques - stackGuard, PointGuard, canary etc) on > > various components that take part in the existing implementation on > Windows > > platform, also how libsigsegv can help if we go for the integration with > HPX > > ( which obviously comes with some tradeoff's if space and time are > factors), > > or we can develop a hybrid unit and see how it can support HPX. > > > > As HPX widely uses threading processes, so libsigsegv will also not be a > bad > > choice, from issue tracker I figured out that using libsigsegv we can > also > > support flag based options, and provide a generic method for every other > > general segmentation fault and stack overflow (it can be done using > legacy > > techniques). > > > > It would be great if you could review this above abstract of what I have > > accumulated and throw some pointers at me so that I can get back to you > guys > > with my proposal in no time ( --t tick tock tick tock). > > > > Overall I am very excited to work on the project, with the community and > > improving my skills by actively contributing to the project(in long run > > also). > > > > Closing with thank you and warm Regards, > > > > Abhimanyu Rawat > > M.E. Computer Science, > > CS/IS Department, BITS Pilani, Pilani Campus > > Email - [email protected] / [email protected] > > Phone. 08930399302 (call/Whatsapp), 09466899302 > > > > ????????????????????????????????????????????? > > > > -- > Bryce Adelstein Lelbach aka wash > Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory > ISO C++ Committee Member > CppCon and C++Now Program Chair > > Replies are often throughput optimized at the expense of latency! > -- > >
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