NetBSD Announces Accepted Summer of Code Projects
jschauma writes "The NetBSD Project is proud to announce
the list of projects accepted for this year's Summer of Code. While the list
of proposals was impressive and of particularly high quality, a choice of
eight applications had to be made, yielding the following projects:
"Support for
journaling for FFS", "Support for MIPS64
ISA", "PowerPC G5
support", "Improved
Writing to FileSystem Using Congestion Control", "TCP ECN
support", "Fast_ipsec
and ipv6", "pkg_install
rewrite for pkgsrc" and
"Improving
the mbuf API and implementation". Details about each project will
be posted to the NetBSD SoC
SourceForge website."
is available here: http://code.google.com/soc/ And I'm happy to note that my proposal (A Lisp Proof Checker) was accepted by PlanetMath! Overall, Google Spent about $3,000,000 funding over 600 Open Source projects! Thanks Google!!!
Google has also donated $10,000 to OpenBSD/OpenSSH. Looks like it's going to be a summer of code all around.
Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
i can't wait for the fs congestion control! good stuff.
Stop Computers/Cars Analogies on S
Please don't forget the dual and quad G5. Then we really will have global desktop domination.
At the very least, support iMac G5 fully.
- Kaos games and encryption systems developer
Another summmer of work on BPG - "An OpenPGP Privacy Toolkit for NetBSD" would have been nice. BPG is a BSD licensed implementation of the OpenPGP standard. In this time of global surveillance this project makes a lot of sense. We do have GPG, but choice is good in security applications.
:-). BPG was in last years batch of NetBSD Summer of Code projects.
Of course I'm to lame to look up if the same project can be accepted twice
At the moment, the closest thing to "competition" is Sun's ZFS with dynamic stripping of writes over multiple devices. While stripped write was probably not designed for "Quality-of-Service" style implied by "Congestion Control", is definitively helping with better speed and reliability (copies on at least 2 devices). This could be as significant BSD advantage as was the immutable file flag.
http://revj.sourceforge.net
survive a slashdotting
Security is nice. Transparent security is even better. Security is like eating your vegtables. No one likes it, so you have to disguise it in some fashion, to make it more palatable.
Most of the projects listed have only title info. I guess the SOC thing is good if you're a student and want a chance to do something significant rather than some summer internship doing meaningless work, but for rest of us not very useful or interesting.
So where is the project making Linux ready for mainstream desktop use? Come on, Google.
This Summer of Code program of Google's is brilliant. I'm amazed at how every major OSS project has gotten funding for at least a couple projects. Maybe it's time for other firms to start doing something similar, the Cottage Fever Coding program(?)... it would certainly be good for PR.