gsoc-student-app-template D1299857457 Aa ## 2011 Plan 9 & Google Summer of Code Student Application Template # #Please use this template as a guide for information you send in any #project application. Unless specifically stated otherwise, all #information we request is required. Ensuring that your application #is properly and fully filled saves us all time, so please be #thorough and accurate! # ### Personal Information # #### Contact Information # # * Name and Email: Your full name and a valid email address. This # will serve as our initial primary method of communication, so # please make sure it is correct! # # * Chat and Instant Messaging: Real-time chat is free (or at least # inexpensive) and is a great way to stay in touch with mentors and # others throughout the course of the summer. For example: "dhobsd on # AIM; evildho on IRC (freenode, efnet)." We require at least one of # these, and strongly encourage participation in our IRC channel, # #plan9-gsoc on irc.freenode.net. # # * Phone number: We'll only use this after exhausting all other # means of contact (and once before accepting students, to verify # it). Please enter a full international phone number. # #### Educational Information # # * Institution: What college or university are you attending? # # * Location: Where will you be working from? Some of our mentors # prefer to work with students in nearby time zones. # #### Biographical information # # * Bio, Resumé, or C.V: Help us get to know you better. Tell us # about your skills, experience, and interest. # # * Code Samples: Summer of Code projects tend to be very # code-focused, and we'd like to see some pointers to code you've # written, either from your own projects or projects you've # contributed to. We're especially interested in things which help us # see why you're a good match for the particular project you're # applying for. # # * Interest in Plan 9: Plan 9 has lots of great ideas, but they're # different from what you find in other environments; we want to make # sure you're not coming in expecting Unix. We'd like to know what it # is about Plan 9 (or related technologies) that you find intriguing; # have you used them before? Which ones (Plan 9, Inferno, v9fs, etc)? # Have you read the papers? # #### Code Challenge # #We want to be sure you understand the basics of Plan 9 concepts and #coding. Please take a look at one (or more) of the following options #and submit your solution along with your application. If you need #any clarification, or have any general questions on any of these #topics, please feel free to get in touch either via the #plan9 or ##plan9-gsoc channels on Freenode, or via the plan9-gsoc mailing list #at http://groups.google.com/group/plan9-gsoc. # # * Port SoftFloat/TestFloat # (http://www.jhauser.us/arithmetic/SoftFloat.html); please include # manual pages as appropriate. # # * Investigate, identify, and fix issues with 4096-bit SSH keys in # native sshserve. # # * I think http://9fans.net/archive/2005/12/221 means that the # longjmp() and waserror() documentation should be patched # # * The example code on the tlssrv(8) man page is dangerously wrong: # tcp!*!xxx allows anybody on your network to hijack your tunnel. Fix # this appropriately. # # * srvssh posts a mode-666 entry into /srv. Fix this to use saner # permissions. # # * vncv has some possible issues with ^Z. Identify and address. # # * Wiki bug (via http access): creating a page with a name # containing an underscore interacts "poorly" with the "map spaces to # underscores" name mangling. # # * Create a simple 9P server to address a small, novel task of your # choosing. # ### Project Information # #### Project Overview # #Tell us about the specific project you'd like to work on. If you've #picked something from our ideas page, please make the title match #what's on that page. Regardless, you should be able to describe the #project in your own words (even if it's just to show us you #understand what an existing idea is looking for). Especially if your #proposal is your own idea, be sure to include enough detail so that #we understand your idea. # #Do *not* copy / paste an idea from the ideas page verbatim. # #### Schedule / Timeline # #Part of effective engineering is being able to break a project down #into component parts and evaluate those. Do so: tell us what the #component parts of your project are and build a schedule for them. # #We'd like you to break down your project into weekly milestones. #This will allow you to get a great feel for the work required for #your project, and will give everyone involved a schedule to help #guide project planning along the way. It will also help us evaluate #the scope and complexity of your project, as well as how well-formed #your idea is. # #### Availability # #Summer of Code is a significant commitment. If selected, you'll be #undertaking a project designed to fill the summer. Please tell us #about any other commitments you have during the summer. How many #hours per week are you prepared to dedicate to this? Will you be #taking courses, as well? Working? Any vacation time planned? This #should already be included in your proposed schedule above, but call #out any vacation, late start or other such exceptional issues #explicitly here. # #### Mentor communication # #Summer of Code is a mentoring arrangement, and communication with #your mentor is key. What frequency of communication would you #expect? Are you prepared to provide progress updates at least a few #times a week? How are you most comfortable communicating (email, #blog, IRC, so on)? While our mentors are making a commitment to give #you time and attention over the summer, "stuff happens"; what would #you do if your mentor disappeared for a week during the summer? # #### Optional: Suggested Mentor # #If you've spoken to someone in our community about this project, and #they've agreed to mentor you for the summer, list them here. This is #optional, but is particularly valuable if you're proposing a project #not on our list. If it is on our ideas list, we can mostly figure #this out. #