Difference between revisions of "DPS909 & OSD600 Fall 2019"

From CDOT Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Week 4)
(Week 4)
Line 158: Line 158:
 
** One of the most widely used licenses in Open Source
 
** One of the most widely used licenses in Open Source
 
** Like the BSD License, nothing about patents (created before software was patentable in the US)
 
** Like the BSD License, nothing about patents (created before software was patentable in the US)
** Example software projects licensed under the BSD License:
+
** Example software projects licensed under the MIT License:
 
*** [https://expressjs.com/ ExpressJS]
 
*** [https://expressjs.com/ ExpressJS]
 
*** [http://rubyonrails.org/ Ruby on Rails]
 
*** [http://rubyonrails.org/ Ruby on Rails]

Revision as of 11:34, 24 September 2019

Week 1

  • Course introduction
  • Labs
    • Weekly labs, typically done in class
    • Labs are due on the Friday of the week they are assigned by midnight
    • Marked using Pass/Fail scheme
    • All labs must be completed to pass the course
    • Lab 1 is available now
  • Releases
    • 4 releases, some with multiple bugs/PRs required, including participating in Hacktoberfest 2019
    • Due Dates: Sept 20, Oct 31, Nov 20, Dec 6
    • Chance to work on real code, real projects
    • Big learning curve, lots of time required
    • Amazing chance to gain experience, network, build your skills and resume
    • Work with new and emerging technologies, gain exposure to tech outside the classroom
  • Discussion/Readings
    • Copyright (Copyright in Canada video)
      • IANAL
      • Who created it, "owns" it.
      • Set of exclusive rights granted to the work's creator
      • "The right to copy," to produce or reproduce a work or substantial portion thereof
      • Copyright is automatic when a work is created, you don't have to register it.
      • Copyright in Canada
      • Copyright Guide
      • In a software project, there can be many copyright holders (e.g., many contributors), or all contributors may assign their copyright to the project (e.g., CLA, which we'll cover later)

Week 2

  • Licenses
    • Rights, privileges, responsibilities, etc. applicable to someone other than the work's creator
    • "Terms and Conditions"
    • These must be granted by a copyright holder

Week 3

  • Introducing git and GitHub
    • Content Addressable Filesystem and Snapshots
    • Distributed: Local vs. Remote development
    • .git directory
    • Content Integrity, SHAs (Secure Hash Algorithm)
      • git init
      • echo 'test content' | git hash-object -w --stdin
      • ls .git/objects
      • git cat-file -p d670460b4b4aece5915caf5c68d12f560a9fe3e4
    • Blobs, Trees, and Commits
    • Branches, master
    • Working Directory, Staging Area, Repository
    • What do these commands really do?
      • git clone url-to-git-repo
      • git add file.txt
      • git status
      • git rm file.txt
      • git commit -m "Added file.txt"
    • Remotes, origin, upstream

Week 4

  • Release 0.1 due Mon, Sept 23. Any issues you need help with?
  • Lab 3 (will be posted later this week)