Winter 2008 OSD600 Weekly Schedule
Revision as of 13:33, 29 January 2008 by Chris Tyler (talk | contribs) (→Week 4 - Collaborative and Community Development Practices)
Week 1 (Jan 8) Course introduction
- Course introduction
- Intro to open source
- Intro to Mozilla project
- Mozilla Project Overview
- Community, Foundation, Corporation
- The Mozilla Manifesto
- Mozilla platform and technologies
- Mozilla Communication Tools
- Web sites/Wikis
- Planet Mozilla
- IRC
- Readings/Resources
- "Cathedral and Bazaar" by Eric Raymond
- "Revolution OS" [film] (see also http://www.revolution-os.com/ or QA 76.9.A25 R68 2003)
- Mike Shaver discusses the Mozilla Manifesto [MP3]
- TODO
- Create a blog (wordpress or blogspot or whatever) and create a feed category or tag called "open source"
- Read the Blog Guidelines for instructions on how to use your blog in the course
- Create an account on this wiki for yourself
- Create a personal wiki page on this wiki, and add a link for yourself to the People page. Your personal page should initially include your contact information and a link to your blog; as you progress through the course, update this page with information about your work.
- Add your blog feed and info to the Open Source@Seneca Planet List so that it appears in the OpenSource@Seneca Planet
- Write a blog posting containing your reaction to and reflections on "The Catederal and the Bazaar" and "Revolution OS".
- Start lurking on irc.mozilla.org - especially the #seneca and #developers channels (Note: to access the #seneca channel, you must be registered - type "/nickserv help" in your IRC client or refer to http://freenode.net/faq.shtml#registering for more information)
- IRC tutorial - http://www.irchelp.org/irchelp/irctutorial.html#intro
Week 2 - Managing and Building large source trees
- Revision Control Systems (RCS)
- Introduction to RCS
- cvs, svn, hg
- Common concepts and tasks
- Repository
- Local Working Copy
- RCS Changes (changesets) vs. Backups
- Typical read-only activities: Checkout, Update, Log, Status
- Using Make to build software
- Intro to Make
- Mozilla has over 50,000 Makefiles
- Building Mozilla from Source
- Readings/Resources
- Getting started in Open Source projects, or "Learning to be at the festival" (on-line lecture) by David Humphrey (given at Mozilla24 in Stanford): Formats - mpg, ogg, mp4
- Two simple makefile examples
- How the Mozilla Build Works (on-line lecture) by Mozilla's J. Paul Reed
- Release Builds: from source tree to exe (on-line lecture) by Mozilla's Robert Helmer
- TODO
- Complete all TODO items from Week 1
- Watch online lectures about the Mozilla build system.
- Practice creating a simple makefile
- Try performing a Debug Mozilla build on your home machine and blog about the experience
- Look at the Project List and Potential Projects pages and pick 3 projects on which you'd like to work--next week, you'll narrow this to just one. List them here along with your name so other students can see and groups can form.
Week 3 - Build (Continued)
- TODO
- Do a Debug Mozilla build on your home machine and blog about the experience
- Finalize your project choice, form a group (if you are working in a group), and create a proper project page for your project in the Project List. See the full project instructions.
- Blog about your project selection and your plans for the next step.
Week 4 - Collaborative and Community Development Practices
- Learning to be Lost Productively
- Adding to Mozilla is not like writing a program from scratch
- Leverage the existing code by reading, studying, and copying existing code
- Mozilla Source Code structure and style
- Searching for Code
- How to Make Changes
- building with client.mk in mozilla/ vs. incremental builds
- Working with Patches
- Readings/Resources
- Reading: Chapter 11 (pages 379-397) of Diomidis Spinellis, Code Reading: The Open Source Perspective, ISDN 0-201-79940-5 - information about the book - eBook version via Seneca Library and Safari
- TODO
- Lab - Learning to use LXR/MXR effectively: Source Code Reading Lab - Blog about your experience.
- Lab - cvs diff and patch: Incremental Build Lab
- Practice doing incremental builds and applying patches
- Identify the main file(s) that your project will be changing and blog about your experience finding them and your observations about those files.
- State your 0.1 release target on your project's wiki page (explain what you will have completed by the time you reach 0.1 release). Discuss this with your professor (this can be done via IRC!).
- Review, and where appropriate, comment on blog postings by other students.