<div dir="ltr"><div style="font-size:12.8px">Â +1 for the introduction part.</div><div style="font-size:12.8px">I would request members to explain projects followed by Motivation, anticipated challenges, testing methodology, anticipated impact (like %speedup etc.). Also, it would be good to archive these docs somewhere. I am having hard time to find past projects.</div><div style="font-size:12.8px"><br></div><div style="font-size:12.8px">If we don't have an immediate place for archival then mail is the best place.</div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 11:00 AM, Tobias Grosser via cfe-dev <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:cfe-dev@lists.llvm.org" target="_blank">cfe-dev@lists.llvm.org</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">Dear LLVM summer of code students,<br>
<br>
let me congratulate you to your successful application!<br>
<br>
After your participation has been announced, its now time to start with community bounding as preparation of the actual project start on 23 May. To ensure your GSoC becomes a large success, I wrote down some general information that has proven important in previous years.<br>
<br>
# GSoC and the LLVM community<br>
<br>
Besides your individual project goals, the primary objective of your GSoC project is to establish yourself as a full and active member of the LLVM community. It is your job to get in touch with the LLVM community and to develop your project as part of the LLVM community. This means you are invited to discuss your ideas with the LLVM community, to submit your patches for public code review, and also to participate as code-reviewer for patches that fall in your area of expertise and match your level of knowledge. To ensure maximal community involvement, LLVM has a well established tradition of incremental development and you should follow this practice in your<br>
GSoC project.<br>
<br>
# The role of the mentor<br>
<br>
You have been paired with one (or two) personal mentors, who will support you throughout your summer of code project. Your mentor is<br>
your first point of contact in case of any questions regarding your GSoC project. His primary role is to ensure you are successfully integrated with the LLVM community by ensuring you understand how to discuss project ideas, how to obtain code reviews, and generally to help you to understand the informal best practices in the LLVM community. In many cases he will also provide reviews for your patches, but please keep in mind that he is not your proxy to the LLVM community, but you are expected to directly interact with the whole community. In the optimal case, you learn quickly how to obtain patch reviews yourself and how to discuss your ideas with the full LLVM community. Your mentor will likely also give feedback, but he is just one out of the many people in the community you will be working with.<br>
<br>
Your mentor also evaluates your project and can change project milestone if this should become necessary. However, we again suggest<br>
to discuss changes to your agenda in public.<br>
<br>
# Media of communication<br>
<br>
This email is on-purpose sent to you through the LLVM/cfe/safecode/Polly mailing lists. Mailing lists are the primary medium of communication for LLVM. Other means such as IRC, phone or personal meetings can complement email, but please ensure that all important discussions either take part via the mailing lists or are mirrored to the mailing lists by posting meeting reports or updates.<br>
<br>
# Reporting / Status updates<br>
<br>
To keep people informed about your work, we suggest each student to implement regular reporting habits. As email is our primary medium of communication, brief weekly status emails can be a nice way to get your information out. If you send them before the week-end, chances are<br>
that some of your news show up in LLVM weekly.<br>
<br>
Previous students also often set up a GSoC blog to irregularly post<br>
larger status updates, performance results, architecture diagrams, ...<br>
<br>
# GSoC administrative issues<br>
<br>
Please use the public mailing lists for all (non-sensitive) administrative issues. You are likely not the only one who has similar questions/concerns. Having your questions (and the solutions) being<br>
archived and available in search engines will save us time and be of<br>
great help for all other students.<br>
<br>
# Introducing yourself<br>
<br>
To kick off your personal GSoC of code, we suggest to introduce yourself and your project on the relevant mailing list, invite people<br>
to provide feedback to your project, and communicate your planned<br>
timeline as well as the media/location and interval you will use to report your status.<br>
<br>
# Project description on <a href="http://llvm.org" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">llvm.org</a><br>
<br>
We will establish a website on <a href="http://llvm.org" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">llvm.org</a> that lists all accepted LLVM projects. Please add yourself all relevant information about your GSoC project. This includes a link to your original project draft, reporting interval, blog, personal website, ...<br>
<br>
# Community bounding period<br>
<br>
Even though the community bounding period is not yet the actual project, it is of high importance to make your actual project a success. Within the next four weeks, you should make sure you get a good feeling how the LLVM community works and you should make your first steps towards becoming a member of the community. This means now is the time to start discussions about your work, but also to get a good feeling of the LLVM development practices. Some of you already contributed patches to LLVM. Whoever has not should make sure to contribute a (smaller) patch as soon as possible. We previously had some students who mostly skipped the community bounding period and they often had to spend time on administrative/infrastructure issues after the actual project phase started, which caused stress and delays throughout their GSoC. On day one of the project phase, you should be able to focus on writing code and pushing first patches through code reviews. Your coding environment should already be set up, you should have a solid understanding of all tools you are planning to use, you should know how patches need to be prepared for smooth review, and you should understand the patch submission and review habits of LLVM. Similarly, your development plan should have been discussed with the community, your reporting should be set up and announced, and the only thing missing is you going full in on your project. The community bounding period is the time where you get up to speed on these administrative/community issues.<br>
<br>
# LLVM developer meeting<br>
<br>
The LLVM Community has a large developer meeting on November 3-4 in San Jose, CA. We encourage you to present your work at the LLVM Developers’ Meeting. Presenting your work is a great way to get exposure and gives you the opportunity to meet many LLVM developers’ in person. There are many different ways to present your work: technical talk, poster, or lightning talk. Funding to attend the LLVM Developers’ Meeting may be available through the LLVM Foundation and more details on this will be available in the coming months. Travel to the meeting may require a passport or VISA, and we recommend investigating your travel document requirements well in advance.<br>
<br>
Best,<br>
Tobias (on behalf of the LLVM GSoC Mentors)<br>
<br>
_______________________________________________<br>
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</blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><div><br></div>-- <br><div><div dir="ltr"><div><i style="font-size:12.8px">Disclaimer: Views, concerns, thoughts, questions, ideas expressed in this mail are of my own and my employer has no take in it. </i><br></div><div>Thank You.<br>Madhur D. Amilkanthwar<br><br></div></div></div>
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