Ceph crushmap visualizationa project by qakapil The CRUSH algorithm determines how to store and retrieve data by computing data storage locations. CRUSH empowers Ceph clients to communicate with OSDs directly rather than through a centralized server or broker. With an algorithmically determined method of storing and retrieving data, Ceph avoids a single point of failure, a performance bottleneck, and a physical limit to its scalability. CRUSH requires a map of your cluster, and uses the CRUSH map to pseudo-randomly store and retrieve data in OSDs with a uniform distribution of data across the cluster. |
ipv6 pxe booting on grub2a project by michael-chang Learn the grub2 network stack and have fun with ipv6 network booting. :D |
froxlor Server Management Panela project by asemen froxlor Server Management Panel |
Work on my OBS packagesa project by lrupp ~> osc my pkg | wc -l |
Merge hermes into OBS APIa project by coolo After https://hackweek.suse.com/projects/105 the next thing to merge is hermes. |
finish the ioq3 arm VMan invention by lnussel I need to finish my work from the last hackweek |
Bootstrap UI for Weblatean invention by mcihar Implement better UI for Weblate using Twitter Bootstrap library. |
Reduce the number of builds in the openSUSE Build Servicea project by dmuhamedagic In case any of the source files changed, openSUSE Build Service rebuilds the dependent packages regardless of whether that particular modification affects the dependency. This makes our resources footprint bigger (and the electrical power bills higher). It also affects users, because every new package build causes the package manager to include that package in the next update thus consuming network bandwidth and resources of users' computers. |
make openSUSE working on Sony Xperia Tablet Za project by sleep_walker Look once again on Xperia Tablet Z and try to have there openSUSE running natively as alternative operating system. |
A SUSE chronicle 0.1a project by rhaidl Talking to people, getting the information about what had happened in the SUSE history, bringing all together to kind of a chronicle. Let's give it a try :-) |