I want to create a more modern mail storage format, which leverages git and tagging instead of folders to manage my mail.
This is inspired by having used notmuch and mbsync for a long time, liking the good aspects of this setup but getting frustrated with the problems. Mainly the issue of storing mail on multiple computers with eventual consistency (for example being able to read mail on my laptop when travelling but my desktop computer when at home).
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RMT.rs: High-Performance Registration Path for RMT using Rust by gbasso
Description
The SUSE Repository Mirroring Tool (RMT) is a critical component for managing software updates and subscriptions, especially for our Public Cloud Team (PCT). In a cloud environment, hundreds or even thousands of new SUSE instances (VPS/EC2) can be provisioned simultaneously. Each new instance attempts to register against an RMT server, creating a "thundering herd" scenario.
We have observed that the current RMT server, written in Ruby, faces performance issues under this high-concurrency registration load. This can lead to request overhead, slow registration times, and outright registration failures, delaying the readiness of new cloud instances.
This Hackweek project aims to explore a solution by re-implementing the performance-critical registration path in Rust. The goal is to leverage Rust's high performance, memory safety, and first-class concurrency handling to create an alternative registration endpoint that is fast, reliable, and can gracefully manage massive, simultaneous request spikes.
The new Rust module will be integrated into the existing RMT Ruby application, allowing us to directly compare the performance of both implementations.
Goals
The primary objective is to build and benchmark a high-performance Rust-based alternative for the RMT server registration endpoint.
Key goals for the week:
- Analyze & Identify: Dive into the
SUSE/rmtRuby codebase to identify and map out the exact critical path for server registration (e.g., controllers, services, database interactions). - Develop in Rust: Implement a functionally equivalent version of this registration logic in Rust.
- Integrate: Explore and implement a method for Ruby/Rust integration to "hot-wire" the new Rust module into the RMT application. This may involve using FFI, or libraries like
rb-sysormagnus. - Benchmark: Create a benchmarking script (e.g., using
k6,ab, or a custom tool) that simulates the high-concurrency registration load from thousands of clients. - Compare & Present: Conduct a comparative performance analysis (requests per second, latency, success/error rates, CPU/memory usage) between the original Ruby path and the new Rust path. The deliverable will be this data and a summary of the findings.
Resources
- RMT Source Code (Ruby):
https://github.com/SUSE/rmt
- RMT Documentation:
https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP7/html/SLES-all/book-rmt.html
- Tooling & Stacks:
- RMT/Ruby development environment (for running the base RMT)
- Rust development environment (
rustup,cargo)
- Potential Integration Libraries:
- rb-sys:
https://github.com/oxidize-rb/rb-sys - Magnus:
https://github.com/matsadler/magnus
- rb-sys:
- Benchmarking Tools:
k6(https://k6.io/)ab(ApacheBench)
Mail client with mailing list workflow support in Rust by acervesato
Description
To create a mail user interface using Rust programming language, supporting mailing list patches workflow. I know, aerc is already there, but I would like to create something simpler, without integrated protocols. Just a plain user interface that is using some crates to read and create emails which are fetched and sent via external tools.
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Description
Rust has similar performance to C. Also, have a better async IO module and high integration with io_uring. This project aims to develop a user-space NFS server based on Rust.
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Interesting Links
Kudos aka openSUSE Recognition Platform by lkocman
Description
Relevant blog post at news-o-o
I started the Kudos application shortly after Leap 16.0 to create a simple, friendly way to recognize people for their work and contributions to openSUSE. There’s so much more to our community than just submitting requests in OBS or gitea we have translations (not only in Weblate), wiki edits, forum and social media moderation, infrastructure maintenance, booth participation, talks, manual testing, openQA test suites, and more!
Goals
Kudos under github.com/openSUSE/kudos with build previews aka netlify
Have a kudos.opensuse.org instance running in production
Build an easy-to-contribute recognition platform for the openSUSE communit a place where everyone can send and receive appreciation for their work, across all areas of contribution.
In the future, we could even explore reward options such as vouchers for t-shirts or other community swag, small tokens of appreciation to make recognition more tangible.
Resources
(Do not create new badge requests during hackweek, unless you'll make the badge during hackweek)
- Source code: openSUSE/kudos
- Badges: openSUSE/kudos-badges
- Issue tracker: kudos/issues
Mail client with mailing list workflow support in Rust by acervesato
Description
To create a mail user interface using Rust programming language, supporting mailing list patches workflow. I know, aerc is already there, but I would like to create something simpler, without integrated protocols. Just a plain user interface that is using some crates to read and create emails which are fetched and sent via external tools.
I already know Rust, but not the async support, which is needed in this case in order to handle events inside the mail folder and to send notifications.
Goals
- simple user interface in the style of
aerc, with some vim keybindings for motions and search - automatic run of external tools (like
mbsync) for checking emails - automatic run commands for notifications
- apply patch set from ML
- tree-sitter support with styles
Resources
- ratatui: user interface (https://ratatui.rs/)
- notify: folder watcher (https://docs.rs/notify/latest/notify/)
- mail-parser: parser for emails (https://crates.io/crates/mail-parser)
- mail-builder: create emails in proper format (https://docs.rs/mail-builder/latest/mail_builder/)
- gitpatch: ML support (https://crates.io/crates/gitpatch)
- tree-sitter-rust: support for mail format (https://crates.io/crates/tree-sitter)
git-fs: file system representation of a git repository by fgonzalez
Description
This project aims to create a Linux equivalent to the git/fs concept from git9. Now, I'm aware that git provides worktrees, but they are not enough for many use cases. Having a read-only representation of the whole repository simplifies scripting by quite a bit and, most importantly, reduces disk space usage. For instance, during kernel livepatching development, we need to process and analyze the source code of hundreds of kernel versions simultaneously.This is rather painful with git-worktrees, as each kernel branch requires no less than 1G of disk space.
As for the technical details, I'll implement the file system using FUSE. The project itself should not take much time to complete, but let's see where it takes me.
I'll try to keep the same design as git9, so the file system will look something like:
/mnt/git
+-- ctl
+-- HEAD
| +-- tree
| | +--files
| | +--in
| | +--head
| |
| +-- hash
| +-- msg
| +-- parent
|
+-- branch
| |
| +-- heads
| | +-- master
| | +-- [commit files, see HEAD]
| +-- remotes
| +-- origin
| +-- master
| +-- [commit files, see HEAD]
+-- object
+-- 00051fd3f066e8c05ae7d3cf61ee363073b9535f # blob contents
+-- 00051fd3f066e8c05ae7d3cf61ee363073b9535c
+-- [tree contents, see HEAD/tree]
+-- 3f5dbc97ae6caba9928843ec65fb3089b96c9283
+-- [commit files, see HEAD]
So, if you wanted to look at the commit message of the current branch, you could simply do:
cat /mnt/git/HEAD/msg
No collaboration needed. This is a solo project.
Goals
Implement a working prototype.
Measure and improve the performance if possible. This step will be the most crucial one. User space filesystems are slower by nature.
Resources
https://docs.kernel.org/filesystems/fuse/fuse.html
Create a page with all devel:languages:perl packages and their versions by tinita
Description
Perl projects now live in git: https://src.opensuse.org/perl
It would be useful to have an easy way to check which version of which perl module is in devel:languages:perl. Also we have meta overrides and patches for various modules, and it would be good to have them at a central place, so it is easier to lookup, and we can share with other vendors.
I did some initial data dump here a while ago: https://github.com/perlpunk/cpan-meta
But I never had the time to automate this.
I can also use the data to check if there are necessary updates (currently it uses data from download.opensuse.org, so there is some delay and it depends on building).
Goals
- Have a script that updates a central repository (e.g.
https://src.opensuse.org/perl/_metadata) with metadata by looking at https://src.opensuse.org/perl/_ObsPrj (check if there are any changes from the last run) - Create a HTML page with the list of packages (use Javascript and some table library to make it easily searchable)
Resources
Results
Day 1
- First part of the code which retrieves data from https://src.opensuse.org/perl/_ObsPrj with submodules and creates a YAML and a JSON file.
- Repo: https://github.com/perlpunk/opensuse-perl-meta
- Also a first version of the HTML is live: https://perlpunk.github.io/opensuse-perl-meta/
Day 2
- HTML Page has now links to src.opensuse.org and the date of the last update, plus a short info at the top
- Code is now 100% covered by tests: https://app.codecov.io/gh/perlpunk/opensuse-perl-meta
- I used the modern perl
classfeature, which makes perl classes even nicer and shorter. See example - Tests
- I tried out the mocking feature of the modern Test2::V0 library which provides call tracking. See example
- I tried out comparing data structures with the new Test2::V0 library. It let's you compare parts of the structure with the
likefunction, which only compares the date that is mentioned in the expected data. example
Day 3
- Added various things to the table
- Dependencies column
- Show popup with info for cpanspec, patches and dependencies
- Added last date / commit to the data export.
Plan: With the added date / commit we can now daily check _ObsPrj for changes and only fetch the data for changed packages.
Day 4
go-git: unlocking SHA256-based repository cloning ahead of git v3 by pgomes
Description
The go-git library implements the git internals in pure Go, so that any Go application can handle not only Git repositories, but also lower-level primitives (e.g. packfiles, idxfiles, etc) without needing to shell out to the git binary.
The focus for this Hackweek is to fast track key improvements for the project ahead of the upstream release of Git V3, which may take place at some point next year.
Goals
- Add support for cloning SHA256 repositories.
- Decrease memory churn for very large repositories (e.g. Linux Kernel repository).
- Cut the first alpha version for
go-git/v6.
Stretch goals
- Review and update the official documentation.
- Optimise use of go-git in Fleet.
- Create RFC/example for go-git plugins to improve extensibility.
- Investigate performance bottlenecks for Blame and Status.
Resources
- https://github.com/go-git/go-git/
- https://go-git.github.io/docs/