Dochazka is a long-term project to replace the obsolete Attendance & Time Tracking system used by the Prague office since 2007. Dochazka is a complex system consisting of three major components:

In addition to the modules listed above, the Dochazka project also spawned the App::CELL and Date:Holidays:CZ CPAN modules.

The Dochazka REST server is implemented as a state machine powered by Web::Machine. The front-end is implemented using jQuery and RequireJS.

Looking for hackers with the skills:

javascript perl

This project is part of:

Hack Week 12 Hack Week 11 Hack Week 13 Hack Week 15 Hack Week 16 Hack Week 20 Hack Week 21

Activity

  • 4 months ago: helgaella99 joined this project.
  • 4 months ago: helgaella99 left this project.
  • 4 months ago: helgaella99 joined this project.
  • almost 2 years ago: vbabka disliked this project.
  • almost 2 years ago: bruclik disliked this project.
  • almost 2 years ago: oholecek disliked this project.
  • almost 4 years ago: gniebler liked this project.
  • almost 4 years ago: llansky3 liked this project.
  • almost 4 years ago: ybonatakis liked this project.
  • almost 4 years ago: smithfarm liked this project.
  • about 7 years ago: TBro liked this project.
  • about 7 years ago: bruclik liked this project.
  • almost 8 years ago: jfajerski joined this project.
  • about 9 years ago: mkubecek liked this project.
  • about 9 years ago: oholecek liked this project.
  • about 9 years ago: pgonin liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: lrupp liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: vbabka liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: scarabeus_iv liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: ptesarik liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: jschmid1 liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: smithfarm added keyword "perl" to this project.
  • about 10 years ago: michal-m liked this project.
  • about 10 years ago: smithfarm added keyword "javascript" to this project.
  • about 10 years ago: smithfarm started this project.
  • All Activity

    Comments

    • Fielaposa
      5 days ago by Fielaposa | Reply

      Action games and those requiring precise GeoGuessr movements can significantly enhance hand-eye coordination. This benefit can be particularly useful in sports, driving, and other activities that demand quick reflexes and accurate movements.

    Similar Projects

    obs-service-vendor_node_modules by cdimonaco

    Description

    When building a javascript package for obs, one option is to use https://github.com/openSUSE/obs-service-node_modules as source service to get the project npm dependencies available for package bulding.

    obs-service-vendornodemodules aims to be a source service that vendors npm dependencies, installing them with npm install (optionally only production ones) and then creating a tar package of the installed dependencies.

    The tar will be used as source in the package building definitions.

    Goals

    • Create an obs service package that vendors the npm dependencies as tar archive.
    • Maybe add some macros to unpack the vendor package in the specfiles

    Resources


    Try to render Agama in a TUI browser by ancorgs

    Description

    Agama is a new Linux installer that will be very likely used for SLES 16. It offers a modern and convenient web interface that can be executed both locally and remotely.

    But of course some users will miss the old TUI (ncurses) interface of the YaST installer.

    So I want to experiment whether would it be possible to render a simplified version of the web interface for TUI browsers. That's only doable and maintainable if we keep the current technology stack we use for rendering the full-blown page, simply replacing complicated UI elements with others that are easy to render. That means the browser would need to support Javascript.

    Chawan seems to be almost there regarding support for Javascript, XHR and related technologies. But according to this conversation, the next missing piece would be to support recursive import of module script tags.

    Unfortunately, Chawan is written in Nim and I'm pretty sure a week is not enough time for me to learn Nim, implement the feature at Chawan and then fix whatever is the next obstacle on the Agama side.

    But if someone could take care of the Nim part, I would do the same with the Agama one. So this is basically a call for help to get this project even started.


    Agama Expert Partitioner by joseivanlopez

    Description

    Agama is a new Linux installer that will be very likely used for SLES 16.

    It offers an UI for configuring the target system (language, patterns, network, etc). One of the more complex sections is the storage configuration, which is going to be revamped. This project consists on exploring the possibility of having something similar to the YaST Expert Partitioner for Agama.

    Goals

    • Explore different approaches for the storage UI in Agama.


    Design the new UI for storage configuration at Agama by ancorgs

    Description

    We are in the process of re-designing the web user interface to configure storage at Agama. We expected to have a clear idea of what we wanted before starting Hack Week. But the idea is still not that clear. So I will use use my Hack Week time to try several prototypes since I really want this to be done.

    Goals

    Have a prototype using Patternfly components and addressing all the use-cases we want to cover. Easy for the easy cases. Capable for the complex ones.


    Editor mode at Agama web interface by ancorgs

    Description

    Agama is a new Linux installer that will be very likely used for SLES 16.

    It takes a configuration (in JSON format) as input. And offers several interfaces to build that configuration in an easy and interactive way.

    I was considering the possibility to add to the web interface a "text editor" mode similar to the XML editor available at virt-manager. That could be used to see how the changes in the UI translate into changes on the configuration.

    Goals

    • Refresh my knowledge about UI development for Agama, since there was a major overhaul recently (adopting TanStack Query) and I need to learn the new way to do things.
    • Please hackers who always want to know how things work internally. :-)


    Create object oriented API for perl's YAML::XS module, with YAML 1.2 Support by tinita

    Description

    YAML::XS is a binding to libyaml and already quite old, but the most popular YAML module for perl. There are two main issues:

    • It uses global package variables to influence behaviour.
    • It didn't implement the loading of types like numbers and booleans according to the YAML spec (neither 1.1 nor 1.2).

    Goals

    Create a new interface which works object oriented. Currently YAML::XS exports a list of functions.

    • The new API will allow to create a YAML::XS object containing configuration influencing the behaviour of loading and dumping.
      • It keeps the libyaml parser and emitter structs in memory, so repeated calls can save the creation of those structs
    • It will by default implement the YAML 1.2 Core Schema, so it is compatible to other YAML processors in perl and in other languages
    • If I have time, I would like to add the merge << key feature as an option. We could then use it in openQA as a replacement for YAML::PP to be faster.

    I already created a proof of concept with a minimal functionality some weeks before this HackWeek.

    Resources