Project Description

The openSUSE Project has a problem, not enough people are engaged in the development. In order to fix this, we need a less obscure way to learn about contributing. One of the ways to do that is enabling people to discover various open meetings that happen for planning of various areas of project progress.

Goal for this Hackweek

An UI for managing calendar events for various teams within the openSUSE Project. All of the meetings listed on the page will be ones that are open to the public to join and contribute to. The calendar has to have an easy way to subscribe to, preferably via webcal link, since most calendar software supports that.

The hackweek would currently be targetting series of these meetings:

  • https://etherpad.opensuse.org/p/weeklymeeting
  • https://etherpad.opensuse.org/p/ReleaseEngineering-meeting
  • https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Heroes/Meetings
  • https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Board_meetings
  • and any future meetings open to the public

Resources

  • https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/matrix-bots-i-think-we-need-what-do-you-think/32847
  • https://github.com/CentOS/calendar
  • https://calendar.fedoraproject.org/
  • https://github.com/openSUSE/openSUSE-release-process/tree/master/schedule (not that much relevant for the task).

Looking for hackers with the skills:

calendar opensuse

This project is part of:

Hack Week 23

Activity

  • about 1 year ago: lkocman liked this project.
  • about 1 year ago: jzerebecki liked this project.
  • about 1 year ago: hellcp-work added keyword "calendar" to this project.
  • about 1 year ago: hellcp-work added keyword "opensuse" to this project.
  • about 1 year ago: hellcp-work started this project.
  • over 1 year ago: Pharaoh_Atem liked this project.
  • over 1 year ago: lkocman originated this project.

  • Comments

    • lkocman
      about 1 year ago by lkocman | Reply

      Git repo for the hackweek project is here!

      https://github.com/lkocman/calendar-o-o/blob/main/README.md

    • lkocman
      about 1 year ago by lkocman | Reply

      Right now I use a static .ics file as an input data. Any help on the visual side would be highly welcome. I recommend running it in distrobox with zypper in node.

      I did install deps with npm install --save express ejs node-ical moment collections

      Server itself was executed by node app.js

    • lkocman
      about 1 year ago by lkocman | Reply

      All commited for today. Readme was updated. Happy hacking!

    • lkocman
      about 1 year ago by lkocman | Reply

      A solution by lcp https://github.com/hellcp-work/calendar-o-o

    Similar Projects

    Digital art wallpapers for openSUSE Leap and Tumbleweed by lkocman

    Description

    We've enrolled set of new wallpapers to both Leap 16 and Tumbleweed as part of https://news.opensuse.org/2024/10/26/leap-tw-get-makeovers/

    We've previewed digital art wallpapers which were not part of the initial drop. I'd like to spend time on hackweek to finialize my current Taipei (mountains) and Mauritius digital art wallpapers.

    Goals

    Finalize existing two digital art wallpapers for Leap and Tumbleweed https://github.com/openSUSE/branding/issues/155 Make them available as part of leap16 dir in https://github.com/openSUSE/wallpapers and update (This makes is available to Tumbleweed users as well). Update https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/X11:common:Factory/wallpapers-openSUSE-extra && Leap:16.0 && Factory.

    Resources

    https://github.com/openSUSE/branding/issues/155 The mauritius draft can be found in https://github.com/lkocman/geo-wallpapers


    Create openSUSE images for Arm/RISC-V boards by avicenzi

    Project Description

    Create openSUSE images (or test generic EFI images) for Arm and/or RISC-V boards that are not yet supported.

    Goal for this Hackweek

    Create bootable images of Tumbleweed for SBCs that currently have no images available or are untested.

    Consider generic EFI images where possible, as some boards can hold a bootloader.

    Document in the openSUSE Wiki how to flash and use the image for a given board.

    Boards that I have around and there are no images:

    • Rock 3B
    • Nano PC T3 Plus
    • Lichee RV D1
    • StartFive VisionFive (has some image needs testing)

    Hack Week 22

    Hack Week 21

    Resources


    Enlightenment in Leap 16 by simotek

    Description

    Get the Enlightenment stack + X11 building and running on the Leap 16 codebase.

    Goals

    • Get enlightenment / terminology compiling for Leap 16
    • Test that they are running correctly in a Virtual Machine.

    Resources


    New migration tool for Leap by lkocman

    Update

    I will call a meeting with other interested people at 11:00 CET https://meet.opensuse.org/migrationtool

    Description

    SLES 16 plans to have no yast tool in it. Leap 16 might keep some bits, however, we need a new tool for Leap to SLES migration, as this was previously handled by a yast2-migration-sle

    Goals

    A tool able to migrate Leap 16 to SLES 16, I would like to cover also other scenarios within openSUSE, as in many cases users would have to edit repository files manually.

    • Leap -> Leap n+1 (minor and major version updates)
    • Leap -> SLES docs
    • Leap -> Tumbleweed
    • Leap -> Slowroll
    • Leap Micro -> Leap Micro n+1 (minor and major version updates)
    • Leap Micro -> MicroOS

    Hackweek 24 update

    Marcela and I were working on the project from Brno coworking as well as finalizing pieces after the hackweek. We've tested several migration scenarios and it works. But it needs further polishing and testing.

    Projected was renamed to opensuse-migration-tool and was submitted to devel project https://build.opensuse.org/requests/1227281

    Repository

    https://github.com/openSUSE/opensuse-migration-tool

    Out of scope is any migration to an immutable system. I know Richard already has some tool for that.

    Resources

    Tracker for yast stack reduction code-o-o/leap/features#173 YaST stack reduction


    YQPkg - Bringing the Single Package Selection Back to Life by shundhammer

    tl;dr

    Rip out the high-level YQPackageSelector widget from YaST and make it a standalone Qt program without any YaST dependencies.

    See section "Result" at the bottom for the current status after the hack week.

    Current Status

    See the development status issue at the GitHub repo.

    tl;dr: It's usable now with all the key features.

    It does real package installation / removal / update with reasonable user feedback.

    The Past and the Present

    We used to have and still have a powerful software selection with the YaST sw_single module (and the YaST patterns counterpart): You can select software down to the package level, you can easily select one of many available package versions, you can select entire patterns - or just view them and pick individual packages from patterns.

    You can search packages based on name, description, "requires" or "provides" level, and many more things.

    The Future

    YaST is on its way out, to be replaced by the new Agama installer and Cockpit for system administration. Those tools can do many things, but fine-grained package selection is not among them. And there are also no other Open Source tools available for that purpose that even come close to the YaST package selection.

    Many aspects of YaST have become obsolete over the years; many subsystems now come with a good default configuration, or they can configure themselves automatically. Just think about sound or X11 configuration; when did you last need to touch them?

    For others, the desktops bring their own tools (e.g. printers), or there are FOSS configuration tools (NetworkManager, BlueMan). Most YaST modules are no longer needed, and for many others there is a replacement in tools like Cockpit.

    But no longer having a powerful fine-grained package selection like in YaST sw_single will hurt. Big time. At least until there is an adequate replacement, many users will want to keep it.

    The Idea

    YaST sw_single always revolved around a powerful high-level widget on the abstract UI level. Libyui has low-level widgets like YPushButton, YCheckBox, YInputField, more advanced ones like YTable, YTree; and some few very high-level ones like YPackageSelector and YPatternSelector that do the whole package selection thing alone, working just on the libzypp level and changing the status of packages or patterns there.

    For the YaST Qt UI, the YQPackageSelector / YQPatternSelector widgets work purely on the Qt and libzypp level; no other YaST infrastructure involved, in particular no Ruby (or formerly YCP) interpreter, no libyui-level widgets, no bindings between Qt / C++ and Ruby / YaST-core, nothing. So it's not too hard to rip all that part out of YaST and create a standalone program from it.

    For the NCurses UI, the NCPackageSelector / NCPatternSelector create a lot of libyui widgets (inheriting YWidget / NCWidget) and use a lot of libyui calls to glue them together; and all that of course still needs a lot of YaST / libyui / libyui-ncurses infrastructure. So NCurses is out of scope here.

    Preparatory Work: Initializing the Package Subsystem

    To see if this is feasible at all, the existing UI examples needed some fixing to check what is needed on that level. That was the make-or-break decision: Would it be realistically possible to set the needed environment in libzypp up (without being stranded in the middle of that task alone at the end of the hack week)?

    Yes, it is: That part is already working:

    https://github.com/yast/yast-ycp-ui-bindings/pull/71