finish de-l3slaveing of crash-setup

a project by mhocko

The primary motivation for crash-setup (created by l3team) is to make kernel crashdumps deployment and crash using as easy as possible. This has been the case for quite some time except the tool was quite l3slave centric. With a great help from tcech the tool is close to be fully usable from other machines and !.de network as well. Let's finish the last pieces. This looks like a very minor project but it will be great to have it finally!

Updated about 5 years ago. 1 hackers ♥️.

Ceph crushmap visualization

a 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. This project aims at creating graphs of the crush map, for better visualization of the Ceph cluster.

Updated about 5 years ago. 2 hacker ♥️.

Combine Hack Week and continious services

a project by hager

More and more customers use our products in mission critical environment. They have a huge need that things run smooth. With Hack Week we have the challenge

Updated about 5 years ago. 1 hackers ♥️.

package inputlirc (or add it to existing lirc package)

a project by wiederda

inputlirc is superior to previous lirc input daemon as it can monitor multiple input sources at the same time. This is needed for some new remote controls that appear as two devices, providing both virtual keypresses as well as mouse clicks. Since I'm too lazy to always build the package manually, I would like to have it available for OpenSUSE.

Updated about 7 years ago. No love.

Take a stroll in dependency hell

a project by jgleissner

While packaging node.js modules, which often depend on specific versions of other node.js modules, sometimes many of them, you easily end up in dependency hell, and maintaining an OBS project with a few hundred of those modules can be a tedious task. So the idea for this project is to familiarise myself with how exactly dependencies are managed on package and repository level, check out what tools exist to drill into dependency data, and hack something that helps keeping OBS repositories in a dependency consistent state.

Updated about 5 years ago. 2 hacker ♥️.

Personal Travel recording web application

an idea by cxiong

I want an open travel application to record my travel activity: connect time/date, photos, comments and thoughts (and many others) with locations and show them all in a map. My plan:

Updated about 5 years ago. 1 hackers ♥️. Has no hacker: grab it!

fix performance problem in soundkonverter

a project by wiederda

I'm using soundkonverter a lot (my whole music collection is flac, but for the car or my children I prefer mp3) and it is working fine. However when doing mass conversions, building the list of files to convert can take ages. It seems the filelist is being re-created for every title added. Debug it and try to fix it in order to speed up this operation.

Updated about 7 years ago. No love.

Add test support to rpmbuild (and build service)

an idea by dmuhamedagic

Add test directives to the spec file which would instruct rpmbuild to run regression and unit tests for the package. rpmbuild should probably also get an option to run these tests. The interface could be exposed in the build service with the possibility to consider a package not passing its tests as failed to build.

Updated about 7 years ago. No love. Has no hacker: grab it!

evince: personal pdf center

a project by dliang

[User] who has lots of PDFs to read

Updated about 7 years ago. No love.

Package DAPS for Debian using the BuildService

a project by tbazant

DAPS (https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Documentation:Tools/daps) is a tool we use in the documentation team to create/validate/export/... docbook documents. It's currently available for SUSE and openSUSE systems, and I believe that packaging it for Debian GNU Linux would help both the DAPS and the Linux community (and me myself as I'm using Debian at home as well :-)

Updated about 5 years ago. 3 hacker ♥️.