On Mon, Oct 07, 2024 at 11:16:49AM +0000, Usman Akinyemi wrote: > On Mon, Oct 7, 2024 at 11:12 AM Patrick Steinhardt <ps@xxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Mon, Oct 07, 2024 at 11:11:04AM +0000, Usman Akinyemi via GitGitGadget wrote: > > > Changes since v5: > > > > > > * Remove spaces between redirect to conform with git style. > > > > Thanks, this version looks good to me now. > > > > Patrick > > Thank you very much and I appreciate all the guidance from all > reviewers. I Learned a great lot of new things. > Going forward, what should be my next step? Can I work on other tasks > now or wait for this to be merged? Are there any other things also > expected from my side as an outreachy applicant ? Thank you very > much. For now I'd recommend to wait a couple of days until the patch series you have sent gets picked up by Junio and merged to `next`. You should watch out for the "What's cooking?" reports that he sends out every couple days and observe how your topic progresses in it. Note that things may go a bit slower right now due to the pending Git v2.47 release, so it may take a while before he picks your topic. When things go smoothly: congrats, you have checked the first box and have successfully completed your microproject :) I'd recommend to keep on reading the mailing list to get familiar with how things work over here and get some familiarity with the code in question. You are of course free to send additional patches, but this is not a requirement. If you still want to do so I'd recommend to not pick up a microproject, but try to find a work item on your own, e.g. by searching for "#leftoverbits" in our mailing list. The reason for why I don't recommend to pick up another microproject is so that other applicants have items to work on, and it decreases the likelihood that your changes collide with the work of another intern. Patrick