Welcome Radostin! On Fri, 2017-05-05 at 10:29 +0100, Radostin Stoyanov wrote: > I would like to introduce myself. > My name is Radostin Stoyanov and I am Computing Science student at > University of Aberdeen. > > After the announcement form Google yesterday, I'm excited that my > proposal for the GSoC project "Ease creation of containers" has been > accepted. > http://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Google_Summer_of_Code_Ideas#Ease_creation_of_containers As a start you could work on Cole's comments on your new UI. Obviously having a blog feed dedicated to your virtualization work would be nice to show off your work to the world. > I am looking forward to become valuable member of the libvirt/virt-tools > community. And we are looking forward a new community member ;) > I would like to ask for any advice/suggestions with regards to > development environment/tools, tests, style of coding, > comments/documentation. Those are quite a bunch of questions in the same sentence. Let me split them a bit. * development environment / tools: if you mean IDE vs text editor, which one, then this is really up to you and your habits. I'm a Vim user, but I'm sure there are people here using emacs or other things to work on the code. If you want tips and tricks on a specific editor / IDE, rather ask more precise questions here or on IRC. * style of coding: when entering a new community, the best is to mimic the code style in other parts of the project. * tests: see `python setup.py --help-commands` for the commands to be used for testing and various other checks * comments/documentation: for the comments, it's the usual trade off between too many (creating noise) and not enough (hard to understand). As for the documentation, I'm only aware of the man files. -- Cedric _______________________________________________ virt-tools-list mailing list virt-tools-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/virt-tools-list