MOTUDeveloperApplication

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'''I, Simon Chopin, apply for Contributing Developer status within the Ubuntu community.''' '''I, Alexandre Ghiti, apply for MOTU status within the Ubuntu community.'''
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|| '''Name''' || Simon Chopin ||
|| '''Launchpad Page''' || https://launchpad.net/~schopin ||
|| '''Name''' || Alexandre Ghiti ||
|| '''Launchpad Page''' || https://launchpad.net/~alexghiti ||
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* I have taken an active role within the development community that requires to be able to
communicate on all dev channels, including the ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com ML, which is
moderated for non-dev members.
* I have contributed quite a few packages now, to both Debian and Ubuntu and feel comfortable enough with the overall process.

* I sometimes worked on a package, waiting for a sponsor, and someone else uploaded it in the meantime: this is a waste of time for everyone.

* I will help clear the sponsorship queue.

* I want to get more responsibility, because the more responsible, the more I feel involved and happy to contribute.
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I am a software engineer hailing from Brittany, France, currently employed by Canonical within the Foundations team. When I'm not working on the internals of Ubuntu as part of my dayjob, you'll usually find me playing either music or videogames, both of which usually involve fiddling with my computer setup ;-). I am a software engineer living in Grenoble, France, I currently work in the Foundations team for Canonical. For a few years now, my focus is RISC-V, more specifically the kernel and when I don't work on this subject, I work on some personal projects (all involve my computer of course :)).
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My Ubuntu story is, for a big part, a Debian story. I discovered free software late when I entered my engineering school in Grenoble where I studied operating systems. And I began contributing to open source softwares with the kernel as I had experience in this area from my first job and I was willing to help (and have fun too).
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Ubuntu was my first successful attempt at Linux back in 2006 on an old laptop, thanks to the free CD shipping program that was running back then. I kept running a dual-boot until 2009, when I had a new laptop which couldn't run the latest Ubuntu but could run the latest Debian. I pragmatically switched to the mother distro, and over the years ended up involved in Python packaging, indirectly working for Ubuntu ;-).

Ironically, my FLOSS contributions died down when I used Ubuntu again, both due to my first job after college. It was only server-side, but its extra-long version strings felt very familiar indeed! I became the resident expert on deploying our applications on our servers, putting my packaging knowledge to good use. After a few years, I switched jobs, and ended up maintaining a whole internal distribution based on Debian, as well as spearheading a grassroot movement to have technical roles in the company use Linux laptops instead of OSX, insisting on Ubuntu LTS on those.

This led me to my current job at Canonical, where I'm happily greasing the internal wheels of Ubuntu so that other, more user-facing teams can deliver a good experience to all of our users, including myself and many around me who've switched to Ubuntu.
I usually had a Linux Mint distribution from the time of my cheap student laptop and then switched to Ubuntu when I installed it to some close relatives a few years ago, so I guess I have always used Ubuntu.
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As part of the Foundations team, my area of impact includes language toolchains, bootloaders, installer, and other core components of the system. I've touched a rather wide range of packages, mostly C libraries and utilities, but my main involvements are netplan development and OpenSSL packaging, for which I'm currently driving the transition to version 3.0.

Outside of my day job, I don't have a big impact at the moment, but my long-term aspirations are to work on reducing the gap between Ubuntu and Debian, and work upstream with the Debian QA team for the good of both their and our archive.
My focus is on enabling the RISC-V architecture which consists in fixing RISC-V specific issues and adding packages to allow better support of existing hardware. But as part of the Foundations team, it often happens that I have to fix packages outside of the RISC-V scope.
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https://udd.debian.org/cgi-bin/ubuntu-sponsorships.cgi?render=html&sponsor=&sponsor_search=name&sponsoree=*chopin*&sponsoree_search=name
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OpenSSL 3:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2021-August/041589.html
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2021-October/041639.html
> 50 sponsored packages:

https://udd.debian.org/cgi-bin/ubuntu-sponsorships.cgi?render=html&sponsor=&sponsor_search=name&sponsoree=*ghiti*&sponsoree_search=name

2 MIRs:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libisofs/+bug/1977959
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/jigit/+bug/1978066

> 5 SRUs:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/util-linux/+bug/1944741
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nezha-boot0/+bug/1965260
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/u-boot-nezha/+bug/1976594
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/flash-kernel/+bug/1978923
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/livecd-rootfs/+bug/1980929

2 +1 reports:

https://www.mail-archive.com/ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com/msg10177.html
https://www.mail-archive.com/ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com/msg10425.html
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Low-level packages such as u-boot, opensbi, flash-kernel...etc. But actually anything to enhance our RISC-V support.
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Actively seek out sponsors outside of the Foundations Team! Also, pay more attention to details, as most of my uploads had small issues (no bug number, forgot to run update-maintainer, etc...) I don't communicate enough with the community. I think being a MOTU will make me more legitimate and will improve that.

I learnt a lot about the processes, but now I have to focus on the details, it happens that I forget a bug number, that I mess a version in my PPA and ask for my sponsor to fix these.

And I really need to pay more attention to all the tools that exist to help us.
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I plan to apply for MOTU after the impish release to help reduce the sponsorship queue. There is some selfish
reasoning behind it: Core dev will have more time to review and upload my uploads to main!

Further out, I of course intend to become Core dev myself, both for my coworkers' sake and mine.
I want to work on the distribution fundamentals and by its nature, the RISC-V architecture may bring new kinds of problems that may need innovative solutions.
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There is no clear-cut way to contribute to an existing package. Some are maintained in Launchpad in a git repository somewhere, which isn't obvious to find, some are directly using the archive as "VCS", and expect a debdiff directly on the launchpad bug, but you'll find a git repository for some of those packages still, via the git-ubuntu package, making things that much harder to grasp. First it would be the sponsoring process: it is very long, random, discouraging and time wasting. I will contribute more knowing that I have upload rights and since nobody will check my work, I'll necessarily pay more attention to details.
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I could contrast this with many other distros, but even Debian seems clearer to me, as all "landing pages" for a given package are interlinked and most of them have a link to whatever VCS is used to maintain the package. Then I think it misses a documentation on the tools that we could use to improve our workflow.
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''As a sponsor, just copy the template below, fill it out and add it to this section.''
`Lukas ‘slyon’ Märdian

* General feedback
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Alex joined the Ubuntu Foundations team and thus became a collegue in November 2021. He picked up mostly on low-level RISC-V enablement work, but also helped with general distro work, e.g. doing +1 maintenance shifts, handling proposed-migration and doing merges. I haven’t been directly involved with his RISC-V focus topic, but sponsored some more generic changes for him. In total I sponsored 12 uploads for Alex, which are distributed across a sync, no-change rebuild, SRUs, MIRs, merges, bug fixes. So Alex showed to understand all those processes related to the Ubuntu archive.
I recommend to use tooling like dput-ng (+ https://git.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-server/+git/ubuntu-helpers/tree/cpaelzer/.dput.d) to catch simple issues earlier, communicating openly with the Ubuntu community on #ubuntu-devel (e.g. asking for sponsorship) and continuing to do +1 maintenance shifts, where having MOTU powers should help a lot to speed things up and give the possibility to learn more about packaging work and the archive (e.g. transition details).

I endorse his MOTU application.

* Specific Experiences of working together

Please add good examples of your work together, but also cases that could have handled better.

I’ve recently worked with Alex on the libgpg-error/i386 proposed-migration (https://pad.lv/1975673), an issue wich was hard to track down as it involved fixes to the autopkgtest code-base, Multi-Arch fixes to related packages in addition to the usual debugging. Understanding all the relationships, he came up with the final Multi-Arch fix that finally resolved the issue for good.
Having my MIR hat on, I’ve also worked with Alex on MIRs related to usb-creator (https://pad.lv/1977959, https://pad.lv/1978066), a process that involves getting four new dependencies accepted into main; Alex worked through all of them and resolved upcoming issues.
On the SRU side I sponsored a long-standing nezha-boot0 change for him, which was kind of special, due to bing a full version backport. Alex was involved in the SRU team discussions to getting this exception approved.
Areas of Improvement

As Alex mentioned himself, I’d recommend putting some more attention to details when working on packages. As a sponsor I had to sometimes fix smaller issues, like adding LP bug numbers to debian/changelog or running update-maintainer on top of his diffs. We also had to re-upload nezha-boot0 due to a typo in the code, which is something that can happen to anyone, but double checking for such details should help to avoid duplicate work in the future. After mentioning issues once, Alex improved upon those for his follow-up sponsoring requests, in addition to submitting relevant patches to Debian and attaching debdiffs/git-ubuntu MPs to the LP bug reports (instead of just providing a PPA build).


Lukasz 'sil2100' Zemczak

* General feedback

Alex is responsible for a lot of the RISC-V effort in Ubuntu, and he’s always very thorough in the work that he is doing. Alex is a fast learner and a good hacker, but at the same time he’s not afraid to ask questions in case things are not clear. That being said, he tries to solve issues by himself as much as possible. Seeing his work so far, I’m sure he would do a good MOTU - and this would allow him to further develop his skills and later become a Core Developer.

* Specific experiences of working together

I only sponsored 4 packages in total, 2 of which were livecd-rootfs related. I was fairly happy with the work he provided with those packages. One of them introduced a regression, which both me and him missed during our initial work there. But those were certain corner cases we simply didn’t take into consideration.
Areas of improvement

Only areas of improvement I can think of is being more attentive for corner cases.

== Graham Inggs ==
=== General feedback ===
I've worked with Alex for almost one year, and in the past nine months I've sponsored 17 uploads for him. The quality has been good and when minor changes were required they were done quickly. I trust that Alex has a good understanding of our procedures to become a MOTU a now, which will make him more effective at +1 maintenance, and allow him to gain the experience required to become a Core Dev in future.

=== Specific Experiences of working together ===
* Many of the uploads I sponsored were fixes found during +1 maintenance, one was https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gcc-mingw-w64/24.4ubuntu1 which was solved as a result of the multi-arch fix for autopkgtest mentioned above

* https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/u-boot-nezha/2022.04+git20220405.7446a472-0ubuntu0.1 was an SRU to jammy

* https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/netdata/1.34.1-1 was a sync from Debian to drop an Ubuntu delta
=== Areas of Improvement ===
None at the moment
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## Uncomment the one that applies for you and please remove the others.
##
[[CategoryUniverseContributorApplication]]
[[CategoryMOTUApplication]]

I, Alexandre Ghiti, apply for MOTU status within the Ubuntu community.

Name

Alexandre Ghiti

Launchpad Page

https://launchpad.net/~alexghiti

Wiki Page

N/A

I am applying because:

* I have contributed quite a few packages now, to both Debian and Ubuntu and feel comfortable enough with the overall process.

* I sometimes worked on a package, waiting for a sponsor, and someone else uploaded it in the meantime: this is a waste of time for everyone.

* I will help clear the sponsorship queue.

* I want to get more responsibility, because the more responsible, the more I feel involved and happy to contribute.

Who I am

I am a software engineer living in Grenoble, France, I currently work in the Foundations team for Canonical. For a few years now, my focus is RISC-V, more specifically the kernel and when I don't work on this subject, I work on some personal projects (all involve my computer of course :)).

My Ubuntu story

I discovered free software late when I entered my engineering school in Grenoble where I studied operating systems. And I began contributing to open source softwares with the kernel as I had experience in this area from my first job and I was willing to help (and have fun too).

I usually had a Linux Mint distribution from the time of my cheap student laptop and then switched to Ubuntu when I installed it to some close relatives a few years ago, so I guess I have always used Ubuntu.

My involvement

My focus is on enabling the RISC-V architecture which consists in fixing RISC-V specific issues and adding packages to allow better support of existing hardware. But as part of the Foundations team, it often happens that I have to fix packages outside of the RISC-V scope.

Examples of my work / Things I'm proud of

Overall:

> 50 sponsored packages:

https://udd.debian.org/cgi-bin/ubuntu-sponsorships.cgi?render=html&sponsor=&sponsor_search=name&sponsoree=*ghiti*&sponsoree_search=name

2 MIRs:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libisofs/+bug/1977959 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/jigit/+bug/1978066

> 5 SRUs:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/util-linux/+bug/1944741 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nezha-boot0/+bug/1965260 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/u-boot-nezha/+bug/1976594 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/flash-kernel/+bug/1978923 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/livecd-rootfs/+bug/1980929

2 +1 reports:

https://www.mail-archive.com/ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com/msg10177.html https://www.mail-archive.com/ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com/msg10425.html

Areas of work

Low-level packages such as u-boot, opensbi, flash-kernel...etc. But actually anything to enhance our RISC-V support.

Things I could do better

I don't communicate enough with the community. I think being a MOTU will make me more legitimate and will improve that.

I learnt a lot about the processes, but now I have to focus on the details, it happens that I forget a bug number, that I mess a version in my PPA and ask for my sponsor to fix these.

And I really need to pay more attention to all the tools that exist to help us.

Plans for the future

General

I want to work on the distribution fundamentals and by its nature, the RISC-V architecture may bring new kinds of problems that may need innovative solutions.

What I like least in Ubuntu

First it would be the sponsoring process: it is very long, random, discouraging and time wasting. I will contribute more knowing that I have upload rights and since nobody will check my work, I'll necessarily pay more attention to details.

Then I think it misses a documentation on the tools that we could use to improve our workflow.

Comments

If you'd like to comment, but are not the applicant or a sponsor, do it here. Don't forget to sign with @SIG@.


Endorsements

`Lukas ‘slyon’ Märdian

* General feedback

Alex joined the Ubuntu Foundations team and thus became a collegue in November 2021. He picked up mostly on low-level RISC-V enablement work, but also helped with general distro work, e.g. doing +1 maintenance shifts, handling proposed-migration and doing merges. I haven’t been directly involved with his RISC-V focus topic, but sponsored some more generic changes for him. In total I sponsored 12 uploads for Alex, which are distributed across a sync, no-change rebuild, SRUs, MIRs, merges, bug fixes. So Alex showed to understand all those processes related to the Ubuntu archive. I recommend to use tooling like dput-ng (+ https://git.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-server/+git/ubuntu-helpers/tree/cpaelzer/.dput.d) to catch simple issues earlier, communicating openly with the Ubuntu community on #ubuntu-devel (e.g. asking for sponsorship) and continuing to do +1 maintenance shifts, where having MOTU powers should help a lot to speed things up and give the possibility to learn more about packaging work and the archive (e.g. transition details).

I endorse his MOTU application.

* Specific Experiences of working together

Please add good examples of your work together, but also cases that could have handled better.

I’ve recently worked with Alex on the libgpg-error/i386 proposed-migration (https://pad.lv/1975673), an issue wich was hard to track down as it involved fixes to the autopkgtest code-base, Multi-Arch fixes to related packages in addition to the usual debugging. Understanding all the relationships, he came up with the final Multi-Arch fix that finally resolved the issue for good. Having my MIR hat on, I’ve also worked with Alex on MIRs related to usb-creator (https://pad.lv/1977959, https://pad.lv/1978066), a process that involves getting four new dependencies accepted into main; Alex worked through all of them and resolved upcoming issues. On the SRU side I sponsored a long-standing nezha-boot0 change for him, which was kind of special, due to bing a full version backport. Alex was involved in the SRU team discussions to getting this exception approved. Areas of Improvement

As Alex mentioned himself, I’d recommend putting some more attention to details when working on packages. As a sponsor I had to sometimes fix smaller issues, like adding LP bug numbers to debian/changelog or running update-maintainer on top of his diffs. We also had to re-upload nezha-boot0 due to a typo in the code, which is something that can happen to anyone, but double checking for such details should help to avoid duplicate work in the future. After mentioning issues once, Alex improved upon those for his follow-up sponsoring requests, in addition to submitting relevant patches to Debian and attaching debdiffs/git-ubuntu MPs to the LP bug reports (instead of just providing a PPA build).

Lukasz 'sil2100' Zemczak

* General feedback

Alex is responsible for a lot of the RISC-V effort in Ubuntu, and he’s always very thorough in the work that he is doing. Alex is a fast learner and a good hacker, but at the same time he’s not afraid to ask questions in case things are not clear. That being said, he tries to solve issues by himself as much as possible. Seeing his work so far, I’m sure he would do a good MOTU - and this would allow him to further develop his skills and later become a Core Developer.

* Specific experiences of working together

I only sponsored 4 packages in total, 2 of which were livecd-rootfs related. I was fairly happy with the work he provided with those packages. One of them introduced a regression, which both me and him missed during our initial work there. But those were certain corner cases we simply didn’t take into consideration. Areas of improvement

Only areas of improvement I can think of is being more attentive for corner cases.

Graham Inggs

General feedback

I've worked with Alex for almost one year, and in the past nine months I've sponsored 17 uploads for him. The quality has been good and when minor changes were required they were done quickly. I trust that Alex has a good understanding of our procedures to become a MOTU a now, which will make him more effective at +1 maintenance, and allow him to gain the experience required to become a Core Dev in future.

Specific Experiences of working together

* Many of the uploads I sponsored were fixes found during +1 maintenance, one was https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gcc-mingw-w64/24.4ubuntu1 which was solved as a result of the multi-arch fix for autopkgtest mentioned above

* https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/u-boot-nezha/2022.04+git20220405.7446a472-0ubuntu0.1 was an SRU to jammy

* https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/netdata/1.34.1-1 was a sync from Debian to drop an Ubuntu delta

Areas of Improvement

None at the moment


TEMPLATE

== <SPONSORS NAME> ==
=== General feedback ===
## Please fill us in on your shared experience. (How many packages did you sponsor? How would you judge the quality? How would you describe the improvements? Do you trust the applicant?)

=== Specific Experiences of working together ===
''Please add good examples of your work together, but also cases that could have handled better.''
## Full list of sponsored packages can be generated here:
##  https://udd.debian.org/cgi-bin/ubuntu-sponsorships.cgi
=== Areas of Improvement ===


CategoryMOTUApplication

AlexandreGhiti/MOTUDeveloperApplication (last edited 2022-09-21 13:33:13 by ginggs)