-- Leo's gemini proxy

-- Connecting to gemini.tuxmachines.org:1965...

-- Connected

-- Sending request

-- Meta line: 20 text/gemini;lang=en-GB

Tux Machines


Fedora and Red Hat


Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Dec 20, 2022


Explore the features of the Linux Double Commander file manager

today's howtos



My Experience as a Fedora Intern - Fedora Community Blog


↺ My Experience as a Fedora Intern - Fedora Community Blog


> As my internship with Fedora comes to an end, I reflect on my experiences over the past five months. I began my internship in May, applying to a Community Architect position posted through Red Hat. I was unfamiliar with the Fedora community, but was eager to learn and contribute to the communities. Marie Nordin, the former Fedora Community Action and Impact Coordinator guided me the whole way. She taught me about the passion and enthusiasm the open source community respects within community involvement.


> Marie and I began the internship preparing for the summer’s Fedora Hatch events. We put together promotional content for the Hatches taking place around the globe. Marie guided me through the process of ensure each Hatch was properly promoted. I communicated with the organizers to ensure that the promotional tweets and Community Blog posts were all agreed upon. The Hatches allowed me to acquaint myself with the involved Fedora contributors. This allowed me to feel more confident and comfortable within the community.



GitOps Cookbook: Kubernetes automation in practice | Red Hat Developer


↺ GitOps Cookbook: Kubernetes automation in practice | Red Hat Developer


> With the advent of practices such as infrastructure as code (IaC), software development has pushed the boundaries of platforms where you can run applications. This becomes more frequent with programmable, API-driven platforms such as public clouds and open source infrastructure solutions. While some years ago developers were only focusing on application source code, today they also have the opportunity to code the infrastructure where their application will run. This gives control and enables automation, which significantly reduces lead time.


> A good example is with Kubernetes, a popular open source container workload orchestration platform and the de facto standard for running production applications, either on public or private clouds. The openness and extensibility of the platform enables automation, which reduces risks of delivery and increases service quality. Furthermore, this powerful paradigm is extended by another increasingly popular approach called GitOps.



Stream processing with ksqlDB in OpenShift Streams for Apache Kafka | Red Hat Developer


↺ Stream processing with ksqlDB in OpenShift Streams for Apache Kafka | Red Hat Developer


> This is the first article in a three-part regarding existing solutions to manipulate Kafka stream data with SQL, the well-known query language widely used to manipulate relational databases.



How to contribute to LLVM | Red Hat Developer


↺ How to contribute to LLVM | Red Hat Developer


> LLVM is a collection of compiler toolchain technologies that underpins many modern programming languages, including Rust, Julia, and Swift. The LLVM community is welcoming to new contributors and a great place to get into compiler development.


> This article is a fairly detailed guide for LLVM contributions. Generally speaking, it's fine to just put up a patch, and somebody will be happy to guide you through the more idiosyncratic parts of the LLVM contribution process. However, a lot of the early patch review feedback tends to be the same, and this article should help you avoid some of the common issues.



A quarter on the Red Hat OSCI and Testing Farm team - Martin Pitt


↺ A quarter on the Red Hat OSCI and Testing Farm team - Martin Pitt


> For the last quarter I have worked in Red Hat’s Testing Farm (TFT) and “Operating System CI” (OSCI) and teams, on a temporary rotation. TFT develops and runs the Testing Farm (TF) infrastructure, an API which you tell “go run a test with $these parameters, it allocates a bunch of cloud instances, sets them up, runs your test, and returns the result. OSCI builds upon this to implement Fedora’s and RHEL’s gating tests for package updates, image builds, upgrades, and so on. Everytime you look at Fedora’s bodhi and see these, you are looking at results provided by these teams...




gemini.tuxmachines.org

-- Response ended

-- Page fetched on Sat Jun 1 09:30:56 2024