Hi all,
As you know, the Fosdem team has decided to change the way devrooms are organized and they have decided to shared devrooms organized around topics instead of distributions. That means that no distribution will have a dedicated/shared devroom. (see http://www.fosdem.org/2010/distrominiconf) If you think you have a talk that can be given in such devroom , feel free to ping me and i'll report that to the Fosdem team. Covered topics in those devrooms will be :
* Packaging * Localization * Community Infrastructure * Test and QA * Governance * Working with upstream (not *our* upstream but upstream in general as in OSS projects ;-) )
(There is a list available here : http://lists.fosdem.org/pipermail/dist2010/ )
On the other side (as already announced on the promo list) we'll have a booth/stand as usual.
Thanks for your ideas ! :D
Hi Fabian.
As you know, the Fosdem team has decided to change the way devrooms are organized and they have decided to shared devrooms organized around topics instead of distributions. That means that no distribution will have a dedicated/shared devroom. (see http://www.fosdem.org/2010/distrominiconf) If you think you have a talk that can be given in such devroom , feel free to ping me and i'll report that to the Fosdem team. Covered topics in those devrooms will be :
- Packaging
- Localization
- Community Infrastructure
I am interested in doing a talk about Spacewalk, even if it's not part of the CentOS backend infrastructure.
Best Regards Marcus
On Fri, Dec 11, 2009 at 1:13 PM, Fabian Arrotin fabian.arrotin@arrfab.net wrote:
Covered topics in those devrooms will be :
I've proposed two talks (or rather discussion panels) for Fosdem on the dist2010 list already:
a) Infrastructure management
I am interested to learn how other distributions manage their infrastructure. I can do a short talk about how CentOS does that, but would like to learn from others. From the "spectator's" view, this could also be interesting for other largish projects doing their own infrastructure.
Topics include hosting, config management, monitoring, dealing with hosters, etc.
b) Mirror management.
I am interested to learn how other distributions manage their mirrors. Again I can do a short talk about how CentOS does that, but would also like to see how other distributions take care of that: How does one become a mirror? How are mirrors checked for freshness? How is content distributed to the mirrors? Is content checked? etc.
Ralph