Google Summer of Code 2009

For the last few years, Google has offered a fantastic opportunity for students to help out Open Source software projects in the summer while getting paid for it. It's called Google Summer of Code™, and it provides free software projects a great way of attracting development effort while providing software developers who are still in university with some interesting and useful experiences. Find out more about the Summer of Code (SoC) from [http://code.google.com/summerofcode.html their site].

Mercurial is a Distributed Version Control System (DVCS), and we would like to participate in 2009's Summer of Code. In recent years (notably since the Linux kernel project started looking for a new VCS), DVCSs have rapidly started to gain traction. For open source projects, especially, the use of a distributed system can be a great enabler, in that it's much easier to keep track of your own changes and publish them back to the community in a structured way. With centralized systems, you have a central repository that only a happy few have (write) access to, and people spend a lot of time mailing around diffs. With distributed systems, everyone has their own branch, and it's very easy to publish it on the web, compare the changes to those on some other branch or merge two branches back together.

We believe distributed version control is the future, and it looks like many other technologists believe the same. There's some heavy competition between open source VCS systems: git, Bazaar-NG and Mercurial are constantly fighting over users, while many more conservative projects are still on Subversion or even CVS. Competition is fierce, stimulating fast-paced development in the three DVCS contenders. It's therefore important (and good for the competition) that projects like ours gain more developers, to keep up with the race for robustness, performance and features. We view the Summer of Code as a great opportunity to help us in this competition.

Written largely in Python (with the exceptions of a few performance-critical core modules), it is easy to develop for and allows for good code organization and clean abstractions. Moreover, it has been optimized from the start for good performance, using an append-only datastore, minimizing random disk access and smart uses of compression. Finally, it has extensive features for sharing changesets, over HTTP, SSH and in files over email and has an innovative extension (Mercurial Queues) to help building and organizing changesets into a thoroughly useful source history.

TableOfContents

1. Notes on applying

Here are some tips on what you might want to include in your application.

2. Getting things done

Some tips on how you can get to project completion within the scheduled timeline.

3. Project Ideas

Here are a bunch of project ideas you might like to apply for. Of course, if you have a different idea of something in Mercurial that badly needs fixing or some feature you think would make a difference, go ahead and apply with it! Some more project ideas can be found via NewFeatureDiscussions, CategoryNewFeatures and NewIdeas.

3.1. Lightweight copies/renames

(very difficult - a successful student will become an expert in Mercurial's storage format and transmission protocol)

Copies and renames currently are not too efficient. Mercurial copies the copied/renamed source file to the new initial revision of the target file in its internal history store. For renames, this is especially counter-intuitive, as renaming a large file grows the store by the file's size. It would be better if Mercurial had some way of referring to the existing revision from the new file, while preserving backwards compatbility and bounded I/O guarantees for retrieving revisions. See [http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/bts/issue883 issue883] for discussion.

3.2. Parent Delta

(very difficult - a successful student will become an expert in Mercurial's storage format and transmission protocol)

Revlogs such as the manifest that have significant amounts of branching can suffer from revlog's linear delta model. Parent delta would allow storing deltas against parent revisions, greatly improving compression. Like lightweight copies, it will require extending the wire protocol to allow backwards compatibility.

3.3. Better Changeset Discovery

(difficult - a successful student will become an expert in Mercurial's protocol and will experiment with difficult graph theory)

Mercurial currently uses a simple graph discovery protocol to discover what new changesets need to be pushed or pulled without transmitting the entire list available on either side. We suspect that a significantly better protocol exists that has fewer round trips and less data transfer, but research remains.

3.4. Partial cloning

(difficult - a successful student will become familiar with most of Mercurial's core algorithms)

(existing work in progress - contact Peter Arrenbrecht, parren on irc)

Currently, it's only possible to clone one whole repository at a time. PartialClone and TrimmingHistory could help make cloning more efficient by limiting the cloning process in either of two dimensions: time or space. For time, we could maybe clone the last few [:ChangeSet:changesets] and lazily fetch the rest as needed. For space, it would be nice if it was possible to clone just a subtree of any repositories. For these features, any number of thorny issues can arise because of current assumptions in Mercurial code. These are hard projects, but the result will be worth it to many Mercurial users (in terms of developers and in terms of projects).

3.5. Instantaneous status on Linux, Windows, OS X

(difficult - a successful student will need to debug complex race conditions and master Mercurial's dirstate algorithms)

The InotifyExtension makes a huge difference to performance on moderate to large [:Repository:repositories] on Linux, but it still has some difficult bugs. Windows and Mac OS X provide file status notification APIs, so it should be possible to port the inotify extension to one or other (or both) of these platforms, providing the same kinds of speed improvements as on Linux. (Don't try to do all of these in one project; instead, pick one platform you are comfortable with, read about the relevant APIs, then come up with a coherent proposal.)

3.6. TortoiseHg

TortoiseHg is a GUI front-end, similar to TortoiseCVS and TortoiseSVN. For many people, this makes interacting with Mercurial much easier. There's a lot of room for improvement, adding graphical UI to interesting extensions like pbranch and others. The project keeps a [http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/crew/wiki/TODO TODO list] of suitable tasks for a Summer of Code.

3.7. Interactive patch selection for commit/Mercurial Queues/record/import

Being able to select parts of the existing changes, with hunk or greater granularity, in an interactive way, can improve the use of commands and extensions that take changes, such as commit, MercurialQueues and import. The RecordExtension currently allows patch hunk selection, but sometimes a better granularity is desired, as when a set of adjacent function definitions should go in different commits. This feature could be added as an --interactive mode for many of Mercurial's core commands.

3.8. Mercurial on Jython

Some Sun projects have taken to using Mercurial as their VCS of choice (OpenJDK, NetBeans; see ProjectsUsingMercurial for a full list). Recently, Mercurial has re-gained pure-Python implementations of the modules that are now in C. It would be nice if someone could take the effort to get this code to run on Jython, opening up Mercurial for use from within the JDK.

3.9. Mercurial on Py3k

(difficult - a successful student will have to master Mercurial's pervasive approach to character set handling and reconcile it with Py3k's)

In 2008, the Python project has finally released their 3.0 branch of Python (affectionately known as Python 3000). This is a major release of Python, with some large changes. Porting to Py3k would be an interesting effort, operating on the current edge of the software, with nice long-term viability results for Mercurial.

3.10. GUI integration

Mercurial is currently lacking features to support integration into a GUI, like TortoiseHg or Mercurial Eclipse. One example of a feature that would benefit GUI is [http://www.nabble.com/Progress-bar-on-network-actions-tt20596124.html#a20596124 a progress indicator] on operations that may take some time.

3.11. Web interface work

The hgwebdir repository interface is one of the successful parts of Mercurial. It allows projects to quickly setup a web interface with access to multiple repositories, and it has some decent ACL features. It's a Python WSGI application, meaning it's relatively easy to run on many platforms and behind differing web servers. It can still be improved, though: there are still some holes in the WSGI implementation (notably, it writes to stdout/stderr in some error conditions) and the access control features aren't always functional enough for complex setups.

Also, improved support for named branches and filtering (like hg log -f and the like) are often requested features.

3.12. Conversion tools

Mercurial is a relatively new entrant in the VCS market, and many projects are still using older VCSs such as CVS and SVN. While we currently have some tools to help migrate to Mercurial in the form of the ConvertExtension, these tools could certainly use more improvements. Specifically, enabling the use of Mercurial as a client for SVN or even git and/or Bazaar-NG repositories would be very nice, as it enables developers to make their own choice regarding the use of their VCS client, thereby drastically enlarging our userbase.

The hgsubversion extension already works quite well, but better integration with the existing Mercurial user interface would be nice.

3.13. Performance tuning

(difficult - a successful student will master performance benchmarking, tuning Python algorithms, and possibly writing C extensions in Python)

There are numerous opportunities for additional performance tuning. Possibilities include:

A project in this area would probably involve picking an important benchmark (eg checkout of a large repository) and tuning multiple areas to meet a performance goal (eg 2x overall performance increase).

3.14. MercurialEclipse

3.14.1. Mylin Integration

Integrate the Mercurial changeset backend in MercurialEclipse with the Eclipse Mylin facilities.

3.14.2. Improve synchronize view

Use structural compare in synchronize view. Visualize remote / local changes by applying them to a DAG. This could use some work already done by Brian Wallis.

3.14.3. Fully support pbranch and attic extensions

Support all commands, including interactive interfacing with Mercurial.

3.14.4. Bitbucket.org, FreeHG (or other hosting services) integration

Create a new repository (and maybe even a account) transparently from Eclipse. Interface with the bitbucket.org API. Jesper Noehr would be willing to help with this. Even interfacing with SVN repository providers might be an option by using hgsubversion.

3.14.5. Native Java implementation of mercurial

This might be too big, but would enable Java programs to talk directly to Mercurial.

3.14.6. Improve Patch workflow

Working with patches could be improved and streamlined by e.g. supporting copy & paste within package explorer / navigator, triggering the patchbomb extension from within mq/shelve support etc. Importing patches from bugzilla/trac/lighthouse/bitbucket/whatever into Mercurial would be nice as well. Mylin could perhaps help with this.

3.14.7. Support some "send change for review" workflow

Most places where I worked you need to have you your changes review'ed by a colleague before pushing it. and there is usually no "integrator" review'ing and pulling the changeset into the "main" branch that is handled by the developer after his changest got approved.

3.14.8. Support release management

Make release menu item that Change some file according to a template (version number in the manifest) commit, autogenerate a tag, commit tag, if its a eclipse plugin, generate a feature with the same version number and generate a release. Auto update version on Eclipse Plugin Central ... (it's not hard today just many smal steps maybe not worth it probably totaly different for different project What kind if steps do you need in your project)

3.14.9. Integration of Eclipse Mylin with bitbucket.org ticketing

Integrate the ticket tool from bitbucket.org with Eclipse's Task/Ticket UI.

4. Mentors

A list of potential mentors.

5. Students Considering Application

6. Applications Received From

7. Project status


CategoryNewFeatures

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