An attempt to create a local Kernel community

19 Nov 2018

Since the day I had my first class of Operating Systems (OS) in my engineering course, I got passionate about it; for me, OS represents one of the greatest achievements of mankind. As a result of my delight for OS, I always tried to gravitate around this field, but my school environment did not provide me with many opportunities to get into the area. To summarize this long journey, I will jump directly into the main point, on November 15 of 2017, I joined to a conference named Linuxdev-br [1] which brought together some of the best Brazilians Kernel developers. I took this opportunity to learn everything that I could by asking lots of questions to developers. Additionally, I was lucky to meet Gustavo Padovan. He helped me a lot during my first steps in the Linux Kernel.

From November 2017 until now, I did the best I could to become a Kernel developer, and I have to admit that the path was very complicated. I paid the price to work from 8 AM to 11 PM, from Sunday to Sunday, to maintain my efforts in my master and the Linux Kernel at the same time; unfortunately, I could not stay focused only in the Kernel. However, all of these efforts were paid off along the year; I had many patches accepted in the Kernel, I joined the Google Summer of Code (GSoC), I traveled to conferences, I returned to Linuxdev-br 2018 as a speaker, I joined XDC2018 [2], and many other good things happened.

Now I am close to complete one year of Linux Kernel, and one question still bugs me: why does it have to be so hard for someone in a similar condition to become part of this world? I realized that I had great support from many people (especially from my sweet and calm wife) and I also pushed myself very hard. Now, I feel that it is time to start giving back something to society; as a result, I began to promote some small events about free software in the university and the city I live. However, my main project related to this started around two months ago with six undergraduate students at the University of Sao Paulo, IME [3]. My plan is simple: train all of these six students to contribute to the Linux Kernel with the intention to help them to create a local group of Kernel developers. I am excited about this project! I noticed that within a few weeks of mentoring the students they already learned lots of things, and in a few days, they will send out their contributions to the Kernel. I want to write a new post about that in December 2018, reporting the results of this new tiny project and the summary of this one year of Linux Kernel. See you soon :)

Reference

  1. linuxdev-br
  2. XDC 2018
  3. IME USP

Articles from blogs I follow around the net

Status update, April 2022

This month marked my first time filing taxes in two countries, and I can assure you it is the worst. I am now a single-issue voter in the US: stop taxing expats! You can get some insight into the financials of SourceHut in the recently-published financial re…

via Drew DeVault's blog April 15, 2022

Status update, April 2022

Hi! This month I’ve continued working on Goguma, my IRC client for Android. I’ve released version 0.2.0 earlier today. Tons of new features and bug fixes have been shipped! delthas has added a new old-school compact mode for the message list, has implemented…

via emersion April 15, 2022

KUnit Hackathon

In partnership with LKCAMP, we organized a hackathon to encourage new Linux kernel contributors.

via FLUSP - FLOSS at USP July 13, 2021

Generated by openring