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From YouTube: Hackathon Info by Serapheim Dimitropoulos & Sara Hartse
Description
From the OpenZFS Developer Summit 2018
Slides: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gx_UmSWhUhdNMRCWFpw2L7Zd_GpwuvvT
Hackathon presentations: https://youtu.be/zN_tGxCpTBU
A
So
our
next
two
presenters
they
are
fairly
new
to
the
open
ZFS
community,
but
they
have
already
made
quite
a
few
contributions
and
they
have
already
presented
here
last
year.
So
here
we
have
a
Seraphim
and
Sarah
who
are
going
to
do
the
hackathon
pitches
for
tomorrow's
hackathon.
So
please
come
on
stage.
B
Hello,
everyone,
as
Pavel
said
this
short
talk,
is
gonna,
be
about
the
hackathon.
That's
gonna
take
place
tomorrow,
just
a
quick
question
to
start
with.
Who
here
has
come
to
the
open
ZFS
summit
for
the
first
time,
whose
first
time
here,
okay
raise
hands?
Okay,
have
some
people,
okay
from
the
people
who
came
here
who
joined
last
year.
How
many,
when
joined
us
on
the
second
day
and
worked
on
a
project,
raise
your
hands?
B
Okay,
okay,
cool!
So
that's
great,
that's
great!
So
the
hackathon
is
a
great
time.
You
know
to
get
together
with
some
people
that
sometimes
you
know
you
generally
don't
work
with
right,
they're,
not
from
your
company
or
like
you
know,
and
you
get
to
work
on
like
interesting
problems
that
sometimes
you
wouldn't
work
otherwise
or
and
for
some
other
people.
It's
like
you
know
a
nice
way
to
get
your
hands
dirty
right
away.
B
So
you
know,
as
I
said,
as
the
slide
says,
you
know
you
work
on
interesting
things.
You
know
working
on
interesting
things,
fostering
like
community
involvement
and
you
get
to
make
new
connections.
You
know
new
friends,
and
it's
like
that.
The
issue
is,
though,
that
what
we've
seen
in
the
past
hackathons
is
that
the
attendance
is
very
low
compared
to
the
first
day.
You
know
many
people
come
here
for
the
talks.
They
join
us
on
the
second
day.
B
They
see
the
lightning
talks,
but
the
hackathon
participation
is
very
low
compared
to
that
and
some
of
the
barriers
that
we've
seen
is
that
many
people,
just
you
know
after
the
lightning
dogs
they're
like
oh
I,
don't
know
if
I
can
be
of
any
or
I
want
to
help,
but
I
don't
know
what
to
work
on
and
maybe
if
they
find
something
that
they
like
to
work
on.
They
don't
know
how
to
get
started
or
you
know,
get
some
help
in
order
to
get
started.
B
C
So,
like
Seraphim
said,
we
really
want
to
make
the
hackathon
as
newcomer
friendly
as
possible,
so
we've
put
together
a
variety
of
newcomer
resources,
so
the
first
is
a
link
to
a
spreadsheet
of
hackathon
suggestions
and
the
first
chunk
of
those
suggestions
are
ones
that
we
came
up
with
is
kind
of
bite-sized,
ensure
projects,
and
then
there
are
other
projects,
some
of
which
might
be
bite-sized
or
not
proposed
by
other
members
of
the
community.
We
also
created
a
resource
page
for
newcomers
on
the
open,
CFS
wiki,
which
you
should
check
out.
C
It
has
it's
kind
of
like
a
collection
point
for
getting
started,
resources,
some
talks
and
materials
that
we
found
really
helpful
when
we
were
getting
familiar
with
the
fest.
We
also
have
a
new
slack
channel
in
the
open,
ZFS
slack.
There's
instructions
on
how
to
join
the
open,
ZFS
lock
on
the
open,
ZFS
wiki
and
everyone
should
join.
So
we
have
a
slack
channel
called
newcomers
for
asking
getting
started,
type
questions
and
answering
those
questions
like
if
you're
someone
who's
more
familiar
stuff
that
wants
to
help
out
newcomers.
C
So
the
other
thing
to
keep
in
mind
is
that
there's
a
huge
range
of
things
that
you
can
work
on
during
this
hackathon.
So
we've
touched
on
a
couple
of
them,
but
everything
from
discussing
future
ideas
and
talking
about
how
you
use
EFS
or
your
company
uses
CFS,
there's
a
ton
of
work
to
be
done
on
documentation.
So
we
saw
from
George's
talk
the
open,
ZFS
wiki
is
a
good
resource,
but
things
are
a
little
like
scattered,
out-of-date.
There's
lots
of
work
to
be
done
there.
Blog
posts
are
really
valuable.
C
That's
really
helpful
for
learning
ZFS
or
getting
familiar
with
subsystems
or
learning
about
new
ideas,
and
then
there's
also
a
lot
of
just
general
community
development
work
to
be
done
so
Matt
touched
on
this
in
his
intro.
Talk
and
Karen
is
going
to
be
kind
of
a
point
person
at
the
hackathon
for
talking
about
these
ideas.
But
how
do
we
make
the
open,
ZFS
community
self-sustaining
and
healthy
and
keep
it
going
in
the
future
and
yeah?
C
C
The
other
thing
that
Seraphim
reminded
me
of
was
that,
and,
as
we
saw
from
the
talk
on
monitoring,
you
don't
even
need
to
like
install
and
set
up
a
development
environment
to
start
doing
interesting
things
with
DFS.
You
can
do
visualizations
like
of
georges
de
trĂªs
script
for
the
I/o
pipeline,
or
you
can
try
and
look
at
like
performance,
metrics
or
all
kinds
of
stuff.
So
hopefully
this
gave
you
some
ideas.
C
C
So
here's
just
like
a
list
of
some
cool
ZFS
features
that
came
out
of
hackathons,
so
you
pull
wait,
see,
pool
checkpoint
view,
dev
met
some
classes,
just
went
in
to
CS,
Linux,
you're,
exciting,
compressed
arc,
Channel
programs
and
a
bunch
of
other
stuff.
So
this
is
like
a
really
a
really
valuable
time
for
community
building
and
growth
of
ZFS
in
general,
and
it's
a
really
like
fruitful
time
for
new
ZFS
features
and
making
progress
in
ZFS
so
yeah.
We
hope
you'll
join
us.
C
A
C
Yeah
exactly
like
right,
it's
asking
questions
is
stressful,
like
in
general,
like
it
is
hard
to
admit
you,
don't
know
things
and
it's
hard
to
kind
of
like
be
vulnerable
in
that
way,
but
you're
surrounded
by
people
who
are
really
excited
about
CFS
and
who
really
want
to
help
people
understand
it
and
also
realize
like
how
confusing
and
weird
things
are
so
like
this
is.
This
is
the
time
yeah.