Hi Christos,
Please excuse a copypaste where not everything may apply to you:
I recommend you familiarize yourself with the Student Application
Process[1] and if you don't know much about git, you can take a look at
some easily "googled" tutorials. I would be happy if we could work on the
project in Linux and therefor to use git command line and not any kind of
gui apps. I would also recommend you to get familiar with Fedora[2] ideally
have it installed or have Live USB with F25, so we don't have any issues
with dotnet[3] development itself. We know what runs in Fedora and how to
get it all working. =)
Next a little bit deeper, you should take a look at how to "talk to"
systemd, such as DBus, etc... [4]
[1] GSoC Application Process:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/GSOC_2017/Student_Application_Process
[2] Fedora:
https://getfedora.org/en/workstation |
https://spins.fedoraproject.org
[3] DotNet Fedora:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/DotNet
[4] D-Bus
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/dbus
...as far as the project goes, it is completely up to the student to write
the proposal, to come up with what is it supposed to be about. I would also
strongly recommend to apply for other projects as well (you can apply up to
5) because the interest in my dotnet projects is great, therefor low
chances of getting accepted for you.
Best regards,
Radka
------------------------------
*Radka Janeková*
*radka.janek(a)redhat.com <radka.janek(a)redhat.com>*
On Sun, Mar 26, 2017 at 2:32 PM, christo kotsi <christo.kotsi(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Hello, my name is Christos Kotsi, and i study Materials Science and
Technology, at University of Crete in Greece.
I am sending you about the ".NET Core wrapper library for systemd" idea.
Because this projects is of the projects i am interested in, i am trying to
understand as much as i can before i attempt to proceed on with the
proposal.
Right now, projects deliverable seems a bit abstract.
I look forward hearing from you.
Best wishes,
Christos Kotsi