Difference between revisions of "Deuces"
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+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "B" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "B" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "R" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "R" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "L" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "L" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "C" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "C" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "A" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "A" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ||
+ | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | == Model a "D" using BRL-CAD == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create an uppercase letter "D" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). | ||
+ | |||
+ | References: | ||
+ | * Introduction to MGED at http://brlcad.org/wiki/Documentation | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
| | ||
{| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" | {| style="background-color:#666666;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="2" width="100%" |
Revision as of 13:17, 26 November 2012
This is a list of succinct tasks that are expected to take most people less than two hours to complete. It's a great starting point for anyone interested in contributing to BRL-CAD.
The tasks are all roughly the same complexity with no prior BRL-CAD experience expected. A description is provided along with a list of references and files you'll probably need to edit. Can we make it any easier?
Getting Started
Please do contact us (via IRC or brlcad-devel mailing list) if you have any questions, corrections, comments, or ideas of your own that you'd like to suggest.
We've made a really awesome virtual disk image that has everything you need included, preconfigured, and ready to be edited. Here's what you do:
- Download our image
- Download and run VirtualBox
- Get started compiling!
Contents
- 1 Getting Started
- 2 Code
- 2.1 Move comments from source to header files
- 2.2 Implement runtime detection of SSE
- 2.3 Fix bounding box function for our polygonal mesh (BoT) primitive
- 2.4 Make mged 'tables' command not call system()
- 2.5 Separate LIBNURBS files into one class per file
- 2.6 Implement mutex locking for Windows
- 2.7 Implement thread creation for Windows
- 2.8 Decouple LIBDM from LIBGED
- 2.9 Implement a function to convert triangle meshes to solid polygon mesh
- 2.10 Close MGED when both windows are closed
- 2.11 Add MGED key-binding to reopen the command window
- 2.12 Implement a primitive surface area function
- 2.12.1 ... surface area function for elliptical hyperboloids (EHY)
- 2.12.2 ... surface area function for right hyperbolic cylinders (RHC)
- 2.12.3 ... surface area function for hyperboloids of one sheet (HYP)
- 2.12.4 ... surface area function for polyhedron with 4 to 8 sides (ARB8)
- 2.12.5 ... surface area function for N-faced polysolid (ARBN)
- 2.12.6 ... surface area function for extruded bitmaps (EBM)
- 2.12.7 ... surface area function for gridded volumes (VOL)
- 2.12.8 ... surface area function for super ellipsoids (SUPERELL)
- 2.12.9 ... surface area function for polygonal meshes (NMG)
- 2.12.10 ... surface area function for triangle meshes (BOT)
- 2.12.11 ... surface area function for NURBS objects (BREP)
- 2.13 Implement a primitive volume function
- 2.13.1 ... volume function for right hyperbolic cylinders (RHC)
- 2.13.2 ... volume function for elliptical hyperboloids (EHY)
- 2.13.3 ... volume function for hyperboloids of one sheet (HYP)
- 2.13.4 ... volume function for superellipsoids (SUPERELL)
- 2.13.5 ... volume function for extruded bitmaps (EBM)
- 2.13.6 ... volume function for gridded volumes (VOL)
- 2.13.7 ... volume function for triangle meshes (BOT)
- 2.13.8 ... volume function for solid polygonal meshes (NMG)
- 2.13.9 ... volume function for extruded sketches (EXTRUDE)
- 2.14 Implement a primitive centroid function
- 2.14.1 ... centroid function for elliptical hyperboloids (EHY)
- 2.14.2 ... centroid function for right hyperbolic cylinders (RHC)
- 2.14.3 ... centroid function for hyperboloids of one sheet (HYP)
- 2.14.4 ... centroid function for polyhedron with 4 to 8 sides (ARB8)
- 2.14.5 ... centroid function for extruded bitmaps (EBM)
- 2.14.6 ... centroid function for gridded volumes (VOL)
- 2.14.7 ... centroid function for N-faced polysolids (ARBN)
- 2.14.8 ... centroid function for extruded sketches (EXTRUDE)
- 2.14.9 ... centroid function for superellipsoids (SUPERELL)
- 2.14.10 ... centroid function for solid polygonal meshes (NMG)
- 2.15 Implement a primitive UV-mapping callback
- 2.15.1 ... UV-mapping for extruded bitmaps (EBM)
- 2.15.2 ... UV-mapping for extruded sketches (EXTRUDE)
- 2.15.3 ... UV-mapping for gridded volumes (VOL)
- 2.15.4 ... UV-mapping for N-faced arbitrary polyhedrons (ARBN)
- 2.15.5 ... UV-mapping for superellipsoids (SUPERELL)
- 2.15.6 ... UV-mapping for triangle meshes (BOT)
- 2.15.7 ... UV-mapping for solid polygonal meshes (NMG)
- 3 Documentation and Training
- 3.1 Add missing documentation (for any ONE command)
- 3.2 Write a tutorial on compiling BRL-CAD with XCode on Mac OS X
- 3.3 Write a tutorial on compiling BRL-CAD with Eclipse on Linux
- 3.4 Document MGED's 'saveview' command options
- 3.5 Write "MGED Interface" reference document
- 3.6 Convert 43 src/conv man pages to valid Docbook
- 3.7 Convert 38 src/fb man pages to valid Docbook
- 3.8 Convert 24 other man pages to valid Docbook
- 3.9 Write a "BRL-CAD Commands Quick Reference" document
- 3.10 Doxygen cleanup
- 3.11 Write a "BRL-CAD Ray Tracing Shaders" tutorial
- 3.12 NURBS BibTeX reference file
- 4 Outreach and Research
- 4.1 Write solicitation for new website designer
- 4.2 Model a "B" using BRL-CAD
- 4.3 Model a "R" using BRL-CAD
- 4.4 Model a "L" using BRL-CAD
- 4.5 Model a "C" using BRL-CAD
- 4.6 Model a "A" using BRL-CAD
- 4.7 Model a "D" using BRL-CAD
- 4.8 Model new BRL-CAD Logo using BRL-CAD
- 4.9 Write BRL-CAD News article on .deb/.rpm builds
- 4.10 Write a BRL-CAD showcase article
- 4.11 Design a "Commercial CAD Comparison" diagram
- 4.12 Investigate performance of setting thread affinity
- 4.13 Determine why solids.sh fails on 64-bit
- 4.14 Investigate permuted vertex lists from g-iges + iges-g
- 4.15 Investigate GMP integration
- 4.16 Research status of compiling BRL-CAD on MINGW
- 4.17 Create an awesome screenshot
- 5 Quality Assurance
- 5.1 Fix single-precision floating point crash
- 5.2 Fix closedb
- 5.3 Create geometry database with one of every primitive
- 5.4 Create an utility library (LIBBU) API unit test
- 5.5 Create numerics library (LIBBN) API unit test
- 5.6 Create a COMPREHENSIVE unit test for bn_dist_pt3_pt3()
- 5.7 Find, reliably reproduce, and report any bug in Archer
- 5.8 Reproduce any 10 unconfirmed open bug reports
- 6 User Interface
- 6.1 Design an MGED command spreadsheet
- 6.2 Create prototype 2D CAD drawing(s)
- 6.3 Create prototype CAD GUI layout diagram
- 6.4 Reorganize MGED menu
- 6.5 Categorize all of BRL-CAD's commands into a spreadsheet
- 6.6 Upgrade Drupal website
- 6.7 Upgrade Mediawiki website
- 6.8 Upgrade Gallery website
- 6.9 Set up StatSVN
- 6.10 Set up SvnPlot
- 6.11 Convert Gallery to Piwigo
Code
Tasks related to writing or refactoring code
All of the code tasks require making changes to BRL-CAD's source code. You will be expected to provide a patch file of all changes. Make sure you read your patch file before submitting it. Make sure your patch file will apply cleanly to an unmodified checkout of BRL-CAD:
svn co https://brlcad.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/brlcad/brlcad/trunk brlcad.edit cd brlcad.edit # make changes svn diff > ~/my.patch # read ~/my.patch file with text editor cd .. svn co https://brlcad.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/brlcad/brlcad/trunk brlcad.fresh cd brlcad.fresh patch -p0 < ~/my.patch # submit your patch file to our patches tracker
Move comments from source to header filesBRL-CAD uses Doxygen source code comments to document the API. The comments need to be moved from .c source code files to the corresponding .h API header file. Note that this is a REALLY easy task, it is just cut-and-paste after all, so it just might take you more than a couple hours if you're inefficient with a text editor. Regardless, you must make sure you compile before and after to make sure you didn't introduce a typo because you're changing so many files. This is a collection of tasks. Each task involves editing source code to move comments and verifying compilation wasn't broken in the process. See each entry below for details.
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Implement runtime detection of SSEBRL-CAD will optionally leverage SSE instructions for some operations but SSE-support is set at compile-time. If you attempt to perform SSE instructions on non-SSE hardware, it'll basically halt the application with an illegal instruction exception. That's a fancy way of saying it crashes. This task involves implementing a function (that will go into our LIBBU utility library) to reports whether SSE support is available at runtime. The most prevalent method for doing this is demonstrated by the Mesa folks where you set up an exception handler for SIGILL and attempt an SSE instruction. That's obviously a non-solution for Windows platforms, but is better than nothing and more useful than a Windows-only solution. Even better if you can handle both or implement a cross-platform solution. You'll implement a bu_sse_init() function that returns an error if SSE is not available at runtime. Code:
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Fix bounding box function for our polygonal mesh (BoT) primitiveBRL-CAD provides functions for its geometric primitives that define a bounding box - a box that completely encloses the volume described by the primitive. Ideally, these boxes are as small as possible while still enclosing the primitive. Currently the routine for BoTs is incorrect. You can use stl-g, obj-g, or any of our other *-g converters to import BoT geometry for testing. This task involves studying the current code for the function rt_bot_bbox() and determining what is causing the current inaccuracies (the mged 'bb' command is a good way to visualize primitive bounding boxes). Make changes to produce a more optimal bounding box. Reimplement it from scratch if you like. The raytracing prep code in rt_bot_prep does prepare a better bounding box, so that is one place to check. Code:
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Make mged 'tables' command not call system()BRL-CAD's geometry editor (MGED) provides hundreds of functions that users can call on the command line. One of our oldest commands writes data out to text files and calls the unix "sort" command to sort a list of items.. That's really bad. This task involves replacing the three calls to system() with a call to quicksort() or any other simple in-memory sorting mechanism. Code:
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Separate LIBNURBS files into one class per fileBRL-CAD has a recently implemented a new library that isn't very well organized. The files for that library are a haphazard collection of classes and functions. It's a bit of a mess. This task involves making sure there is no more than one struct or class per source file. Class/struct declarations should be in header files. Class/struct method and functions should be in source files. Headers should be fully self-sufficient and include proper #ifdef wrappers (see include/*.h for examples). Make sure new files are named to match their enclosing class/struct. Be sure to update the CMakeLists.txt build file too and test compilation. Code:
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Implement mutex locking for WindowsBRL-CAD implements support for running in parallel on computers with multiple CPUs or cores. However, there are lots of ways to run in parallel. BRL-CAD runs on Windows, but presently only in a single-threaded mode. To make it work in parallel, we need to define how threads acquire a mutex lock. This task involves implementing the necessary logic to acquire and release a mutex or semaphore on Windows. You can use either, but probably want to call CreateMutex(). This requires a very minor source code modification to just one file, but make sure it works with a simple test program. Make your test program call bu_semaphore_init()+bu_semaphore_acquire()+bu_semahpore_release(), see include/bu.h for API docs. References:
Code:
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Implement thread creation for WindowsBRL-CAD implements support for running in parallel on computers with multiple CPUs or cores. However, there are lots of ways to run in parallel. BRL-CAD runs on Windows, but presently only in a single-threaded mode. To make it work in parallel, we need to define how threads are created. This task involves implementing the necessary logic to create a new thread in bu_parallel(). This requires a very minor source code modification to just one file, but make sure it works with a simple test program. Make your program call bu_parallel(), see include/bu.h for API docs. References:
Code:
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Decouple LIBDM from LIBGEDBRL-CAD has a 3D display manager library (LIBDM) and a geometry editor command library (LIBGED). For clean encapsulation and library management, it's desirable to keep library dependencies to a minimum. LIBGED presently makes direct calls to LIBDM for a "screengrab" command. Properly fixed, it should be possible to remove the LIBDM linkage from LIBGED's build file and the command still work as expected. This task involves breaking the dependency of LIBGED on LIBDM by making LIBGED not directly call any LIBDM functions. To do this, LIBGED will need to introduce a callback mechanism in the "ged" struct so that the screengrab command can capture an image without directly calling a LIBDM function. This task is a little tricky, so you'll need to be somewhat proficient with C if you want any chance of completing this within a couple hours. Code:
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Implement a function to convert triangle meshes to solid polygon meshBRL-CAD implements numerous "primitive" 3D entity types. The Bag of Triangle (BoT) primitive implements simple triangle mesh geometry. Our N-manifold geometry (NMG) primitive implements solid polygonal mesh geometry. While we have a routine that converts an NMG to a BoT (mk_bot_from_nmg()), we do not have the reverse (mk_nmg_from_bot()). This task implements the missing mk_nmg_from_bot() function so that the input triangle mesh is converted into the NMG data structures and stitched together appropriately. References:
Code:
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Close MGED when both windows are closedBRL-CAD has an interactive geometry editor called MGED. It's often the starting point for beginners and allows creation and manipulation of models using commands. When mged is run, it creates 2 windows: a text-console command window and an interactive graphics window. When the user closes one of those windows, there is a bug. Closing the graphics window closes the command window. This task involves fixing this behavior so that ONLY closing both windows terminates the process properly and that closing either window does not take the other along with it. Code:
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Add MGED key-binding to reopen the command windowBRL-CAD has an interactive geometry editor called MGED. It's often the starting point for beginners and allows creation and manipulation of models using commands. When MGED is invoked, it creates 2 windows: a text-console command window and an interactive graphics window. If the user closes the text-console command window, they are left with the interactive graphics window. There is presently no way (correct us if we're wrong) to get the text-console back without restarting mged. A good way to test this is to run in classic mode and run the 'gui' command: sushi:~ morrison$ mged -c test.g BRL-CAD Release 7.22.0 Geometry Editor (MGED) Fri, 24 Aug 2012 00:02:42 -0400, Compilation 6 morrison@sushi.local:/usr/brlcad/rel-7.22.0 attach (nu|X|ogl)[nu]? mged> gui This task involves adding some mechanism, perhaps a simple key binding, to the graphics window so that you can get the command window back on-demand. Code:
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Implement a primitive surface area functionBRL-CAD provides more than two dozen types of geometry "primitives" such as ellipsoids, boxes, and cones. Every primitive is described by a collection of callback functions, for example rt_ell_bbox() returns the bounding box dimensions for an ellipsoid. Wikipedia, Wolfram Mathworld, and various other math sites (and research papers) around the web include the equations for most of our basic primitives while others are a little more tricky to compute. This task involves writing a new callback function that takes an rt_db_internal object and calculates the surface area (units are mm^2). There are numerous examples in our code where we compute surface area for other primitives. The primitives that do not already have a centroid callback are itemized in following. References:
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Implement a primitive volume functionBRL-CAD provides more than two dozen types of geometry "primitives" such as ellipsoids, boxes, and cones. Every primitive is described by a collection of callback functions, for example rt_ell_bbox() returns the bounding box dimensions for an ellipsoid. Wikipedia, Wolfram Mathworld, and various other math sites (and research papers) around the web include the equations for most of our basic primitives while others are a little more difficult to compute. This task involves writing a new callback function that takes an rt_db_internal object and calculates the volume (units are mm^3). There are numerous examples in our code where we compute volume for other primitives. The primitives that do not already have a volume callback are itemized in following. References:
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Implement a primitive centroid functionBRL-CAD provides more than two dozen types of geometry "primitives" such as ellipsoids, boxes, and cones. Every primitive is described by a collection of callback functions, for example rt_ell_bbox() returns the bounding box dimensions for an ellipsoid. Wikipedia, Wolfram Mathworld, and various other math sites (and research papers) around the web include the equations for most of our basic primitives while others are a little more tricky to compute. This task involves writing a new callback function that takes an rt_db_internal object and calculates its centroid (as a point_t 3D point). There are numerous examples in our code where we compute centroids for other primtiives. The primitives that do not already have a centroid callback are itemized in following. References:
Code:
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Implement a primitive UV-mapping callbackBRL-CAD provides more than two dozen types of geometry "primitives" such as ellipsoids, boxes, and cones. Every primitive is described by a collection of callback functions, for example rt_ell_bbox() returns the bounding box dimensions for an ellipsoid. One of those functions describes a UV mapping of the object's surface, which is used for things like texture and bump mapping. An example of this is rt_ell_uv() in the src/librt/primitives/ell/ell.c source file for an ellipsoid. Several of our more complex primitive types (such as BoT, NMG, and BREP/NURBS) do not presently implement a UV-mapping function leading to unexpected runtime behavior. This task involves implementing a UV-mapping callback for any of the primitives that do not already have a functional UV-callback defined. Note that this is an advanced task that might take you more than a couple hours if you don't have solid coding skills, but it's ultimately just a few lines of code. See other primitives that already implement a UV-mapping callback for reference. References:
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Documentation and Training
Tasks related to creating/editing documents and helping others learn more about BRL-CAD
Add missing documentation (for any ONE command)BRL-CAD is an extensive system with more than 400 commands and more than a million pages of documentation, but there are approximately 120 commands that are entirely undocumented: a-d archer asc2g asc2pix bot-bldxf bottest brep_cube brep_simple brickwall btclsh burst bw-a bw-d bwish c-d chan_add clutter contours d-a damdf dauto dauto2 d-bw dconv ddisp d-f dfft d-i dmod double-asc dpeak dsel dsp_add dstat d-u dwin euclid_format euclid_unformat fbgammamod f-d fence fhor f-i g-adrt g-euclid1 g-jack globe g-off i-a i-d i-f ihist imod istat jack-g kurt lowp molecule nmgmodel nmg-sgp off-g pipe pipetest pix2g pix3filter pixcount pixelswap pixembed pixfields pixfieldsep pixflip-fb pixpaste pix-spm pix-yuv plstat pyramid rawbot remapid rlesortmap rletovcr room rtcell rtexample rtfrac rtrad rtsil rtsrv script-tab sketch solshoot sphflake spltest spm-fb ssampview syn tea tea_nmg testfree texturescale torii ttcp tube txyz-pl u-a u-bw u-d u-f umod ustat vcrtorle vegitation wall wdb_example xbmtorle xyz-pl yuv-pix This task involves writing basic documentation for JUST ONE of those commands in the Docbook XML format. The command documentation should provide a one-sentence description, a detailed paragraph description (200+ words), explanation of all available command-line options, and one or more examples on how to use the command. Code:
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Write a tutorial on compiling BRL-CAD with XCode on Mac OS XBRL-CAD uses the CMake build system to generate outputs for a variety of platforms. It will output Makefiles, Microsoft Visual Studio build files, XCode project files, Eclipse build files and more. This task involves generating an XCode project with our build and verifying that it successfully compiles all of BRL-CAD. Document the process on our wiki as a tutorial. Include screen shot images when referring to visual actions within XCode. References: |
Write a tutorial on compiling BRL-CAD with Eclipse on LinuxBRL-CAD uses the CMake build system to generate outputs for a variety of platforms. It will output Makefiles, Microsoft Visual Studio build files, XCode project files, Eclipse build files and more. This task involves generating an Eclipse project with our build and verifying that it successfully compiles all of BRL-CAD. Document the process on our wiki as a tutorial. Include images/screen shots when referring to visual actions within Eclipse. References: |
Document MGED's 'saveview' command optionsBRL-CAD's primary geometry editor (MGED) provides hundreds of commands. Two of those commands are the savewview and loadview commands that write current view settings out to a text file and read them back in. The saveview command provides -e -i -l and -o options, but they are not documented. This task involves writing documentation for those missing options. Consult the source code to see what they do and add the corresponding sections into our Docbook XML doc just like we do in our other documentation files. Test compilation to make sure your XML syntax is correct. References:
Code:
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Write "MGED Interface" reference documentBRL-CAD's primary geometry editor is called MGED. MGED's documentation is extensive but incomplete without a concise 1 or 2 page document that details MGED's interface. This task involves writing an interface reference document that gives a brief descriptive overview of the key bindings, mouse bindings, and primary GUI elements. The shift grips reference should be incorporated, albeit much more concisely and organized. It should minimally include the command window, the graphics window, the raytrace control panel, the combination editor, the geometry tree view, and overview graphics window key bindings. References:
Examples: |
Convert 43 src/conv man pages to valid DocbookBRL-CAD is in the process of converting its documentation in order to enable automatic generation of output in different formats (html, pdf, man) from a single source. We need to convert our existing UNIX man pages to the Docbook XML format. There is a doclifter conversion tool available to help automatically convert files, then just a little bit of cleanup is needed. This will find all of them: find src/conv -name \*.1 The simplest way to confirm the files are successfully converted is to incorporate them into BRL-CAD's build logic (edit CMakeLists.txt) and view the output using brlman and an html viewer. It is recommended to use the Emacs editor with the nxml mode in order to more easily identify and fix errors, but this is not a requirement. This task involves using the doclifter tool to perform a rough conversion to Docbook of all man pages in the src/conv subdirectory of the BRL-CAD source tree (about 43 files), then performing whatever manual corrections are needed to the autogenerated XML files to make them valid Docbook (some conversions have already been done and can serve as guides). Add new files to the doc/docbook/system/man1/en directory (via svn add), edit the CMakeLists.txt file in that same directory, verify no errors by compiling, and make a patch. References:
Code:
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Convert 38 src/fb man pages to valid DocbookBRL-CAD is in the process of converting its documentation in order to enable automatic generation of output in different formats (html, pdf, man) from a single source. We need to convert our existing UNIX man pages to the Docbook XML format. There is a doclifter conversion tool available to help automatically convert files, then just a little bit of cleanup is needed. This will find all of them: find src/fb -name \*.1 The simplest way to confirm the files are successfully converted is to incorporate them into BRL-CAD's build logic (edit CMakeLists.txt) and view the output using brlman and an html viewer. It is recommended to use the Emacs editor with the nxml mode in order to more easily identify and fix errors, but this is not a requirement. This task involves using the doclifter tool to perform a rough conversion to Docbook of all man pages in the src/fb subdirectory of the BRL-CAD source tree (about 38 files), then performing whatever manual corrections are needed to the autogenerated XML files to make them valid Docbook (some conversions have already been done and can serve as guides). Add new files to the doc/docbook/system/man1/en directory (via svn add), edit the CMakeLists.txt file in that same directory, verify no errors by compiling, and make a patch. References:
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Convert 24 other man pages to valid DocbookBRL-CAD is in the process of converting its documentation in order to enable automatic generation of output in different formats (html, pdf, man) from a single source. We need to convert our existing UNIX man pages to the Docbook XML format. There is a doclifter conversion tool available to help automatically convert files, then just a little bit of cleanup is needed. This will find all of them: find src/[glnrt]* -name \*.1 The simplest way to confirm the files are successfully converted is to incorporate them into BRL-CAD's build logic (edit CMakeLists.txt) and view the output using brlman and an html viewer. It is recommended to use the Emacs editor with the nxml mode in order to more easily identify and fix errors, but this is not a requirement. This task involves using the doclifter tool to perform a rough conversion to Docbook of all man pages in the src/gtools, src/lgt, src/nirt, src/remrt, src/rt, src/rttherm, and src/tab subdirectories of the BRL-CAD source tree (about 24 files), then performing whatever manual corrections are needed to the autogenerated XML files to make them valid Docbook (some conversions have already been done and can serve as guides). Add new files to the doc/docbook/system/man1/en directory (via svn add), edit the CMakeLists.txt file in that same directory, verify no errors by compiling, and make a patch. References:
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Write a "BRL-CAD Commands Quick Reference" documentThere is already a command quick reference for BRL-CAD's MGED geometry editing tool, but there is not a similar document for BRL-CAD's 400+ command-line commands. This task involves writing a quick reference document similar to the MGED quick reference but for BRL-CAD commands. The sheet should minimally include the following commands: mged, rt*, *-g, g-*, fb*, *fb, nirt, remrt, rtsrv, asc2g, g2asc, dbupgrade, pix*, *pix, *-*, brlman, benchmark References: |
Doxygen cleanupBRL-CAD uses Doxygen for most API documentation but the comment blocks are not optimally set up for Doxygen output. This task involves cleaning up the Doxygen comments in the library so that useful reports and API documentation automatically generated (correctly, completely, and cleanly). Verify/fix any Doxygen syntax. Verify/fix groups so that functions are organized neatly and all contained within a group. Provide patches that give clean (PDF) output from Doxygen. References:
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Write a "BRL-CAD Ray Tracing Shaders" tutorialBRL-CAD includes numerous shaders that let you specify different optical effects during ray tracing. This task involves writing a brief tutorial that describes what shaders are and how one specifies them for geometry. How shaders are specified is already described in detail in the Introduction to MGED document. Code:
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NURBS BibTeX reference fileBRL-CAD maintains a bibliography file that keeps track of published articles and reports pertaining to BRL-CAD, but it would be useful to have similar files that keep track of other topics. There are commonly two ways to create and maintain a .bib file. One way is manually (using any text editor) and the other is using a GUI such as JabRef. The rule of thumb is generally to use the text editor approach when building a .bib file of references that are pre-packaged (such as those often provided by publishers of journal articles) and to use a tool like JabRef when you have to create the entire entry from scratch. This task involves creating a NURBS.bib file that documents BRL-CAD's various paper references contained in the bibliographics of the following papers (include these papers and what they reference): Practical Ray Tracing of Trimmed NURBS Surfaces http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.35.7126 Direct and Fast Ray Tracing of NURBS Surfaces http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.90.7500 Watertight Trimmed NURBS http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.146.3590 The best route is probably assembly of pre-existing .bib entries from either the citeseerx website or from the sites of the journal actually publishing the article. References:
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Outreach and Research
Tasks related to community management, outreach/marketing, studying problems, and recommending solutions
Write solicitation for new website designerThe BRL-CAD website is in need of a design overhaul. This task involves writing up a brief article soliciting new contributor(s) to work on designing a new website. The article needs to be detailed and specific to our particular website requirements (Drupal+Mediawiki+CSS) to ensure the contributor can design the appropriate stylesheet(s), updated graphics, and new layout. Provide a title, an image, a short summary (<200 words), and the detailed write-up (>400 words). References: |
Model a "B" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "B" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model a "R" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "R" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model a "L" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "L" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model a "C" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "C" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model a "A" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "A" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model a "D" using BRL-CADCreate an uppercase letter "D" geometry model using BRL-CAD. You can use the mged or archer geometry editor tools or write a script. The model should be roughly 1000mm tall, about 500mm wide, and about 100mm deep. Create it using CSG or other methods, but it cannot be an imported model, polygonal mesh (BOT, NMG), or extruded bitmap (EBM). It should be free of modeling errors (no overlaps, run "rtcheck" to verify). References:
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Model new BRL-CAD Logo using BRL-CADThe winner of the recent BRL-CAD Logo contest is a clean depiction of two interlocked components. Modeling the new Logo in BRL-CAD in CSG (without NURBS, without polygons) requires some careful arrangement, but can provide an attractive three dimensional rendering. The output of this task would be a .g file of BRL-CAD logo. The two segments should overlap at the join, but this is your opportunity as an artist and 3D magician to come up with an interesting or faithful interpretation. References:
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Write BRL-CAD News article on .deb/.rpm buildsBRL-CAD's maintainer, Jordi Sayol, manages the .deb and .rpm builds. Interview the developer, obtain details on how the releases are produced, what platforms are supported, etc, and write up an article for our Community Publication Portal (CPP) The output of this task is an article added to our CPP wiki page in a final production-quality review state. References: |
Write a BRL-CAD showcase articleBRL-CAD has several ongoing development activities developed by community members that showcase the power and applicability of BRL-CAD to various domains. For this task, you'd be expected to interview one or more individuals to obtain information and pictures about their project, write up a descriptive overview of their model, the goals of the project, and any interesting ancillary information that may be relevant. There are presently several candidate topics listed in our Community Publication Portal (CPP). The output of this task is an article added to our CPP wiki page in a final draft review state. References: |
Design a "Commercial CAD Comparison" diagramNew users frequently ask how BRL-CAD compares to other major commercial CAD systems such as CATIA, Unigraphics/NX, Pro/ENGINEER, Solidworks, and AutoCAD. BRL-CAD has many of the same features and it would be very useful to visualize the feature overlap graphically with a diagram. This task involves identifying core significant features of relevance and describing BRL-CAD along with the various major CAD vendors. The diagram should fit on one page. References:
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Investigate performance of setting thread affinityBRL-CAD's raytrace library (LIBRT) is pervasively multithreaded using routines defined in our basic utility library (LIBBU) for detecting an using multiple CPUs/cores/threads. On Linux, BSD, or Mac OS X, you can set the affinity of a process to stay on a processor. This task involves making minor modifications to the LIBBU parallel interface using sched_setaffinity and/or pthread_attr_setaffinity_np (or similar affinity mechanism depending on the platform) and then evaluating the performance impact using our BRL-CAD Benchmark suite ('benchmark' command). Code:
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Determine why solids.sh fails on 64-bitBRL-CAD has a regression test script called solids.sh that creates a bunch of primitives, renders an image of those primitives, and then compares that image to a reference image. On (most?) 64-bit platforms, the test is off by several RGB values for exactly 3 pixels. This task involves figuring out why, exactly, this is occurring. It may be helpful to compare intermediate computation results from a 32-bit environment to see where the computations diverge, however slightly. Ultimately, the goal is to identify the cause and a recommended course of action to fix the divergence problem. Code:
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Investigate permuted vertex lists from g-iges + iges-gBRL-CAD has a geometry exporter and importer for the International Graphics Exchange Standard (IGES) file format. If you run our g-iges exporter on some geometry, then run iges-g on that same geometry to import it back to BRL-CAD format, the geometry will have permuted vertex lists. Particularly for geometry already in polygonal format, such as our NMG or BoT geometry, this conversion should result in identical geometry but presently does not. This task involves investigating why this occurs, reporting (in detail) why it occurs, and if obvious, making a recommendation on how to fix the problem. Code:
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Investigate GMP integrationBRL-CAD uses a fastf_t typedef for most all math operations that is usually a "double" floating point type. We would like to provide the option for resorting to exact arithmetic if possible by merely redefining fastf_t to a C++ type sufficiently overloaded to behave the same. You should be proficient with C++ operator overloading to take this task on. This task involves testing compilation with a C++ class with overloaded operators such that vmath macro calls still work as well as a sampling of LIBBN API function calls without major changes to the original code. A perfect example case study would be creating the class then testing whether bn_dist_pt3_pt3() and bn_mat_determinant() compute correctly for values that cannot be exactly represented with floating point arithmetic. References: Code:
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Research status of compiling BRL-CAD on MINGWBRL-CAD compiles on a number of platforms but is rarely compiled under mingw. A cygwin compilation was last successfuly performed a few years ago with relatively minor effort, but mingw hasn't been tested. This task involves attempting to compile BRL-CAD under mingw (AFTER successfully compiling with MSVC). Follow the CMake documentation and edit our build system accordingly. Report on what fails and write up a tutorial on the BRL-CAD wiki. References: Code:
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Create an awesome screenshotEveryone loves to see screenshots of software in action. We use screenshots in our marketing and outreach. See some of the examples below that we already have. Create an awesome screenshot of either mged or archer. It should be graphically interesting, show wireframe and/or raytraced geometry and give some sense of capability. References: |
Quality Assurance
Tasks related to testing and ensuring code is of high quality
Fix single-precision floating point crashBy default, all of BRL-CAD compiles using double-precision floating point arithmetic. We provide a simple typedef, however, that converts almost the entire system over to single-precision floating point. This compilation mode was recently cleaned up and tested, but a bug was found. The problem is reproduced very simply by compiling in single precision mode and running our "rt" ray tracer tool. To compile in single precision, edit the include/bn.h header file and change the fastf_t typedef from double to float. To reproduce the bug, compile BRL-CAD and write this out to a text file named star.view: viewsize 2.500000000e+05; eye_pt 2.102677960e+05 8.455500000e+04 2.934714650e+04; viewrot -6.733560560e-01 6.130643360e-01 4.132114880e-01 0.000000000e+00 5.539599410e-01 4.823888300e-02 8.311441420e-01 0.000000000e+00 4.896120540e-01 7.885590550e-01 -3.720948210e-01 0.000000000e+00 0.000000000e+00 0.000000000e+00 0.000000000e+00 1.000000000e+00 ; start 0; end; Then run rt feeding it that view script as input. This is an example how to run within the gdb debugger: gdb path/to/bin/rt ... (gdb) run -F/dev/X -M .cmake/share/db/star.g all < star.view At this point, rt should crash due to an infinite recursion. A backtrace in the debugger will show lots and lots of calls to rt_shootray() and light_hit(). This task involves investigating and preventing the crash. Provide a patch that fixes the bug. References:
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Fix closedbBRL-CAD geometry editor application (mged) has several hundred commands including two very simple commands for opening and closing a geometry database file. While the user rarely ever needs to close the file, as all changes are always immediately saved, it can be of use to scripting applications. However, at some point in the recent past, the closedb command was horked. It's undoubtedly something very simple but we haven't bothered to look due to other priorities. You can fix it. If you run these simple steps within graphical mged, you should see how commands stop working after calling closedb: mged> opendb test.g y mged> make sph sph mged> l sph mged> closedb mged> make sph sph mged> opendb test.g mged> l sph mged> exit Provide a patch that fixes the bug or tell us which SVN revision introduced the bug. Make sure you can reproduce the bug before claiming this task, which presumes you know how to download/install BRL-CAD from a source distribution. Code:
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Create geometry database with one of every primitiveBRL-CAD implements 40 different types of 2D, 3D, and non-geometric objects that get stored in a ".g" geometry database file. For numerous debugging and testing purposes, it'd be useful to have a database with all object types included. Our csgbrep procedural geometry database tool creates 21 of them. Our mged geometry editor application lets users create them manually using the "make" and "in" commands via the command-line interface. This task involves running the csgbrep to create a starting set of objects and then creating the remaining ones manually. Provide a .g file that contains every possible object type. References:
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Create an utility library (LIBBU) API unit testThere are more than 300 library functions in our core LIBBU library. As a core library used by nearly every one of BRL-CAD's tools, testing those functions for correct behavior is important. This task involves implementing a new unit test for any of LIBBU's source files that do not already have a unit test defined. The test should run all of the public functions and be hooked into our build system. We have lots of existing unit tests to follow as an example. References:
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Create numerics library (LIBBN) API unit testThere are more than 300 library functions in our core LIBBN library. As a core library used by nearly every one of BRL-CAD's tools, testing those functions for correct behavior is important. This task involves implementing a new unit test for any of LIBBN's source files that do not already have a unit test defined. The test should run all of the public functions and be hooked into our build system. We have lots of existing unit tests to follow as an example. References:
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Create a COMPREHENSIVE unit test for bn_dist_pt3_pt3()There are more than 300 library functions in our LIBBN numerics library. Creating a comprehensive unit test involves exhaustively exploring all possible inputs to the function, testing them for proper behavior, and characterizing the output in a PASS/FAIL fashion. Unlike the other testing framework tasks, the goal of this task is comprehensiveness. The task must cover all possible inputs including NULL, -inf, +inf, NaN, real numbers, and other values in most if not all possible combinations. Code:
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Find, reliably reproduce, and report any bug in ArcherArcher is our new modeling interface and a soon to merge with our long-standing MGED geometry editor. It undoubtedly has bugs. It's your job to find one, but do so in a manner that is so obvious that one of the other devs will be able to instantly reproduce the bug given your specific instructions. Find a way to make archer crash, become unresponsive, or otherwise behave incorrectly. You will have to explore the tool with minimal documentation. This task involves filing a bug report with verifiable and reproducible steps that clearly demonstrate the bug. It can't be a bug already reported or otherwise documented nor can it be merely behavior you don't like. References:
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Reproduce any 10 unconfirmed open bug reportsBRL-CAD presently has approximately 75 open bug reports of which 50 are unassigned. Read the comments and status to see if the bug has been confirmed/reproduced. This task involves going through those reports and REPRODUCE at least 10 of the ones that have not been confirmed. When you can reproduce the issue being reported, you'll comment on the thread to state as much and attach any data you used to reproduce the crash. References: |
User Interface
Tasks related to user experience research or user interface design and interaction
Design an MGED command spreadsheetBRL-CAD's primary solid geometry modeling application is called MGED. MGED contains a comprehensive set of more than 700 commands for manipulating, viewing, and inspecting geometry. There is a need to more effectively manage those commands, characterize them all, and get a "big picture" of the command landscape so that usability may be addressed. This task involves designing a spreadsheet that will be used to characterize all of MGED's commands. References:
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Create prototype 2D CAD drawing(s)BRL-CAD provides limited services for drafting features including the production of 2D CAD drawings (blueprints). This task involves designing a 2D CAD drawing prototype that effectively captures a set of design requirements and follows industry conventions. Basically, this requires identifying one or more style(s) of drawings that should be supported along with critical elements to be included on each drawing. References: |
Create prototype CAD GUI layout diagramBRL-CAD's usability is notoriously complex and "expert friendly". MGED and Archer are the main geometry editors, with drastically different user interfaces. This task involves evaluating the features provided by MGED and Archer, then designing a new GUI layout that encompasses their features while improving usability. Rationale for design decisions and layout should be provided. References: |
BRL-CAD's main graphical user interface, MGED, is heavily menu-driven but not exceptionally well organized. This task involves performing an exhaustive review of MGED's various menus, including temporary menus when in a given editing state, reorganizing them for logical groupings, and rewording them for clarity. It's necessary to learn the basics of the MGED interface in order to understand what the various options do. For this task, you'll provide a description of the existing menus and mapping to a new organization including basic rationale behind any new groupings or rewording. References:
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Categorize all of BRL-CAD's commands into a spreadsheetBRL-CAD is a suite of more than 400 processing tools, image tools, geometry converters, and more. There is an existing spreadsheet that characterizes all of the available commands in terms of inputs, outputs, and options, but there is insufficient characterization of BRL-CAD's commands as to how they logically group and work together. This task involves building up a spreadsheet that lists all of our commands, describing a finite set of command categories, and characterizing all commands into those categories while filling in the spreadsheet with details for each command. References:
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Upgrade Drupal websiteA portion of the BRL-CAD website runs on Drupal, but it's out of date. Migrating to newer versions will require incrementally updating the website database per Drupal's upgrade instructions along with all of our modules. Access to a copy of our webserver files will be provided. Experience working on a command-line is a must, ideally with prior Drupal experience if you hope to complete this within a couple hours. This task involves getting the Drupal portion of our website cleanly migrated to the latest version of Drupal. All installed modules should also be updated. References: |
Upgrade Mediawiki websiteA portion of the BRL-CAD website runs on Mediawiki, but it's out of date. Migrating to newer versions will require incrementally updating the website database per Mediawiki's upgrade instructions along with all of our extensions. Access to a copy of our webserver files will be provided. Experience working on a command-line is a must, ideally with prior Mediawiki experience if you hope to complete this within a couple hours. This task involves getting the Mediawiki portion of our website cleanly migrated to the latest version of Mediawiki. All installed extensions should also be updated. References: |
Upgrade Gallery websiteA portion of the BRL-CAD website runs on Gallery, but it's out of date. Migrating to a newer version will require incrementally updating the website database per Gallery's upgrade instructions. Access to a copy of our webserver files will be provided. Experience working on a command-line is a must. This task involves getting the Gallery portion of our website cleanly migrated to the latest version of Gallery. All images and view statistics should be preserved. References: |
Set up StatSVNBRL-CAD's Subversion repository is the oldest open source repository on the planet and we love statistics. A decade ago, we used to run a little tool called StatCVS that gave pretty graphs of commit activity. When we converted to Subversion, a comparable tool didn't exist but now there are several and we want to try them out. We'll set you up with an account on our web server. This task involves running the latest version of StatSVN on our repository, providing the output, and providing instructions for running it again so we can keep the output up to date. You may need to normalize the results if StatSVN has the same bug that StatCVS used to have if the line counts are incorrect, but hopefully not. References: |
Set up SvnPlotBRL-CAD's Subversion repository is the oldest open source repository on the planet and we love statistics. A decade ago, we used to run a little tool called StatCVS that gave pretty graphs of commit activity. When we converted to Subversion, a comparable tool didn't exist but now there are several and we want to try them out. We'll set you up with an account on our web server. This task involves running the latest version of SvnPlot on our repository, providing the output, and providing instructions for running it again so we can keep the output up to date. References: |
Convert Gallery to PiwigoA portion of the BRL-CAD website runs on Gallery, but it's been difficult to maintain. We'd like to see what our gallery would look like in Piwigo. Access to a copy of our webserver files will be provided. Experience working on a command-line is a must. This task involves getting the Gallery portion of our website cleanly migrated to Piwigo. All images should be preserved. Bonus points if you can preserve the image view counts. References: |