I began to study gluster and use it to try some concepts by the middle of 2012 and for me the most useful sources of information were/are:
- The four posts "Translator 101" from Jeff Darcy at
http://hekafs.org/index.php/2011/11/
Then:
- About the gluster protocol comm, some reverse engineering Niels presented at the last Gluster workshop at Linuxcon
And some online doxygen documentation I found through the web from version 3.2.7 (you can always generate it yourself, but a direct like that sometimes is useful too).
Best,
Gustavo Brand
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On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 4:22 PM, Vijay Bellur
<address@hidden> wrote:
On 01/17/2013 06:16 PM, Kunal Kushwaha wrote:
Hi,
I am new to this community. I am very much interested in glusterfs
development.
Welcome aboard! Glad to have you in this community.
Can anybody help me to give some pointers, from where I can start? or
any specific feature set where I can start looking ?
The best place to start digging in would be the source code :). Apart from the source code, some of these documents/articles can help improve your understanding of GlusterFS better:
http://www.gluster.org/community/documentation/index.php/Developers
Jeff's blogs at: http://hekafs.org
You can also hop on to #gluster-dev on freenode where most of the developers hang out.
You can also find a list of todos in GlusterFS here:
http://www.gluster.org/community/documentation/index.php/Planning34
Raghavendra (in CC) is also aggregating a new set of todo items. You should see that in the gluster.org wiki shortly.
I have a decent experience in Linux kernel development (6+ yrs) and
worked mostly in Storage technologies (RAID ) and plan to give at least
4-6 hours a week to this project.
looking forward to work in this community.
Look forward to your participation!
Cheers,
Vijay
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