GSoC 2024 Haiku contributors

In 2024, Haiku mentored five GSoC participants, all of whom completed their projects. Calisto-Mathias - Tracker Query window refactoring Diego Roux - Virtio sound driver Dalme - NVMM port / hardware virtualization for QEMU Trungnt2910 - Improving the userland debugging experience Zardshard - Updating Haiku WebKit2 port

GSoC contributors FAQ

GSoC contributor Application FAQ Where do I apply? First of all, join our forum, mailing list and/or IRC channel to discuss your idea. You are encouraged to share a draft of your proposal so developers can discuss it with you and help you improve on it. When it's ready, submit your application Google Summer of Code site What ideas can I apply for? Check out our List of Google Summer of Code Ideas What info do you need in the application?

Setting up Haiku on Google Compute Engine

Pre-created Haiku r1/beta5 images are available on Google Cloud Platform’s Compute Engine. To deploy a Haiku VM to Google Compute Engine, all you need is the gcloud CLI tool. Preparing gcloud cli Follow the directions to install gcloud Deploying Haiku To deploy a Haiku VM, you simply need to leverage the official Haiku, Inc. image via the gcloud sdk There is a cost to deploying VM’s to Google Cloud. Make sure you understand the costs before deploying systems.

R1/beta5 – Release Notes

The fifth beta for Haiku R1 over a year and a half of hard work to improve Haiku’s hardware support and its overall stability, and to make lots more software ports available for use. Nearly 350 bugs and enhancement tickets have been resolved for this release. Please keep in mind that Haiku is beta-quality software, which means it is feature complete but still contains known and unknown bugs. While we are increasingly confident in its stability, we cannot provide assurances against data loss.

UEFI Booting Haiku

UEFI Booting the Anyboot Image Haiku also supports booting via the traditional BIOS boot system. See the regular install instructions if your hardware requires a BIOS boot process. Use the instructions on this page should your hardware require a UEFI boot process. The instructions are somewhat manual at the present time (R1/beta5), but should be enhanced with a more guided process in the future. Install Steps The following steps assume a fresh installation where the local disk will be used in its entirety for Haiku.

Emulating Haiku in Proxmox

Proxmox Virtual Environment is an open source server virtualization management solution based on QEMU/KVM and LXC. You can manage virtual machines, containers, highly available clusters, storage and networks with an integrated, easy-to-use web interface or via CLI. This guide assumes that you’ve already downloaded Proxmox VE from their website, installed it on your machine, and have downloaded the ISO for Haiku you would like to install. Uploading the Haiku ISO to Proxmox Login to your Proxmox installation via the GUI and go to the storage device where you will store ISOs (’local(pve)’ in my case), select ISO Images, and Upload.

GSoC project ideas

For information about Haiku's participation in GSoC this year, please see this page. Qualifying students can apply for a Haiku project (see the list of suggested projects below). For details about how to apply, please check out How to Apply for a Haiku Idea. The most successful Google Summer of Code projects are often those proposed by the participants themselves. The following list represents some of our ideas and wishes for the project.

GSoC project ideas

For information about Haiku's participation in GSoC this year, please see this page. Qualifying students can apply for a Haiku project (see the list of suggested projects below). For details about how to apply, please check out How to Apply for a Haiku Idea. The most successful Google Summer of Code projects are often those proposed by the participants themselves. The following list represents some of our ideas and wishes for the project.

GSoC 2023 Haiku contributors

This year Haiku mentored 3 students, all of whom completed their projects! Sean Brady - TUN and TAP network interfaces, porting OpenVPN to Haiku Trung Nguyen - Porting C# and .Net developper platform to Haiku Zardshard - Improvements to Icon-O-Matic

R1/beta4 – Release Notes

The fourth beta for Haiku R1 over a year and a half of hard work to improve Haiku’s hardware support and its overall stability, and to make lots more software ports available for use. Over 400 bugs and enhancement tickets have been resolved for this release. Please keep in mind that this is beta-quality software, which means it is feature complete but still contains known and unknown bugs. While we are increasingly confident in its stability, we cannot provide assurances against data loss.