Hi Konrad,
I'm very happy to hear that and wish you good luck with the project.
I think it'd be best if you can begin with familiarizing yourself with
oVirt.
If you have few computers around, it should be fairly easy to set it up. If
you have a single computer, you can set up Lago[1] and ovirt-system-test[2]
to bring up an environment as well.
The (very basic) code for ovirt4cli is available on my github[3] - I have
just created a very basic framework as a proof of concept - feel free to
fork and modify it. Specifically, I think we should re-work it to share
more code with our Ansible code[4].
Let me know if there's anything I can help you with in the project!
Y.
[1]
http://lago.readthedocs.io/en/stable/
[2]
http://ovirt-system-tests.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
[3]
https://github.com/mykaul/ovirt4cli
[4]
https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/lib/ansible/module_utils/ov...
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 9:06 AM, Konrad Djimeli <djkonro35(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,
My name is Konrad Djimeli a third year Computer Science Student at the
University of Buea, Cameroon. I am interested in contributing to oVirt
and I would like to work on the Google Summer of Code project
"ovirt4cli". I am very comfortable working with Python and I have
experience working with web services like REST.
Please I would appreciate any suggestion on how to get started and to
better familiarize myself with the project.
Thanks
Konrad
http://djimeli.me/