Pascal Borreli
4 months ago
Community
5
The idea of this event comes from a discussion between members of the #symfony-fr IRC channel. The main idea is to let people contribute back something to symfony that only takes a few minutes a day.
The main goals of this event are the following:
- Enhance the quality of the documentation
- Enhance performance of future releases
- Enhance the coverage of the automated tests
- Close the open bugs to let the core team work on new features
The rules are simple:
Once registered into the event, you have to close/resolve/create+patch a minimum of one ticket a day.
You can work on two tickets the same day and dispatch them on two different days (for instance, you cannot work on symfony on Monday, but you have fixed two tickets on Tuesday, so just pick one and pretend to have fixed it on Monday)
Each month, prizes will be awarded to three participants (the rules will be choosed depending on how many contributors registered but at least one prize will be randomly offered to one of them).
And here are the rewards:
Each month, Fabien Potencier offers a book of winner choice:
- Practical symfony 1.2 for Doctrine - second edition
- OR Practical symfony 1.2 for Propel - second edition
- OR Symfony : Mieux développer en PHP avec Symfony 1.2 et Doctrine
- OR The symfony 1.2 Reference Guide (soon available)
Each month, Jonathan Wage offers a Doctrine Book.
Pascal Borreli offers a surprise gift.
Each month, ServerGrove offers the winner:
- $100 credit for ServerGrove services (can be transfered to family, friends or customers)
- OR $50 Amazon gift certificate
For July and August, Ideato.it offers a random PHP t-shirt (size L) from php|architect
If you want to sponsor the event, contact me at pborreli@sqli.com.
How can you participate?
First, go to the dedicated Wiki page and add your name to the list of participants.
Then, read carefully the How to contribute to symfony wiki page.
Eventually, every day, add the ticket number you added/closed/patched to the table (#9999) under the correct day.
Comments 
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#1 Pascal said about 15 hours later

Sounds great to improve symfony quality :)
If it works, would it be possible to organize the same kind of thing for plugins?
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#2 eljam said about 15 hours later

Something like make propel plugin doctrine compatible ?
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#3 Klemens said about 17 hours later

This is a great idea, and should make symfony even more a community project.
Some questions:
- How to commit into the svn repository?
- What about quality assurance?
- I suppose it will often be necessary to consult one of the core devs. Any special procedure for this?:-) Klemens
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#4 Dustin Whittle said about 24 hours later

@klemens, First, go to the dedicated Wiki page and add your name to the list of participants.
Then, read carefully the How to contribute to symfony wiki page.
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#5 James said 8 days later

well thats a good idea. I hope it will work well. Investment of a just a few minutes is not bad to get that gain. <a href="http://www.lowmortgageoffer.com">mortgage</a>





