Difference between revisions of "SummerOfCodeIdeas"
(Typo fixes) |
(Typo fixes) |
||
Line 76: | Line 76: | ||
==== Milestones and deliverables ==== | ==== Milestones and deliverables ==== | ||
− | * A first milestone would be a presentation summarizing the different studies, and the proposed interface. preliminary | + | * A first milestone would be a presentation summarizing the different studies, and the proposed interface. preliminary informal stages would probably be desirable, to make sure the proposed idea is already a consensus within devs |
** Study of other MP game-matching interfaces and functionalities | ** Study of other MP game-matching interfaces and functionalities | ||
** Study of other MP communities | ** Study of other MP communities | ||
** Study of other MP moderation practices | ** Study of other MP moderation practices | ||
** Study of the Wesnoth MP community, including needs, various opinons from different developers and players | ** Study of the Wesnoth MP community, including needs, various opinons from different developers and players | ||
− | * A second milestone would be the main code delivery. Code should be functional for it will be delivered in the next Wesnoth | + | * A second milestone would be the main code delivery. Code should be functional for it will be delivered in the next Wesnoth development release |
− | |||
=== Other ideas to be fleshed out === | === Other ideas to be fleshed out === |
Revision as of 20:49, 27 February 2008
Contents
- 1 Ideas for Google Summer of Code projects
- 2 List of Ideas for the Project
- 3 Other info to provide for GSoC
- 3.1 Describe your organization.
- 3.2 Why is your organization applying to participate in GSoC 2008? What do you hope to gain by participating?
- 3.3 Did your organization participate in past GSoCs? If so, please summarize your involvement and the successes and challenges of your participation.
- 3.4 If your organization has not previously participated in GSoC, have you applied in the past? If so, for what year(s)?
- 3.5 Who will your organization administrator be? Please include Google Account information.
- 3.6 What license(s) does your project use?
- 3.7 What is the URL for your ideas page?
- 3.8 What is the main development mailing list or forum for your organization?
- 3.9 What is the main IRC channel for your organization?
- 3.10 Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now.
- 3.11 Who will be your backup organization administrator? Please include Google Account information.
- 3.12 Who will your mentors be? Please include Google Account information.
- 3.13 What criteria did you use to select these individuals as mentors? Please be as specific as possible.
- 3.14 What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students?
- 3.15 What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors?
- 3.16 What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before, during and after the program?
- 3.17 What will you do to ensure that your accepted students stick with the project after GSoC concludes?
- 3.18 People to bug on IRC, possible mentors
Ideas for Google Summer of Code projects
This is a compilation of ideas from ML. Needs to be refined (more detailed description, deliverables, workload estimation?):
List of Ideas for the Project
Writing an AI based on the formula AI
Wesnoth has always had a simple C++ based AI. David (our lead developer) has been working on a simple language to write AI in wesnoth link to formula AI page here
The wesnoth AI is used as an oponent in most campaigns, and as such is an important piece of code for the wesnoth project. Unfortunately it is also one of the most neglected piece of code and a place where a lot of research and work could be done
General description
The aim of this project is to develop a new AI that would replace the original C++ AI. The main criterias we would want for this new AI are
- Plugability : It should be trivial for any content maker to change the behavior of the AI in specific case. The exact cases are still to be defined but should typically include
- hardwiring the first few turns of the AI
- changing the recruitment pattern
- completely controlling a given unit (sceneario unit)
- taking control then giving back control of a given unit
- tunability : It should be easy for a scenario author to specify the general behaviour of the ennemy on a given scenario (agressivity, intrepidity...)
- specific behaviours : there are some typical behaviours that are not smart to win the scenario but are needed, such as guarding a given unit, a given position, wandering aimlessly, attacking randomly, always fleeing. The AI should implement such behaviours, and allow easy addition of new behaviours
Required knowledge and talent
- A minimal knowledge of C++ is required, a good knowledge of C++ is desired : The formula AI framework is a work in progress and chances are high that some changes in the wesnoth code base will be needed. The wesnoth developper community is used to handle people that are familiar with coding but not C++, however the Forumla AI framework uses advanced C++ features and a good knowledge of the language would avoid a major hurdle when plugging in new entries or functionalities for the AI
- Good social interaction with a large player community : A preliminary phase to coding any AI is to know the strategies and game pattern used by human players. This requires huge interaction with the player community. Our Gameplay Developpers are open and can give some good starting points, but a big game experience and good interaction with the player community will greatly help in the study of the design
Milestones and deliverables
It is hard to give milestones at this point, but here are some ideas of what could be done
- AI design description, and basic function library : This first deliverable aims to conclude the study and analysis part of the project : becoming familiar with the formula language, study of the Multiplayer strategies and of the need of scenario writers with regard to AI. We would like to have a description of the code structure of the AI, some basis of the play strategies it would use and how external scenario writers could configure it for the particular behaviour they need
- Main AI delivery : This milestone's aim is to deliver a working AI implementing the strategies described in the first phase. It would not have to systematically beat the standard C++ AI at this point, but should be able to play the game correctly (recruit, early deployment on villages, grouping units to attack, holding its ground, protecting weak/important units). Moreover most plug-in entries should be available and a test-case for these entries should be provided.
- Fine tunning and behaviour library : The third phase would validate the actual strategy of the AI. The AI should consistently beat the default C++ AI, and do fairly well against an average human player. At that stage a library of scenario behaviours should also be delivered. The AI does not need to be as efficiant with all scenario tweaking, but should act correctly with regard to the particular behaviour desired.
Extending the Multiplayer server
When the developement team met at FOSDEM, we had our multiplayer commuinty, though it is strong and healthy, had its growth restrained by the interface of the multiplayer lobby.
General Description
The general idea of this project would be
- To study the current lobby,
- To present some ideas of evolutions both in interface and functionalities of our multiplayer interface to allow it to scale to a much larger community
- To present some well constructed thought on our MP community and how that interface would develop it
- Of course to implement those changes :)
Some ideas that we had (but that are in no way mandatory)
- Having a simple way to register and authentificate nicknames, similar to what IRC offers. The point is not to have cryptographically safe logins, but to have something simple that gets the job done
- Having a simple room system? again inspired on IRC
- Having some way to find the type of games you are interested in.
- game type
- number of free slots/players
- any other criterias you might find interesting
Other ideas we are not convinced are good, but that are certainly worth studying (especially how the communities based around these concepts are different from ours)
- ranking players
- guilds
- official tournaments
- titles for players
- metaservers
The scalablity of the project, both in term of number of players, and in term of the possibility for players and developpers to extend the concept will be a valued criteria
Administration/moderation problems and techniques should also be studied
interaction with the Add-On server/forum might be an interseting field to expand to
Required knowledge and talent
- A fair amount of experience on C++ is required. Wesnoth uses some advanced C++ features and is heavily based on BOOST and STL. We can train you in some of the libraries used, but learning all of them would be a big hurdle
- Various experience with multiplayer games, in order to have a good idea of what multiplayer lobbies of other game look like, and (more importantly) a good idea of the social behaviours of multiple MP communities, how teams are formed in games and things like that
Milestones and deliverables
- A first milestone would be a presentation summarizing the different studies, and the proposed interface. preliminary informal stages would probably be desirable, to make sure the proposed idea is already a consensus within devs
- Study of other MP game-matching interfaces and functionalities
- Study of other MP communities
- Study of other MP moderation practices
- Study of the Wesnoth MP community, including needs, various opinons from different developers and players
- A second milestone would be the main code delivery. Code should be functional for it will be delivered in the next Wesnoth development release
Other ideas to be fleshed out
- Working on the GUI engine (needs to be defined more precisely)
- Rewrite of the campaign (add-on) server
- The editor can use quite a revamp
- A good scenario editor. We have campgen but it hasn't been updated for a while.
Other info to provide for GSoC
Describe your organization.
Why is your organization applying to participate in GSoC 2008? What do you hope to gain by participating?
Most of our developers have interesting areas in which they work. Though they are efficient in their areas, there are areas that are interesting but have a high barrier of entry.
By having a student dedicated to any of these areas, we could quickly get someone up to date with that particular area, efficient, and responsible of this area.
Basically, by getting new people in and making them actively responsible for an area of code we hope to kickstart some areas of the project that have lagged behind
Did your organization participate in past GSoCs? If so, please summarize your involvement and the successes and challenges of your participation.
This is the first time the Wesnoth projects applies to Google SoC
If your organization has not previously participated in GSoC, have you applied in the past? If so, for what year(s)?
This is the first time the Wesnoth projects applies to Google SoC
Who will your organization administrator be? Please include Google Account information.
Nils Kneuper aka Ivanovic
crazy.ivanovic |ATTT| googlemail.com
What license(s) does your project use?
Our project is entirely GPL.
All code is GPL.
All art is GPL, 99% was made for the project, everything was taken from content that was checked to be GPL.
What is the URL for your ideas page?
Our main summer of code pages is located at http://www.wesnoth.org/wiki/SummerOfCodeIdeas
This page contains various coding ideas and the thought the development team has already given them.
It also contains a list of the developers that are the most active on IRC and their domain of interest.
What is the main development mailing list or forum for your organization?
Most development work takes place on "wesnoth-dev |ATTT| gna.org". Beside this some work happens at http://www.wesnoth.org/forum/.
What is the main IRC channel for your organization?
All our IRC channels are on the freenode network
- #wesnoth-dev is the main development channel, where most discussion takes place
- #wesnoth is a generic channel for the community
- #wesnoth-mp is a separate channel for multiplayer games and balancing
Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now.
We plan mainly to meet potential students through our IRC channel, but the following questions are wesnoth-specific and are worth pondering for any student, even if we don't need a formal answer
- What type of gamer are you? What type of games? What type of opponent? Are you more interested in story or gameplay ?
- Are you good at interacting with other players ? Our developer community is quite nice, but the player community can be a bit rough.
- Do you give constructive advices? Do you receive advice well? Are you good at sorting useful criticism from useless ones?
'to be completed'
Who will be your backup organization administrator? Please include Google Account information.
Jeremy Rosen alias Boucman
boucman2@gmail.com
Who will your mentors be? Please include Google Account information.
What criteria did you use to select these individuals as mentors? Please be as specific as possible.
What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students?
What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors?
What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before, during and after the program?
Wesnoth has a particularly healthy community, both for developers and for players.
Our general policy regarding new coders has always been "two patch... you're in" In other word, anybody that is able to get two non-trivial patches applied is offered commit right.
We have a developer responsible for applying patches and guiding new developers into our community. This is a well known and effective process we plan to apply to students, directing them to our EasyCoding pages (these project are usually a couple of hours long and has been chosen to provide easy access to code)
Usually, patches go back and forth a couple of time, to make sure that all secondary things are in place (indenting, coding style, modified makefiles etc.) The idea is that coder education should take place before the coder gets commit rights, but that getting new coder in is one of the most important things to maintain our project alive.
If the student is a little proactive and ready to join IRC, all the developers are usually very welcoming, and good at directing newcomers to quickly give useful results.
to be completed
What will you do to ensure that your accepted students stick with the project after GSoC concludes?
People to bug on IRC, possible mentors
Everybody feel free to edit/correct his entry!
Dave alias Sirp
Sirp started Wesnoth and is our lead developper. He is currently our C++ expert and is also the one that is working on the new Formula AI. Any questions regarding the formula AI should be directed to him.
Mordante
Many of the possible projects do at least partly go into the area of code where he knows most of. Plus many of the possible projects currently listed on the ideas page do require GUI parts to work, too. So if Mordante wants to tackle a rewrite of large parts of this, he will be our expert there as well as he already is our expert for the terrain engine (cf. editor / scenario editor works).
Elias Pscherning (elias)
He has written the original version of campgen and as such will know a lot about what is needed to to make such an editor work correctly. The work on a scenario editor might be based upon campgen and as such make his knowledge really helpful.
Karol Nowak (grzywacz)
Last year he was participating at GSoC as a student, so he knows at least this side of the medal. Beside this he is our top expert regarding embedded devices support since he is actively working on the gp2x support.
boucman
As our "patch monkey" he has valuable knowledge in comments and critics for patches of every kind. Beside this he knows many areas of the game due to working on applying patches. He is particularly used to answer question from new coders, and doesn't mind explaining trivial stuff.
If you want to have a feeling of the developer spirit, it is recommended to go to our EasyCoding page.
Soliton
He does know our mp server setup best. Beside this he already has done a lot of work on the mp server himself, too. So he probably has most knowledge about it and due to being one of our mp-developers might provide important help from the perspective of mp-community and what is needed there.
zookeeper or Mythological or Rhuaven
As our leading WML expert it would be good to have him in the list when it comes to WML specific problems. That is for work on the scenario editor he probably knows best what should be implemented in it and what is a usable way for things.
YogiHH or Piotr Cychowski (cycholka)
Since they are the two developers who know most about building under Windows, they will probably be really helpful. Either if the student comes from the Windows side, or to help test resulting work to make sure that it does work on Windows and, for the case that it does not, to show them where problems are.