On Sun, 08 Sep 2024 10:28, Joseph Kurape <jkur...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,

I'm new to open-source, but I've learned C and Python.

I've read the 'Getting Started' guide, but aside from signing up for the
mailing list and getting the source code, it doesn't provide much direction
for beginners.

I'm looking for somewhere I can contribute. Could any maintainer suggest
any issue they need fixing or offer general directions on the best way to
get started?

Hello Joseph!

First, the bad news: QEMU is a sophisticated and complicated project, and I would not recommend it as the first foray of serious programming to most people. But the good news is, it is still possible to contribute without being an expert simply because QEMU is composed of many different things.

The usual advice is to take a look at the issues labelled as "Bite-Sized" on our Issue tracker:

https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/?sort=created_date&state=opened&label_name%5B%5D=Bite+Sized&first_page_size=50

Take your time looking at each of them and you can choose something that looks approachable to you.

Note: I see that in many issues people say they want to contribute and ask for the issue to be assigned to them- no need to do that! Focus on writing down your solution and sending it to the list while following the "submitting a patch" docs: https://www.qemu.org/docs/master/devel/submitting-a-patch.html

If you have any kind of technical question you should ask on IRC, if you happen on any developer being online at the same time as you, or on the list. Do not ask people in private because not only will less people see your question, but most QEMU maintainers only pay attention to the mailing list for QEMU related discussion.

If you have any more questions feel free to ask!



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