CANOSP Fall 2021 - Eclipse Adoptium and Eclipse AQAvit
About the project: Adoptium is a community-driven, open-source project dedicated to building, testing and distributing high-quality, fully-testing OpenJDK binaries to the Java community. AQAvit (Adoptium Quality Assurance vitality project) is an ever-evolving program to “make quality certain to happen”. We create tools and innovate in the area of software verification, bringing research and prototypes to production grade solutions as part of our mission to provide high-quality OpenJDK binaries. Mentors: Shelley Lambert, Lan Xia, Sophia Guo About CANOSP: The Canada Open Source Projects (CANOSP) initiative is a Canada-wide program that brings together the top students from different universities to work on open-source projects over the course of a semester. We host a weekend Code Sprint where the students meet their project mentors, learn about the project that they will be working on, and start developing on a starter task or issue to introduce them to the codebase. This face-to-face working time is critical for building initial rapport amongst teams, solving problems people might be having with toolchains, and explaining complex topics and technologies. After the Code Sprint, students return to their respective institutions and continue to work on their projects under the supervision of their project mentors.
About the project: Adoptium is a community-driven, open-source project dedicated to building, testing and distributing high-quality, fully-testing OpenJDK binaries to the Java community. AQAvit (Adoptium Quality Assurance vitality project) is an ever-evolving program to “make quality certain to happen”. We create tools and innovate in the area of software verification, bringing research and prototypes to production grade solutions as part of our mission to provide high-quality OpenJDK binaries. Mentors: Shelley Lambert, Lan Xia, Sophia Guo About CANOSP: The Canada Open Source Projects (CANOSP) initiative is a Canada-wide program that brings together the top students from different universities to work on open-source projects over the course of a semester. We host a weekend Code Sprint where the students meet their project mentors, learn about the project that they will be working on, and start developing on a starter task or issue to introduce them to the codebase. This face-to-face working time is critical for building initial rapport amongst teams, solving problems people might be having with toolchains, and explaining complex topics and technologies. After the Code Sprint, students return to their respective institutions and continue to work on their projects under the supervision of their project mentors.