Drupal
Drupal.org redesign sprint San Francisco: Day 5
- Josh finished the cross site activity client and server. It is now ready for modules to implement activities, such as commenting, project issue followups, and CVS commits.
- Karoly continued working on the documentation parser and API commenting.
- Matt finished the Apache Solr search facets implementing Mark Boulton’s prototype and implemented a jQuery drop down results sorter.
- Todd continued work on the Bluecheese theme.
- Chris finished mapping out Drupal.org’s current content and worked on mapping the prototype’s content. This will show what existing content we need to fit in and reveals any content we need to write.
- I worked on the dashboard with Dmitri and Ken.
Single sign on, comments for the API reference, search, and project pages all had significant progress during this sprint and will be deployed in the next 2 or 3 weeks.
This was the 3rd multi-day sprint, and there have been 2 one-day sprints. 57 people have SVN accounts and 144 people have joined the redesign implementers group. We are building a flexible and well-engineered theme and a suite of modules for single-sign-on, activity, and dashboard widgets shared among multiple sites. Drupal.org and its subsites have a lot of moving parts supporting the Drupal community. There is still a lot of work to do, especially in the modules we are building and doing editorial work on the content.
Thanks again to the Drupal community making this possible via the Drupal Association.
Drupal.org redesign sprint in San Francisco

During a lunch at the Paris sprint, Dries suggested doing a sprint in San Francisco. I ran with the idea and now we are working on implementing the Drupal.org redesign at Chapter 3’s freshly-refurnished office. Mark Burdett, Matt Cheney, Erik Hopp, Josh Koenig, Kieran Lal, Courtney Miller, Todd Ross Nienkerk, Colin Sagan, David Strauss, and I are busy implementing the new Drupal.org. Chris Bryant, Dmitri Gaskin, Karoly Negyesi, Stephanie Pakrul, and Derek Wright are joining us later this week. I am working on the dashboard and helping organize everything. Kieran has a full list of what we are working on.
Thanks to Chapter 3 for expediting their new desks making room for 12 more people. AF83 and Advomatic are each buying lunches for us. The Drupal Association provided funding for some flights and hotels, we are keeping costs low by couch surfing and using local talent as much as possible.
If you want to help, join the group and #drupal-infrastructure. We are filing many issues to track the progress. We will be working through the weekend. Drupal.org is a big site with many moving parts, with more being added, all being built and maintained by volunteers. The effort in Cologne, Cambridge, Paris, and Washington D.C. has been amazing and shows what this community can accomplish.
State of the API module
I talked with a few people interested in API.drupal.org improvements at DrupalCon D.C. This post outlines the details of what I want to see done. Some tasks, like commenting on API pages, seem simple, however there are time-consuming details.
This comprehensive list is a lot of work. It will not get done quickly without help. I am organizing a Drupal.org redesign sprint April 8 to 11 or 12 in San Francisco, some API module work will likely be done April 11 and 12. Email me if you are interested in attending. I will be attending the documentation planning sprint in Toronto to work with the larger documentation project.
I would like to see more people, particularly Drupal shops, using API module. More users means more contributors. For example, Development Seed is trying out API with Spaces on their Code site. I talked with Young about the implementation and the scalability to 4000 modules.
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FOSDEM 2009 presentation
Yesterday I presented about security at FOSDEM. The slides are now available. At Drupalcon D.C. I will be joining Greg, author of Cracking Drupal, and Matt to give a more broad security presentation with live demos.
I am in Paris for the week continuing work on the Drupal.org upgrade and redesign implementation. We split into two teams, triaged issues and are set to make a lot of progress this week.
Help fund Drupal.org redesign sprints
We have a new design for Drupal.org, now we need to implement it. To get this done quickly, Dries is organizing 4 sprints. I will be taking 2 weeks off of client work to help out in Boston, Paris and Washington, D.C., joining Gábor, Derek & Chad, Gerhard, Damien and others. We have a lot of work to do: upgrading project module and the existing site to Drupal 6, implementing the new design and new features.
I have been working on
- infrastructure with Gerhard, Narayan and Damien,
- the current Bluebeach theme with Gábor,
- association.drupal.org with John Forsythe
- and api.drupal.org.
The Drupal community is great at working online, but this type of project will greatly benefit from concentrated, in-person collaboration. Getting people in a room is not free; please chip in to help make this happen. At the time of writing, 48 people have contributed an average of $37.35 each. More convincing is available in English, Français, Magyar and 中文.
Something I am working on for API module

Upcoming events and a podcast
Next week, I will be at the Nonprofit Software Development Summit in Oakland. I am scheduled to help out with a wide range of sessions about Drupal and political data. I have been attending this summit since its first year when CivicSpace was still young; it will be good to catch up with everyone and see what people are doing with Drupal.
In March, Greg, Matt and I will be talking about Drupal security for users and developers at Drupalcon DC. Long-term, insecure configuration and development for Drupal should be harder, with better user interface and APIs; but I think education is still needed. There will be a lot going on since it is a Drupalcon, including another round of usability testing.
Earlier this week, Angie, Earl and I were on The Linux Link Tech Show #273. We talked about a wide range of topics. If you like podcasts, it might be a good introduction to Drupal and what is happening now.
Speaking at Bay Area Drupal Camp
I am speaking both Saturday and Sunday at BADCamp. Saturday I will be talking about Drupal Development Tools and Resources with Matt Cheney. We will demo tools we help build, like Drupal’s API reference and Drupal for Firebug, and other great tools we use to help build sites smarter and faster.
Sunday I will be talking about Importing data with job queue and import manager. I have done this presentation in a few different forms before, at DrupalCon Boston, NewTools Drupal Day and a SFDUG meeting. This presentation will be more-technical than the others and explain how you can queue and manage jobs with Job queue and Import manager.
As always, I will be on the lookout for people interested in Drupal usability and improving the API module.
Job queue for Drupal 6
The Job queue issue queue has been quiet and I have been testing it with the development version of the API module, so it is time for a Drupal 6 release.
Drupal 2013
Before the Boston Drupalcon, I was asked “Can you describe what the experience of using your [Drupal’s] design will be like in 5 years?” I usually think one or two release cycles ahead, 2 years maximum, so this is a challenge.
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I’m going to Drupalcon Szeged
I will be on the Performance tuning expert panel at Drupalcon Szeged. I am excited to see a continuing focus on usability and hope to help during the sprints. Please consider sponsoring the conference if you can.
I will be on vacation the week before Drupalcon. If you know where to find vegetarian food between Prague and Budapest, email me.
Drupal performance tuning
I gave a talk about scalability at the last SF Drupal User’s Group meeting. Performance and scalability is an excellent topic for a user group meeting; everyone wants to know about scalability and there is enough material for hours. I did my talk in two parts: I spoke about the general process and demoed useful tools.
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