OSCAL 2019/Ligjëruesit
Below are all the speakers for this edition of OSCAL.
Adam Samalik
Open source enthusiast. Software Engineer with Red Hat working on Fedora. Most of Adam’s activities tend to be in the Fedora community, focusing on advocacy and innovations of the Linux distribution. This includes looking at ways how to make the build infrastructure more effective, exploring ways how we can define and manage different lifecycles within the distribution, and also making sure everything is understandable and well documented. He also enjoys automating things with horrible shell scripts, making graphical design, and writing.
Topic
Linux distributions, lifecycles, and containers
Description
Deploying software has lots of solutions, but what gets deployed often plays out as a fight between developers and operators. Developers want the latest (or at least later) code. Operators want things in nice packages, certified, and with a known period of support. What we need is a catalog of software with the variety of versions the developers need, with the qualities expected by the operators.
Come and learn how various projects within Fedora approach this problem from different perspectives, including Fedora Modularity, containers, Fedora CoreOS, and Fedora Silverblue.
Adrian Ratiu
Adrian Ratiu is both a hobbyist and a professionel embedded Linux software engineer, currently working for Collabora in the Core Systems team. He has a wide range of interests accross the F/LOSS stack from low-level bootloaders, the kernel and associated sub-projects like PREEMPT_RT or eBPF, to maintaining his own Yocto/OpenEmbedded-based distribution and hacking on various tools like Emacs or the notmuch mail indexer. He created an eBPF series on the Collabora blog which can be useful for those wishing to further their knowledge after attending this introductory presentation.
Topic
A gentle introduction to Linux tracing using eBPF
Description
Over the last few years a new technology has been developed within the Linux kernel. It allowings engineers to safely monitor, debug or modify the behaviour of a running system, both in production and development, without risking performance degradations (for example a normal debugger completely halts a process), crashes or other unwanted side-effects which may negatively impact software reliability. This is done by running code inside a kernel Virtual Machine which is now present and enabled by default in all Linux distribution kernels, and is gaiding wide industry adoption. Come to this presentation to learn more and how you can also use this technology on your own devices. No prior OS/Linux kernel development experience is required.
Alexander Sander
Altin Ukshini
Angjelina Dervishaj
Amita Sharma
- Besfort Guri
- Dajana Mulaj
- Daniel Bello
- Dashamir Hoxha
- David Stainton
- Dávid Halász
- Dennis Van Zuijlekom
- Dimitar Zahariev
- Eduard Milushi
- Elger Jonker
- Elio Qoshi
- Emiliano Vavassori
- Eugene Zhukov
- Gabriele Falasca
- Guillaume Rischard
- John Sturdy
- Jora Kasapi
- Jor Bashllari
- Jos Weyers
- Kleidi Eski
- Koloreto Cukali
- Lars Heafner
- Laurent Ymet
- Marko Kažić
- Mehul Patel
- Mike Schwartz
- Paul Honig
- Rafael Shkëmbi
- Redon Skikuli
- Riccardo Magliocchetti
- Rikeldo Ndreu
- Ritger Teunissen
- Sam Tuke
- Winfried Tilanus
- Xhesi Balla