Summer of Code/2009/Print Support

From Sugar Labs
Jump to navigation Jump to search

About you

1 What is your name?
Vamsi Krishna Davuluri
2 What is your email address?
vamsi<dot>davuluri<at>gmail<dot>com
3 What is your Sugar Labs wiki username?
IwikiwI
4 What is your IRC nickname?
IwikiwI
5 What is your primary language? (We have mentors who speak multiple languages and can match you with one of them if you'd prefer.)
English, Hindi, Telugu. I prefer English!
6 Where are you located, and what hours do you tend to work? (We also try to match mentors by general time zone if possible.)
I am located in india (5:30+ GMT), I usually work in the night, from my 7 pm to 2:30 am
So any mentor should be ideal.
7 Have you participated in an open-source project before? If so, please send us URLs to your profile pages for those projects, or some other demonstration of the work that you have done in :open-:source. If not, why do you want to work on an open-source project this summer?
I have not been part of an open source development team. Nor do I have a very profound understanding of the OS development paradigm yet. But seeing how I could never afford software which was sold at :high price even though that software was the bare essential software for me to get my computer working. And as my experiences are true for almost two thirds of other students, I would like to see them :not to have to put up with the buy-what-you-want software, in-fact I would love for them to grow up using free software that I make and hope that they will produce free software themselves, a few of them :at least.
Although not really a group developmental project, I have coded two networks projects and a prototype game for windows. (the source is in downloads)
1) Simulation of mobile units and their movement over a network (unix network programming, and unix programming)
http://code.google.com/p/iwikiwi/
2) A client/server model for file transfer, md5 check sum, IP translations, and file size requests (unix network programming, and unix programming)
http://code.google.com/p/iwikiwi-clientserver/
3) A prototype Bounce game in OpenGL for windows
http://code.google.com/p/iwikiwi-bounce/

About your project

1 What is the name of your project?
Print Support for the XO laptops
2 Describe your project in 10-20 sentences.
As the self explanatory name suggests, the project is to add print support to the laptops.For the time being, the print requests will be sent to the school server through a moodle print page
then the teacher can view the files through his login in the same application, and approve them for printing to a print server. We will also be including a fallback strategy that is usb printing.
Why should my idea be considered:
My refined version of the print support idea is actually a better way of ensuring that paper abuse will be curbed, as the kids wouldn't really take into account :all the predicaments associated with :printing. And needless to say printing does take place with the teacher's intervention. And everything takes place in a moodle environment, plus there is the added benefit of printing in the No XO case.
A step by step abstraction:
(The first step would essentially mean a Save as PDF hack and put the jobs for processing on moodle )


1) (this is no way related to abiword's print to pdf ability)
The right click menu of an item in the journal will have a new option, i.e. send for network printing. When clicked, the item will be sent to a local virtual CUPS-PDF printer for PDF conversion, and the pdf will have metadata attached stating its details (this PDF plus metadata wont be visible to the user).The object is then said to be marked for printing and can be unmarked for printing too.(That is by again right clicking on the parent journal item and clicking cancel for network printing).
Also a similar button will be provided for saving to PDF. Which will have a PDF file of the same in journal;the pdf will be tangible. (that is text will be mapped as text only)
We will be using moodle as our interface for sending print requests on the network. The interface will have a user page and a teacher page. The page will have a report of his print jobs and a status report of his live jobs. And the ability to put 3 live jobs on queue. The number of upload slots will be dynamically updated according to his live jobs pending for teacher's approval. And the number of free slots will automatically be filled up by the browser with the to-print PDFs. And then these objects will be sent to the moodle web folder.
(The 2nd would be implementing queuing and teacher review, reject approve facilities
2) Through moodle the teacher will have a page displaying the contents of the print datastore along with user names attached, and he/she will be able to download them to his remote system, and check them and approve them for printing if he/she wishes. After his/her approval or disapproval (that is a delete along with an option why) the information is held in the datastore, and the user can view it in the form of history transactions pertaining to his id, and teacher can view a finite list of previous transactions pertaining to all. :
( The 3rd usb printing on demand!)
3) The no School Server case. The simple solution to this case is to print directly through usb. And this won't be counter productive to the idea of teacher moderated printing, as the printer won't be available for just anyone; this is only a quick alternative to the 'save to portable drive and do the printing' method.
In-Depth analysis:


for step-1, We use CUPS. The API has a nice array of functions, one of which is to get the printer's name (the cups-pdf virtual printer).And print our file as a PDF in the datastore. Which is pretty much the same for saving as PDF, or sending to moodle.(in the latter we just dont display it, in the former we do)
For the sake of our python convenience we will be using a python wrapper to cups, pycups. The print objects will have metadata attached to them through the sugar datastore API.
For the second part of it when ever the print page url is accessed, we make browse communicate with the moodle print queue through xmlrpc to get the queue details, and upload that many slots (as the number of slots will also be dependent on the print queue through a php trick) This would essentially mean a rainbow hack so that browse can communicate with journal without a dialog (Or a simpler way will be to bypass the dialog automatically). The execution part of this will take place dynamically as soon as the user requests the print page. And also, once the pdf is read, it is destroyed.
for step-2, We will be using the interface already created, but for the teacher we will issue global access privileges enabling him/her to access all the sent requests for his group.The approve button will initiate shell commands to send the particular file to a network printer through CUPS installed on the server.This can again be achieved through hacking into moodle and understanding how notifications are sent to the students from teacher. The notifications would be relating to whether the teacher has approved or disapproved the print.
The moodle part can be achieved through hacking the already existing plugin [1] and looking into the moodle API and plugin documentation. From my research so far, moodle has most of all the low level details already existing within the moodle libraries, even $_GET $_POST methods are abstracted into simpler functions.
for step-3, no new code is required; a few more dependencies are required, Which wont exceed 17mb. We will be including print directly (usb), as an option under the item's right click menu too. This will essentially have the same code as print to pdf, but with code to select a new default printer added.
Is there a disadvantage in relying upon moodle for network printing?
Since the whole concept relies upon network printing, it will be feasible for moodle to coexist with the system on the school server. We will just be adding moodle as a requirement for network printing.


Key features:
  • Will be able to print to any USB printer
  • Will be able to output a print as a PDF
  • Includes a local queue and a teacher queue
  • automatically parses print requests to the print page
  • Uses moodle as interface for teacher moderated printing
  • A 3 live/pending jobs at a time queue.
  • Teacher can approve/ disapprove printing from the queue.
  • Student will have status updates in his page.
  • Has a no school server case.


3 Convince us, in 5-15 sentences, that you will be able to successfully complete your project in the timeline you have described. This is usually where people describe their past experiences, :credentials, prior projects, schoolwork, and that sort of thing, but be creative. Link to prior work or other resources as relevant.
I have a fairly good understanding of communication models, and my skill with networks is quite satisfactory. And as most of the implementation is already available in form of python bindings, all that :remains is placing them together with a sound design, which I have already discussed with several community members. And I can provide as much time as is required for the work to get done. And I am introduced to server side programming through django on which I had worked to develop a weblog ( I dont have the code for it, and the weblog isn't operational), all I can say is I had *fun* with the template language they had, which was mostly regexp parsing.
And I have learnt php these last few days enough to hack on moodle.
My credentials include:
1) The ability to finish projects on his own, with self motivation, as the 3 projects I have attached have been made as a self interest.
2) An internship at Kenexa which had been to develop an assembly which logged database transactions, written in c#, so I have an exposure to infrastructure.
3) winner of a coding event, Mind-Hunters, at a national level technical festival.
I have already added a fix to Write so that it can export to pdf files, and I have provided a temporary fix for a screen bug, for which I will provide a complete fix.
And I have checked the feasibility of my approach by going through the source files/apis, and writing sample programs like


 cups_dest_t *dests, *dest;
 int num_dests = cupsGetDests(&dests);
 int job_id = cupsPrintFile(dests->name,
                            argv[1],
                            "Test",
                             0, NULL);
 if (job_id == 0)
 printf("error printing file, unsupported format");
for printing
4 What is the timeline for development of your project? The Summer of Code work period is 7 weeks long, May 23 - August 10; tell us what you will be working on each week. (As the summer goes on, you and your mentor will adjust your schedule, but it's good to have a plan at the beginning so you have an idea of where you're headed.) Note that you should probably plan to have something "working and 90% done" by the midterm evaluation (July 6-13); the last steps always take longer than you think, and we will consider cancelling projects which are not mostly working by then.


April 20th to May 26th:
  • Research the sugar API extensively
  • Write sample D-BUS communication programs and xmlrpc programs
  • Hack into moodle code, and create purposeful hacks (modifying the limits for plugin in consideration, and such)
  • Talk with the design team and produce prototype interface designs
  • Look into moodle APIs
  • Focus on the bare essential dependencies required to get the job done
My job will be not only writing working code, but regularly getting it deployed to check if the user's find it good and working to their needs or not.
So when I say community feedback, I will be using it interchangeably between actual deployment and the irc community depending on context


Milestone 1
Week 1 :
Write code which prints to any selected printer. (CUPS-pdf will be the primary case till gsoc), and add the print buttons to the item right click menu of journal.
Start working on browse hack to parse file paths to the print page's forum input box.
Week 2 :
Finish with browse. get community feedback
Mile stone 1 result : Sugar side of our code will be done.
Milestone 2
Week 3 :
Start working on moodle's userpage.
Hack the 'upload an assignment' code and make a new plugin out of it.
Week 4
start working on moodles teacher page, and see that he/she can review only his group's assignments
Week 5
And start working on a php script for shell commands to directly print to the network printer.Get mentor and community feedback.
Mile stone 2 result : The teacher review feature and student upload features are working
Milestone 3
Week 6
Start working on creating a nice html layout for the page, get feedback and make corrections accordingly.
week 7
Test code on a server with a printer, and test if everything works, get mentor and community feedback, and if any integration bugs remain, drill them out.
Milestone 3 result: It would be to finish the moodle plugin, and see to it that printing can be done through it by the teacher and that we have thousands of happy XO user's faces
Beyond GSoC:
primary focus:
  • Add a direct network printing mechanism ( avahi if not the CUPS provided Bonjour for DNS-SD/mDNS) and print directly to the print server through wi-fi.This will be in the form of a new button in the journal item's menu.This will be disabled when ever an XS is connected.
I have written a sample program http://pastebin.be/17562
What this does is, it gets the list of printers from the print server, and prints to the default configured one.
It can be extended to select the print server automatically, traverse through the printers, select appropriate one. And also implement a local queue, cancel option.
Secondary focus:
  • Make the printing feature an integral part of the API so that printing can be done directly without the journal UI's intervention
  • Make a CP activity to select the default printer.

You and the community

1 If your project is successfully completed, what will its impact be on the Sugar Labs community? Give 3 answers, each 1-3 paragraphs in length. The first one should be yours. The other two should be answers from members of the Sugar Labs community, at least one of whom should be a Sugar Labs GSoC mentor. Provide email contact information for non-GSoC mentors.
From myself:
"The XO users and teachers will greatly benefit from printing, as converting something digital(which may be art, a presentation or a photo) into a physical representation is something very basic, and :something very strong. Not only will there be a good deal of happy faces, but it will also kill the effort required to copy content to a portable drive, and go to a terminal and print.
"
From Benjamin M. Schwartz:
"In order for Sugar to be adopted in schools with existing IT infrastructure, it must give users an easy way to print their documents.If that printing could be routed through a teacher-controlled visual :print queue, then in this regard Sugar would be the most preferred solution for primary education and schools with limited IT resources."
From Martin Langhoff


"So children can print their own renditions of Robocop on a Unicorn.
The goal of your project is to have a simple, effective and portable
way to print documents from the Sugar environment. The most immediate
outcome will be very straightforward printing through a School Server.
Printing is a very popular request in our DIY community so it is also
important to ensure that printing is workable even in the absence of a
School Server."


2 Sugar Labs will be working to set up a small (5-30 unit) Sugar pilot near each student project that is accepted to GSoC so that you can immediately see how your work affects children in a deployment. We will make arrangements to either supply or find all the equipment needed. Do you have any ideas on where you would like your deployment to be, who you would like to be involved, and how we can help you and the community in your area begin it?
I think it would be wonderful to begin with my school, I come from a government funded school, not one of those fancy private schools. The kids there would definitely love the different teaching :environment. I will have a talk with the principal, and after that I will further this.
3 What will you do if you get stuck on your project and your mentor isn't around?
I will of course go through the net. developer mailing lists, and forums.
But more over, the community has been very helpful without having a mentor as of yet. I will look forward to the community then!
4 How do you propose you will be keeping the community informed of your progress and any problems or questions you might have over the course of the project?
I intend to provide weekly updates on the wiki itself. And I will also be providing daily updates on the channel.

Miscellaneous

Here is the pic with my hack [2]
1 What is your t-shirt size? (Yes, we know Google asks for this already; humor us.)
Large! (do I get a sugar tshirt?)
2 Describe a great learning experience you had as a child.
Being alone and not interacting with others is a hard bargain. It might seem appropriate during the experience (as one can brush it off as," who will interact with the lessers"), but its only after you :reach an age you realise the tragedy one has brought on himself. I can never change my past, but I am a different person now and will be in the future.
3 Is there anything else we should have asked you or anything else that we should know that might make us like you or your project more?
My motto: There is no such thing as not able to achieve something, the only variable really is effort which differs from achievement to achievement with person to person.
what someone else can do, So can I.