From Fedora Project Wiki

Mail: psimerda AT redhat DOT com, pavlix AT pavlix DOT net

Jabber: pavlix AT pavlix DOT net

IRC Freenode: pavlix (#nm and a couple of other channels)

Phone: +420 775 996 256

Timezone: Europe/Prague (CET), sometimes available through later hours

About

After learning a bit of programming, I was attracted by the networking world. I got from petty Pascal/C++ projects through web development using ugly PHP and later Python, to a freelancing work with most of the projects in server administration, network equipment configuration and a bit of programming. Most people in the business know me from my conference talks and articles.

One of my conference talk brought me an offer from Red Hat, which I joined in May 2012 to work on NetworkManager. I was already a Fedora user and package maintainer at that time. Since August 2012 I'm no longer working as a regular NetworkManager developer (staying an upstream contributor, though). Even before that I tried to put my hands on a number of other projects via bug reports, tests and code. I'm also interested in various network-related standards and especially bugs and bad assumptions in IETF documents.

Wiki resources

Contributions are welcome.

Packages

Maintainer

  • aiccu (IPv6 tunneling client)
  • connman
  • racoon2
  • radvd (taken over from Petr Písař)
  • strongswan

Help with specific features or integration issues welcome.

Co-maintainer

  • bind
  • bind10
  • NetworkManager-ssh
  • rsync
  • squid

(I haven't touched any of them, yet, as of August 2013.)

Upstream contributions

  • NetworkManager
    • Building on any distribution
    • Virtual device support (bridging/bonding, with others)
    • Valgrind and code coverage support for tests
    • Separate platform interaction module (nm-platform, with Dan Winship)
      • Refactored NetworkManager's bridging/bonding/vlan configuration
      • Refactored NetworkManager's IPv4/IPv6 configuration
    • Userspace IPv6 autoconfiguration (nm-rdisc/libndp, with Jiří Pírko)
      • Getting IPv6 autoconf features on par with IPv4
      • Avoiding loads of kernel IPv6 bugs and design flaws
    • Runtime (non-persistent) configuration support (with Dan Winship and Dan Williams)
    • A lot of bug triaging

Bug tracking/reporting

  • avahi
    • Missing for IPv6 link-local addresses.
    • IPv6 disabled by default.
    • Problems with duplicates in discovery.
  • glibc
    • The getaddrinfo() support is very complicated while not giving correct results in many cases.
  • kernel
    • Network configuration is a real pain.
    • Kernel IPv6 autoconfiguration is only designed for trivial use cases and is very buggy.
  • libnl
    • Most of the advanced stuff is very buggy.

Daily usage

Distributions

  • Gentoo
  • Fedora/CentOS
  • Debian
  • OpenWRT

Desktop

  • Gnome 3 – Seeking something more mature and stable
  • Gnome Terminal
  • Evolution (for IMAP/SMTP mail) – Seeking something more mature and stable
  • Empathy/Telepathy (for jabber and IRC) – Seeking something more mature and stable
  • Evince
  • Firefox

Development

  • vim
  • gcc
  • make, autotools
  • gdb
  • valgrind

Presentation

  • LaTeX/Beamer