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Jenkins' Participation in Hacktoberfest 2024

Bruno Verachten
Bruno Verachten
November 13, 2024

Hacktoberfest

The Jenkins community is pleased to have participated in this year’s Hacktoberfest, an event focused on fostering open-source contributions and welcoming new contributors to our ecosystem.

As Hacktoberfest 2024 has come to a close, we’re happy to reflect on the community’s participation:

Jenkins’ Contribution to Hacktoberfest

This year, we saw an increase in community engagement, with contributions including 1,174 pull requests across the jenkinsci, jenkins-infra, and jenkins-docs GitHub organizations. Notably, 243 pull requests were part of the Hacktoberfest initiative, contributed by 67 unique participants.

Out of these submissions, 223 pull requests were successfully merged, demonstrating the collaborative efforts and commitment of our contributors and maintainers alike, achieving an impressive 92% acceptance rate.

Encouraging Newcomers

One of our primary objectives during Hacktoberfest is to welcome and support new open-source contributors. The Jenkins community provided resources and guidance, assisting newcomers in understanding the procedures and standards for quality contributions.

We are proud of all our participants, with special recognition for our seasoned contributors who continue to provide valuable input year after year. Notable contributions from some of our well-established members include:

  • jonesbusy, submitting 41 validated pull requests

  • basil, contributing 14 pull requests

  • kmartens27, adding 11 pull requests

Each of these individuals has consistently demonstrated their commitment to enhancing the Jenkins project, contributing their expertise to advance our goals, and mentoring and supporting new contributors along the way.

Supporting Our Maintainers and Community

The proactive involvement of our project maintainers has been instrumental in the success of Hacktoberfest this year. Their dedication to preparing repositories by adding relevant topics and tags to ensure clear, accessible contribution guidelines has been crucial. Our heartfelt thanks go out to all maintainers for fostering a supportive environment for our contributors.

Looking Forward to Hacktoberfest 2025

With an eye towards next year’s Hacktoberfest, we are keen to build on our success and continue improving our engagement with both long-standing community members and those new to the world of open source. We hope to keep enriching our processes and support frameworks.

The Jenkins community is proud of what we’ve achieved together and looks forward to welcoming more individuals into our ongoing open-source projects. If you are interested in contributing or learning more about our activities, we encourage you to engage with us.

Join our discussions and help shape the future of Jenkins!

About the author

Bruno Verachten

Bruno Verachten

Bruno is a father of two, husband of one, geek in denial, beekeeper, permie and a Developer Relations for the Jenkins project. He’s been tinkering with continuous integration and continuous deployment since 2013, with various products/tools/platforms (Gitlab CI, Circle CI, Travis CI, Shippable, Github Actions, …​), mostly for mobile and embedded development.
He’s passionate about embedded platforms, the ARM&RISC-V ecosystems, and Edge Computing. His main goal is to add FOSS projects and platforms to the ARM&RISC-V architectures, so that they become as boring as X86_64.
He is also the creator of miniJen, the smallest multi-cpu architectures Jenkins instance known to mankind.

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