Rust Project Expands Open Source Mentorship: Joins Outreachy May 2026 Cohort with 4 Intern Projects
Breaking: Rust Project Announces Participation in Outreachy for May 2026
The Rust Project is officially joining the Outreachy open source internship program for the May 2026 cohort, marking a significant expansion of its mentorship initiatives. This move adds to the project's existing participation in Google Summer of Code (GSoC) and OSPP.

Outreachy focuses on providing internships to individuals from underrepresented groups in tech, offering a dedicated contribution period and community-selected interns. The Rust Project will mentor four interns starting May 2026, covering their stipends and overhead through community funding.
Key Differences Between Outreachy and GSoC
Unlike GSoC, Outreachy requires applicants to first apply to the overall program before selecting specific communities. A mandatory contribution period sets Outreachy apart—applicants must actively contribute before applying. Interns are selected based on both applications and contributions.
Another major distinction: for GSoC, Google covers stipends and overhead, whereas for Outreachy, each community funds its own interns. The Rust Project has committed to funding four interns due to limited mentoring capacity and budget.
The Four Selected Intern Projects
Calling Overloaded C++ Functions from Rust
Ajay Singh will work with mentors teor, Taylor Cramer, and Ethan Smith to implement an experimental feature for calling overloaded C++ functions from Rust. The project aims to test this feature in representative use cases.
Code Coverage of the Rust Compiler at Scale
Akintewe Oluwasola, mentored by Jack Huey, will develop workflows to run and analyze code coverage across the compiler's entire test suite and ecosystem crates. The goal is to detect inadequate testing and build continuous analysis tools.
Fuzzing the a-mir-formality Type System Implementation
Tunde-Ajayi Olamiposi, mentored by Niko Matsakis, Rémy Rakic, and tiif, will implement fuzzing for a-mir-formality—a work-in-progress model for Rust's type and trait system.
Background
The Rust Project has a strong track record with open source mentorship, including three years in Google Summer of Code and previous OSPP involvement. Outreachy fills a critical gap by targeting contributors who face systemic bias in the tech industry. The program's structure—with mandatory prep work and community-funded stipends—aligns with Rust's inclusivity goals.
"We're excited to welcome Outreachy interns and expand our mentorship ecosystem," said a Rust Project spokesperson. "This is a vital step toward building a more diverse and resilient compiler community."
What This Means
For the Rust compiler, these projects will improve interoperability, testing coverage, and type system validation. The fuzzing work could uncover critical bugs before release. For the broader open source community, Rust's participation underscores a commitment to equity in tech.
"By funding interns ourselves, we're investing directly in underrepresented talent," added a mentor. "This model ensures more voices shape Rust's future."
The May 2026 cohort will run from May to August, with a second cohort starting December 2026. Interested applicants should monitor the Outreachy website for application details.
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