Issue108
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WORK IN PROGRESS
Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #108 for the week September...
UWN Translations
- Note to translators and our readers: We are trying a new way of linking to our translations pages. Please follow the link below for the information you need.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Translations
In This Issue
General Community News
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2008-September/000481.html
http://www.jonobacon.org/?p=1278
http://oldsoldiers.wordpress.com/2008/09/12/last-push-for-intrepid-documentation/
Ubuntu Developer Week
Ubuntu Developer Week happened from Sep 1st to Sep 5th in #ubuntu-classroom on irc.freenode.net. 25 IRC sessions happened with involvement from developers of all sorts of teams. At peak times we had more than 200 participants. Here a quick overview what happened throughout the week.
- Day 1:
"Packaging 101" was packed with people and although we just had one hour to go through the bare-bone structure of the hello-debhelper package, we had a great time and the participants were a very sharp bunch asked very clever questions. Awesome!
Jorge Castro’s "Upstream Bug Linkages" also went great. He got lots of questions about the process of linking Ubuntu bugs to Upstream bugs, which helps a lot to bring developers closer together. In addition to the session log, check out Bugs/Upstream for more information.
Iulian Udrea had a very busy time in "Introduction to MOTU". Everybody wanted to know more about our Master of the Universe and how to get involved. Iulian covered a lot of ground, talking about processes, meetings and people and gave a good feeling for how the team works.
Celso Providelo was up next and talked about Soyuz and all that Jazz". Lots and lots of questions came up and Celso did his best to answer all of them, he even drew a fancy diagram to explain what Soyuz is all about. I’d like to not that the audience of this session likes Rock’n'Roll more than Jazz.
Pedro Villavivencio Garrido spent almost an hour talking about tips and tricks working with "Ubuntu and GNOME QA". If you know Pedro you know how enthusiastic he is about spreading the Ubuntu and GNOME love and that’s what he did in the session. He covered using GNOME’s Bugzilla, talked about the GNOME Love project, freedesktop components and lots of other stuff. Awesome!
- Day 2:
"How do I fix an Ubuntu bug?" was a lot of fun. Lots of sharp questions and lots of really good fixes by the end of the session. We used Harvest to find some low-hanging fruit, verified the bug, tested the fix, test-built it and came up with a collection of good debdiffs. Yeeeehaw! Lots of excitement among the crowd!
The audience had a good time with David Futcher who was up next with his "Introduction to BZR". David shared a lot of insights into bzr and code hosting on Launchpad and everybody seemed quite pleased.
Super Mario Limonciello joined us to take the plunge and experience the joys of "Kernel module packaging with DKMS". His presentation was concise, to the point and demonstrated quite impressively, why DKMS is the way to go.
Leonard Richardson (with the help of Barry Warsaw and Francis Lacoste) demonstrated "The Launchpad Web Service API" and got a huge amount of questions. I guess we’re going to see a lot of scripts and applications making use of the Launchpad API soon. Thanks a lot Launchpad Heroes!
At the end of day 2, Brian Murray demonstrated his "Launchpad Hacks" and how to make use of Greasemonkey to change bits of the functionality of Launchpad pages, add additional information, etc. With Brian’s background in QA work it was pretty obvious to see how these hacks make working with bugs a lot easier.
- Day 3:
James Westby started off with "BZR for packaging". The atmosphere was great and James demonstrated very very well, why bzr for packaging makes the world a better place and yourself much more productive.
Cesare Tirabassi took over and explained "How to update a package properly". There was lots of MOTU participation in the sesion, so lots of questions could easily be answered. Excellent session!
Mathias Gug was next and did an "Introduction to the Server Team". A great session: he introduced everybody to the current team members, explained what areas of interested the team works on, where to find easy tasks to get involved and answered loads and loads of questions! ROCK ON Server People!
This is the umpteenth time that Celso Providelo gave his rocking "Introduction to PPA" session. You could call him a veteran of Ubuntu Open and Developer Weeks. It was just awesome to see how many questions popped up, how many ideas were discussed, interest in PPAs is definitely very very high.
Christophe Sauthier and Didier Roche did a 1h30m-session about "Various ways to patch packages". No matter if it was quilt, CDBS’ simple-patchsys, dpatch or anything else: these two guys from France managed to give everybody the perfect overview. Rock’n'Roll!
- Day 4:
Ara Pulido kicked off the day with "Automated Testing of the Desktop". Ara showed us what amazing stuff she was working on. In examples she showsed how easy it has become nowadays to test the integral parts of our Ubuntu Desktop. The audience asked lots of interesting questions any everybody left the session with a much better idea of what’s happening in #ubuntu-testing.
Afterwards Daniel Holbach did another session called "How do I fix an Ubuntu bug". The main aim of these session was to demonstrate how easy it is with Harvest and the Ubuntu development tools to make Ubuntu better today. That you don’t need a degree in rocket science, just a knack for trying to make things work again, some patience and that you’re good at team-play. The session was well-attended and the questions showed that the audience was clearly motivated to shake out bugs of Ubuntu. We even managed to fix two bugs during the session. The shipment of awesome-ness clearly has arrived!
Jonathan Riddell delivered the third session that day and showed how to write a "WebKit browser in PyKDE". Everybody was very impressed by how easy it is to use WebKit in PyKDE. Have a look at the examples yourself: this is clearly next-generation awesome stuff.
Alexander Sack afterwards gave a great introduction to "Having fun with the Mozilla Team". This is one of the very very busy teams we all expect the best from. Alexander explained all the areas that require work (extensions, bug work, maintenance of all mozilla-related packages, etc.) At the end of the session he demonstrated the ease of packaging Mozilla extension. Rock and Roll!
Steve Langasek as one of the Heroes of the Archive Admins delivered a great session on "How to avoid making Archive Admins unhappy". The session was a great opportunity to find out almost everything that’s reviewed with great scrutiny, especially since the session was a relaxed discussion, it invited everybody to join in.
- Day 5
Matt Zimmerman kicked off with "Ask Matt". He answered myriads questions about Ubuntu Development plans, syncing of upstream and distro schedules, distributed development, Canonical partners and ltos of other interesting things. If you read the log you can imagine how fast Matt was typing to answer the questions. Rock On, Matt!
Lars Wirzenius talked about "Unit testing Python Code, with code coverage measurement". He did a great job at explaining the bits an pieces needed to write better code and get it tested. The audience was very interested and will hopefully make Lars proud with their next Python projects.
The "Introduction to the Installer Team" was up next and Evan Dandrea held a great session about it. It’s worth pointing out how modest Evan was and how he introduced everybody who’s involved in the team. He also gave a quick udpate what’s happening in the team right now and invited everybody to join in on the fun.
The "Introduction to the Security Team" session was packed with people who wanted to see Jamie Strandboge, Kees Cook and William Grant talk about their most favourite topic. They started off with a quick introduction to the lifecycle of a security issue, areas in which the team is active, proper testing of security fixes and so on. Lots and lots of good questions.
Ben Collins had the last slot of this week, talking about "the Kernel Team". Current plans, DKMS goodness, 2.6.26 vs 2.6.27 and lots of other discussion happened and everybody saw how much fun the Kernel can be.
MOTU
You can refer to Fabien Tassin as a MOTU now. His application was just approved; his track record of excellent work on Mozilla related packages spoke for him.
The MOTU Council just approved Iulian Udrea's application as a Universe Contributor. He spent quite some time making Ubuntu better and has learned a lot in the last weeks and months.
Thierry Carrez (Koon) just joined the Universe Contributors team. He put a lot of good work into several areas in the Server Team and the feedback of his sponsors was great.
New Ubuntu Member
Ruben Romero from Oslo, Norway has been approved for Ubuntu Membership. Ruben is the contact person of Ubuntu Eucador, LoCo Team as our new member. He has been contributing to various projects, notable among them are Spread Ubuntu and Spanish Documentation for Ubuntu. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~huayra Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Hubuntu
The Asia Oceania board is happy to welcome Ruben as it's newest Ubuntu Member!
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2008-September/000175.html
New Ubuntu Cyclists Team
http://blog.grossmeier.net/2008/09/11/announcment-new-launchpad-team-ubuntu-cyclists/
Ubuntu Stats
Bug Stats
- Open (#) +/- # over last week
- Critical (#) +/- # over last week
- Unconfirmed (#) +/- # over last week
- Unassigned (#) +/- # over last week
- All bugs ever reported (#) +/- # over last week
As always, the Bug Squad needs more help. If you want to get started, please see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad
Infamous Bugs
Translation Stats Hardy
- Language (#) +/- # over last week
- Language (#) +/- # over last week
- Language (#) +/- # over last week
- Language (#) +/- # over last week
- Language (#) +/- # over last week
Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 8.04 "Hardy Heron," see more at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/hardy/
LoCo News
http://stompbox.typepad.com/blog/2008/09/ohio-linuxfest.html
http://daniel.holba.ch/blog/?p=243 (use the ubuntu berlin part to highlight loco team)
http://daniel.holba.ch/blog/?p=243, the part about the team having monthly bug jams.
New in Hardy Heron
Launchpad News
Ubuntu Forums News
In The Press
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080908-ubuntu-9-04-to-be-called-jaunty-jackalope.html
http://luisbg.users.ubuntustudio.org/luisbg/computer_music/, see thread at https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-studio-users/2008-September/003114.html
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1001_3-10040271-92.html?part=rss&subj=news
In The Blogosphere
http://www.workswithu.com/2008/09/10/ubuntu-saves-compaq-presario-2100-from-death-and-windows/
In Other News
Join us at PostgreSQL Conference: West 08, October 10-12 2008
The second annual PostgreSQL Conference West will be held in The Native American Student & Community Center at Portland State University. Already on the schedule is the membership drive for PgUS, the new PostgreSQL non profit association. Also hoped for is a debate and potential election of board members. But they would also like papers:
- If you have a topic you have been dying to talk about
- If it involves PostgreSQL
- If it is interesting
Then post a submission [1]. One such possible talk might be about Ubuntu, PostgreSQL and Drupal.
[1] http://www.postgresqlconference.org/west08/talk_submission/
http://www.postgresqlconference.org/
Meeting Summaries
Technical Board Meeting Summary
Board members: Mark Shuttleworth, Matt Zimmerman Apologies: Scott James Remnant (holiday) Attendees: Oliver Grawert, Emmet Hikory
Status of cdrtools discussion
Mark has offered to obtain a legal opinion from the Software Freedom Law Center, on the condition that Joerg Schilling will agree up front to accept their determination.
We are waiting for Joerg to respond to this proposal. Mark suggested that we also involve Sun in the discussion, as they are shipping cdrtools.
Action: Mark to contact Sun legal regarding cdrtools
Gobby co-maintenance with Debian
Philipp Kern, upstream developer and Debian maintainer of gobby, and MOTU, is interested in helping to maintain gobby in Ubuntu main.
We agreed that this is reasonable, and that Phillipp's existing qualifications are sufficient to grant upload privileges.
Action: Matt to arrange upload rights for gobby for pkern
Revisiting limited upload privileges for kernel and printing packages
The Technical Board granted core-dev privileges to two developers (Tim Gardner and Till Kamppeter) interested in working with specific packages in main, with the proviso that they were to follow standard sponsorship processes for other packages.
Now that Launchpad has the capability to implement this type of access control directly, we agreed to transition these developers from ubuntu-core-dev to per-package upload rights.
Action: Matt to follow up with Tim and Till
Board membership/nominations
The Technical Board is in search of new members, and suggestions from the community have been received and reviewed. The next step is to contact the top candidates (most were suggested by third parties) and ask whether they are willing to serve in the position.
Action: Mark to contact the candidates and confirm their interest
Ubuntu Server Team Summary
http://ubuntuserver.wordpress.com/2008/09/12/server-team-20080909-meeting-minutes/
Upcoming Meetings and Events
Community Spotlight
Updates and Security for 6.06, 7.04, 7.10, and 8.04
Security Updates
[USN-641-1] Racoon vulnerabilities - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-September/000746.html
[USN-642-1] Postfix vulnerabilities - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-September/000747.html
[USN-643-1] FreeType vulnerabilities - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-September/000748.html
[USN-644-1] libxml2 vulnerabilities - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-September/000749.html
Ubuntu 6.06 LTS Updates
ipsec-tools_0.6.5-4ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-September/012747.html
freetype 2.1.10-1ubuntu2.5 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-September/012748.html
libxml2 2.6.24.dfsg-1ubuntu1.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-September/012749.html
Ubuntu 7.04 Updates
ipsec-tools_0.6.6-3ubuntu3.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-changes/2008-September/008994.html
freetype 2.2.1-5ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-changes/2008-September/008995.html
libxml2 2.6.27.dfsg-1ubuntu3.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-changes/2008-September/008996.html
Ubuntu 7.10 Updates
ipsec-tools_0.6.6-3.1ubuntu3.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-September/010300.html
audit 1.5.4-0ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-September/010301.html
postfix_2.4.5-3ubuntu1.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-September/010302.html
freetype 2.3.5-1ubuntu4.7.10.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-September/010303.html
libxml2 2.6.30.dfsg-2ubuntu1.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-September/010304.html
Ubuntu 8.04 Updates
ipsec-tools_0.6.7-1.1ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011981.html
phpmyadmin_2.11.3-1ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011982.html
gallery2_2.2.4-1ubuntu0.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011983.html
kdenetwork 4:3.5.9-0ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011984.html
checkgmail 1.13-1ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011985.html
libtranslate 0.99-0ubuntu4.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011986.html
ikiwiki 2.32.3ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011987.html
nagios2 2.11-1ubuntu1.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011988.html
app-install-data-commercial 9.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011989.html
linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24 2.6.24.14-21.49 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011990.html
gcc-4.2 4.2.4-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011991.html
openvpn 2.1~rc7-1ubuntu3.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011992.html
mysql-dfsg-5.0 5.0.51a-3ubuntu5.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011993.html
sudo 1.6.9p10-1ubuntu3.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011994.html
gdb 6.8-1ubuntu3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011995.html
cheese 2.22.3-0ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011996.html
gstreamer0.10 0.10.18-4ubuntu2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011997.html
xserver-xorg-video-intel 2:2.2.1-1ubuntu13.7 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011998.html
samba 3.0.28a-1ubuntu4.6 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/011999.html
postfix_2.5.1-2ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012000.html
freetype 2.3.5-1ubuntu4.8.04.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012001.html
libxml2 2.6.31.dfsg-2ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012002.html
gdc-4.2 0.25-4.2.4-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012004.html
gcj-4.2 4.2.4-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012003.html
gnat-4.2 4.2.4-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012005.html
debian-installer 20070308ubuntu40.5 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012006.html
ngircd 0.10.3-2ubuntu0.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012007.html
gnome-power-manager 2.22.1-1ubuntu4.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012008.html
gnome-python-extras 2.19.1-0ubuntu7.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012009.html
glibc 2.7-10ubuntu4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-September/012010.html
UWN #: A sneak peek
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Conclusion
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UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue108 (last edited 2008-09-18 17:25:58 by dsl-189-146-113-17)