/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2008/06/30/#ubuntu-devel.txt

beDrunghi gnomefreak00:15
gnomefreakbeDrung: hi was just talking about you :)00:15
gnomefreakbeDrung: whats up with licenses on the 2 extensions?00:15
gnomefreaki didnt know you talked to asac so im lost on it i grabbed it but only got first block of license in the md5.js00:16
beDrunghttp://revu.ubuntuwire.com/revu1-incoming/pwdhash-0806221510/pwdhash-1.5/debian/copyright00:17
beDrungall files have the same licence, except md5.js00:17
beDrungi am in contact with the upstream author. he will add a licence file to the source package. he said, that the package uses bsd as licence.00:18
gnomefreakbeDrung: im guessing its a clause 2 license?00:19
beDrungclause 3 licence (e.g. http://revu.ubuntuwire.com/revu1-incoming/pwdhash-0806221510/pwdhash-1.5/chrome/stanford-pwdhash/content/domain-extractor.js )00:19
gnomefreakbeDrung: ah perfect00:20
beDrungand md5.js says: * Distributed under the BSD License00:20
gnomefreakwaiting on upstream to add the files?00:20
gnomefreakbeDrung: yeah i know it didnt tell me anything i wanted to know00:20
beDrungyes, he wrote june, 26 that he will do it. so i am waiting.00:22
gnomefreakbeDrung: ok thanks for update :)00:22
beDrungand for htmlvalidator: someone should check all files for the licence.00:22
beDrungif i remember correct opensp uses bsd licence and tidy uses mit00:25
gnomefreakbeDrung: ok i will ask someone to look into it or i will when i get caught up00:57
* gnomefreak gone good night00:57
=== persia_ is now known as persia
mcquaidis it no longer required having an fstab entry for ones cdrom/dvdrom drive?03:03
persiamcquaid: The presence or absence of such an entry will affect behaviour of the system.  Not having an entry is current recommended.03:07
mcquaidok thx.  since going to hardy from gutsy i can't successfully burn a data dvd.  failed in brasero, gnomebaker and k3b. trying to figure it out03:08
mcquaidi currently have an entry, will remove it.  but i find it a stretch thinking that could cause burning issues, but i'm not sure03:08
mcquaidi asked about this when i first upgraded to gutsy, that there should be a way to generate a new fstab post install03:09
StevenKpersia: HAL handles it automagically?03:15
persiaStevenK: Well, HAL provides the notification that media is available.  I believe that then is available over dbus, and the relevant system (gnome-volume-manager for GNOME) then performs a user-mount on the device in a new directory in /media.03:22
StevenKpersia: Much like it does for USB keys and the like.03:22
* persia is fuzzy on the details, as this was last investigated in Edgy or so03:22
persiaStevenK: Exactly the same mechanism.03:22
persiaThis also works for any fixed device not in a blacklist that happens to be present in the system.  If a user connects a new hard drive to the SATA bus, and it is formatted with an acceptable filesystem, it will be mounted in /media at next boot.03:24
persias/boot/login03:24
persiaI think there is some permissions layer, due to a complaint that anyone logging in automatically got access to NTFS/HFS+ drives in dual-boot configurations, but don't remember the details.03:26
persia(and modern HFS+ is especially annoying, as it presents UNIX userids, etc. which then further confuse permissioning if not aligned)03:27
StevenKpersia: You can have exactly the same problem with ext3 on a USB key, or NFS.03:28
persiaStevenK: Well, for NFS I rarely consider it a "problem", but yes, any UNIX FS that gets pulled by the /media mounting gets confusing.  It seems optimised for FAT, which might be right in some cases, but isn't reliably always correct.03:29
wgrant(it's actually Nautilus which does volume mounting in GNOME now)03:30
persiaSo what does gnome-volume-manager do?03:31
wgrantAny device that isn't a volume, IIRC.03:32
persiaRight.  All the more reason for programs to have names that are completely unrelated to function.  This wouldn't be confusing it this was gnome-frobnicator.03:33
persias/it this/if it/03:33
* StevenK chuckles03:34
mcquaidif i remove the fstab entry for my cdrom, would it stil lbe accessible outside gnome, like say in icewm?03:39
wgrantpersia: It did do volumes until Hardy, I believe.03:41
persiawgrant: It did.  I'm just amused, as between Nautilus and the HID layer, there aren't a lot of devices left to be handled by g-v-m.03:41
wgrantSystem->Preferences->Removable Drives and Media shows a few.03:42
wgrantThey're neither removable drives nor media, though.03:42
persiaWell, digital cameras might be considered that: many can be represented as volumes.  Input devices is sadly lacking in several classes of device (joysticks, MIDI, 6D CAD controllers, "gaming" pads, sensors, etc.), and this panel doesn't actually have any influence over the activation.  PDAs are just an odd inclusion, and we've a whole separate Printer system.  Oh well.03:46
persiaMaybe that can go away entirely for intrepid :)03:47
StevenKpersia: Maybe GNOME are hoping printers will just quietly go away :-P03:47
persiaStevenK: I guess, although printers are the part of that which I'm least likely to actually use (my printer has a parallel port).03:48
persiaI prefer gizmod for input devices, use usbnet for PDAs, and would expect scanners and cameras to be accessible from within relevant applications, rather than taking action on device detection (would I have to close the scanning app every login if I had a scanner attached to the workstation?)03:51
* StevenK sighs at bzr merge03:58
lifelessStevenK: ?04:03
StevenKlifeless: It is moving directories around, shifting files around and generally making a mess of my working tree04:03
lifelessStevenK: arbitrarily, or because whomever you are merging from did that?04:04
StevenKlifeless: Because it thinks there are conflicts04:04
StevenKI can't find said conflicts, or why it thinks they do ...04:04
lifelessStevenK: what type of conflicts is it claimin04:05
StevenKText conflicts04:05
lifelessStevenK: text conflicts ondirectories?04:05
* StevenK manages to crowbar the working directory back into a state that looks okay04:05
StevenKlifeless: I can point you at the two repositories, and tell you the merge command I ran, if that would help explain it?04:06
lifelessStevenK: yes, though if they are huge I'd rather see you pastebin the relevant stuff04:06
lifelessStevenK: anytime a merge is bad, if you think bzr should have been able to do better (if you can't understand teh conflicts and why) - please see #bzr immediately04:07
lifelessfeedback is valuable04:07
StevenKlifeless: The repos are on LP and are small04:07
YokoZarHmm, Intrepid Alpha 1 amd 64 doesn't log into gnome for me in vmware06:57
YokoZarAs a fresh install06:57
* TheMuso wipes sweat from his forehad after finally uploading initramfs-tools merge for intrepid. That was a big one.07:16
* RAOF gives props to TheMuso for working on the bombs :)07:17
TheMusoRAOF: If you track intrepid-changes, I think you'll see what I mean.07:17
RAOFNot yet.  I track via the rss feed, and it's not updated for me yet.07:18
TheMusoRAOF: Right.07:18
wgrantIt'll be another minute until it's accepted.07:19
nxvlthere is a rss feed of -changes?07:21
wgrantUnofficially.07:21
wgrantTheMuso: Nasty merge, indeed!07:26
StevenKTheMuso: *Daaamn*07:27
* wgrant thinks that TheMuso needs to now file a few dozen bugs in Debian to merge the changes.07:28
wgrantThat would be even more fun.07:28
TheMusowgrant: Thats the plan, but tomorrow. My head is in no shape for complex thought patterns atm.07:28
nxvlis there any way to use any chroot environmet or something to build packages in other architectures?07:30
TheMusonxvl: You would have to set up a cross-compiler.07:31
nxvli need to fix a problem on amd64 and i only have an i386 machine07:31
RAOFThat's more difficult :)07:31
nxvlTheMuso: did you know if there is a wiki page about that?07:31
TheMusonxvl: No, I am not aware of such a page.07:31
RAOFActually, you could probably do some virtualisation magic.  Wasn't there a qemu frontendything?07:31
nxvlRAOF: virt-manager07:32
nxvli'm using ppa, but it's kind of slow, and no the best way to do it07:32
RAOFWell, that'd work.  I actually meant a qemu frontend around pbuilder.07:32
RAOFqemu-x86-64-buildpackage07:32
StevenKTheMuso: "Fire bad, tree pretty" ?07:32
RAOF(May or may not exist)07:33
wgrantnxvl: Probably best to convince somebody else to do it.07:33
TheMusoStevenK: ??07:33
wgrantOr get access to an amd64 machine.07:33
StevenKTheMuso: It's a Buffy quote.07:33
TheMusoStevenK: oh.07:33
RAOFRight.  I've been known to hand out access to my amd64 box.07:33
StevenKTheMuso: Giles asks Buffy a complex question after a big-bad fight and her response was "My thought patterns are only capable of 'Fire bad, tree pretty'"07:34
TheMusoStevenK: hahaha right.07:34
nxvlalso i have another problem07:34
nxvli don't know why the build process is deleting a directory called "build" which i don't know why ships with upstream release07:35
nxvland it's making my package fail to build twice in a row07:35
nxvlis there any way to search for packages that depends on others?08:05
cody-somervillenxvl, you can list reverse dependencies if thats what you mean08:05
persianxvl: apt-cache rdepends covers the simple case.  debcheck has more complex cases.08:05
* nxvl HUGS cody-somerville and persia 08:07
cody-somerville:)08:07
nxvlcody-somerville: mm08:08
nxvlerr08:08
nxvlpersia: it doesn't work08:08
persianxvl: Please supply a referent for "it".08:08
cody-somervillenxvl, you'll need to be a bit more descriptive then that :)08:08
nxvli'm trying to find packages that depend on chrpath to use them as examples08:08
mvoif you like guis, synaptic can do it too in its filters (and search)08:08
Hobbseemvo!08:08
* mvo waves08:08
persiaAh.  You want reverse build-depends.  For that you need grep-dctrl.08:09
Hobbseemvo: i have a bug for you.08:09
Hobbseemvo: so you might want to run away, instead of waving.08:09
* mvo considers this08:09
persianxvl: I think it's `grep-dctrl -FBuild-Depends chrpath -sPackage /var/lib/apt/lists/*intrepid_*_source_Sources08:12
persia`08:12
nxvlpersia: there is not apt way to do it?08:15
nxvlpersia: someone point me to some command some days ago but i didn't write it down, and it's not on my history08:16
nxvl:(08:16
persianxvl: BNot for build dependencies.  You could perhaps add something to apt-cache or synaptic, if you wanted.08:16
nxvli will se08:18
slangasekTheMuso: how's alsa-lib coming?08:19
slangasekTheMuso: I noticed some feedback suggesting there were some problems with the repo you'd set up, are those ironed out?08:20
slangasekasac: have you seen my follow-up to bug #210481?  Do you or another member of the mozilla team have time to fix that this week?08:22
ubottuLaunchpad bug 210481 in firefox "gutsy->hardy upgrade problem" [High,In progress] https://launchpad.net/bugs/21048108:22
cody-somervillemvo, when do you guys first start uploading gnome to Intrepid?08:25
cody-somervillemvo, as soon as the first alpha or beta is available or just the release candidates?08:25
mvocody-somerville: uploading of the current devel version of gnome has already started, we do it as soon as gnome releases tarballs08:29
mvocody-somerville: seb128 is the lead for this effort and usually a new tarball release goes very quickly into our archive as well08:29
=== thekorn__ is now known as thekorn
cody-somervilleAlthough I know this may be a question you can't answer, do you think that would be a good approach for Xubuntu too?08:30
cody-somervilleXfce4 just moved to a time-based release schedule08:30
mvocody-somerville: this is great for testers, they get the new unstable gnome very quickly and easily08:30
* cody-somerville nods.08:30
cody-somervilleWell, upstream is worried about or modifications08:30
cody-somervilleIn the past, they have caused problems for them.08:31
mvocody-somerville: it depends a bit on the xfce upstream community and the xubuntu community08:31
mvoI think its great if you have man-power (two-three decidated people) making regular updates and feed bugreports back to upstream08:31
mvo(that is what the gnome team is doing, also more people :)08:31
mvoand it also depends if xfce upstream has a reliable release process08:32
mvothat is aligned with our releases dates somewhat08:32
cody-somervilleThey're releasing in september08:32
cody-somervillewe're releasing in October I believe08:32
cody-somervilleso I think it'll work08:32
mvobut if that is the case, then it can be a great resource for upstream for additional testers (just running it from the livecd for people who are scared of running intrepid entirely)08:33
* mvo nods08:33
* cody-somerville nods.08:33
mvoyou mentioned upstream might be concerned about it earlier?08:33
mvomaybe its a matter of explaining that its more of a help than a burden because of better feedback08:34
mvo(we do the same for compiz, upload git snapshots into the archive early and upstream likes that a lot)08:34
* cody-somerville nods.08:35
seb128mvo: well, he mentioned that distro changes were an issue08:36
seb128not sure what sort of changes they are doing though and why that's an issue08:37
mvohm, those should be discussed with uptream again I guess - what kinds of changes are we talking about?08:37
seb128but we try to have a low delta for GNOME08:37
cody-somervilleIt might have been more to do with Xfce4 upstream not getting along well with Jani Monoses08:37
cody-somervilleWhich is a shame : (08:37
cody-somervilleWhat was happening was that Xubuntu was shipping SVN with patches, lol08:38
cody-somervilleAnd as you know, once a release becomes stable we don't just randomly update it with svn snapshots08:39
slangasekcody-somerville: in keeping with tradition, 8.10 will definitely be released in the 10th month of the year; however, in the event of unforeseen setbacks I'm prepared to switch to the pre-Julian Roman calendar08:39
dholbachgood morning08:40
persiaslangasek: Please don't: it gets very close to end-of-year stuff, and hurts the immediate blush of SRUs.08:40
StevenKslangasek: Bwahaha08:41
slangasekpersia: er, I hope you don't mean to say you were taking me seriously :)08:41
* cody-somerville has a number of SRUs to do sadly.08:42
cody-somervilleI wish I had been able to get them done in time for .1 but work ate up all my time with getting our product ready for the release of the new iPhone08:42
persiaslangasek: Well, there was 6.06, so I'm yet convinced it's impossible to make such a switch, and you've a better rationale than some.08:42
=== enrico_ is now known as enrico
seb128hello dholbach08:47
dholbachhi seb12808:47
mvohey dholbach!08:50
dholbachhiya mvo08:52
seb128hello mvo08:53
mvohey seb128!08:53
emgentmorning09:02
halexmoin emgent09:03
emgentheya halex09:13
asacslangasek: when is 8.04.1 release date?09:37
slangasekasac: Thursday09:37
cjwatsonhow goes the certification side of things?09:37
slangasekcr3 gave us a clean bill of health, with the exception of one wireless issue which was not a regression vs. 8.04 and remains unresolved09:38
cjwatsonoh, good news09:38
slangasekthat was before the last l-r-m change, so I'll ask him today for another run09:39
=== dholbach_ is now known as dholbach
asacslangasek: for 210481 i can include the fix in the security upload that is about to go out09:51
slangasekasac: a security upload for ff2?09:51
asacslangasek: yes. on Wed is target date09:51
dholbachthekorn: can we distinguish between types of descriptions in py-lp-bugs?09:52
asacslangasek: all the bits are loaded ... e..g build and ready to be released, but since ffox 2 is in universe I could reupload it (after checking with jdstrand that the builders have cycles atm)09:52
slangasekasac: ok, that'd be swell :)09:53
thekorndholbach: sorry, but which types of descriptions do you mean?09:54
dholbacherm sorry09:55
dholbachthekorn: SUBscriptions :)09:55
thekorndholbach: ok, that's possible but only in the html mode09:56
thekornlet me find an example09:57
dholbachthanks a lot Markus09:57
\shdirect_list=self.bugReport.get_subscriptions_category("directly")09:58
\sh        via_duplicates=self.bugReport.get_subscriptions_category("duplicates")09:58
\sh        also_notified=self.bugReport.get_subscriptions_category("notified")09:58
\shyou mean those subscriptions, right?09:58
dholbachah perfect09:58
dholbachthanks \sh09:58
\shdholbach: welcome09:59
* thekorn is too slooow again10:01
\shthekorn: na...I just have eclipse open with the source ;)10:01
asacslangasek: we currently have http://paste.ubuntu.com/23904/ ... i guess that we have to bump that on every security update :/10:10
asacor start to use funny versions for ffox updates10:11
wgrantWhy does it need to conflict with a lower version of itself?10:11
asacwgrant: Package: firefox-210:11
wgrantWhy does it need to be so strict, even so?10:12
asacwgrant: good point10:12
wgrantWhat is its purpose?10:12
persiaWouldn't it help force the upgrade case if someone had the ancient package around?10:13
slangasekasac: hmm? surely you should just update it once, to (<< $minimal_hardy_version) ?10:13
Koondholbach: you sponsored the pam-pgsql upload for hardy, would you be interested in sponsoring my fakesync for intrepid ? Fixes a security hole.10:13
persia(firefox -> firefox-2)10:13
asacslangasek: guess << 310:13
wgrantslangasek: That's what I thought.10:13
slangasekasac: I think so, yes.10:14
asack. will do that then10:14
dholbachKoon: did I? is your fakesync in the sponsoring queue?10:51
Koondholbach: I just subscribed ubuntu-universe-sponsors, following persia's advice.10:53
dholbachok great10:54
dholbachI'll triage the quee later on10:54
dholbachqueue10:54
Koondholbach: thx10:54
ograsiretart, hmm, your rss-glx upload wil break al screensavers that have sound (not thatthis is a bad thing, but expect some bug fallout as last uploader)11:20
ogra(people like to complain about such stuff)11:20
persiaogra: Aren't there already none of those as a result of bug #21507 ?11:22
ubottuLaunchpad bug 21507 in rss-glx "Disturbing sounds in Skyrocket screensaver" [Medium,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/2150711:22
ograthere are mre than skyrockat afaik and this one just ha the volume set to zero, you can easily swithc it back on11:23
ogra*skyrocket11:23
ograpersia, i dont really care (especially since my name isnt the last uploader here :) and i gave screensavers to tedg quite a while ago ... ) but there are many people ot there that use xscreensaver for example where you have the opportunity to adjust volume of a single screensaver, they will surely open bugs for that11:26
=== Lamego_ is now known as joaopinto
siretartogra: are you serious with people complaining that their screensaver won't make any noise anymore?11:30
siretartthat is a so unbelievable silly feature to me that I have to ask this question11:30
ograsiretart, the bug abouve definately had the same (less funny though) in the opposite direction, yes :)11:31
ogratake over screensavers for a release, you will encounter the funniest bugreports :)11:31
ograsiretart, i totally agree with you about the sillyness, that was just a warning that people will surely notice it and complain11:32
siretartogra: I think having openal in universe is way more desireable than having screensavers making silly noises11:32
siretartand I'm willing to argue about this in front of the TB11:32
ograis rss-glx realy the only one to use it ? i would have expected some sdl games etc to use it too11:33
ograno need to involve the TB here unless the bugs get to tricky :)11:33
siretartogra: AFAIK all those packages are in universe. if you happen to notice another package in main using openal, please notify me11:34
ograwill do so, thanks for caring for the breakage11:35
persiaogra: SDL games use SDL sound.  SDL sound can use several backends, openal included.  I believe it uses ALSA by default.11:35
ogra(and for tagging your name on the screensavers *G*)11:35
siretartand since there is no libsdl1.2debian-openal, sdl is not a problem here11:38
siretartogra: you need openal for games that feature *spacial* sound. having a screensaver with *spacial* sound supported is so unbelievably silly to my mind that I cannot express it11:39
ograwell, if you want to hear the rockets flying over your head ....11:39
ogra:)11:39
siretartexactly11:40
persiaogra: And at angles, so you hear them getting louder, and in the right direction?  Isn't it easier to code it to just swoop?  Anyway, aren't screen savers supposed to avoid CRT burn-in, while letting your computer sleep?11:40
ograwoah11:41
ograhttp://parker1.co.uk/eternity/11:41
ograwe should urgently get these in11:41
broonieA lot of people use them because they look pretty :)11:41
* ogra poders for tedg to wake up11:41
siretartpersia seems to agree with me :)11:42
ograpersia, they were when CRTs showed green text  ... today they are to support global warming :)11:42
persiaogra: I had more burn-in on polychromatic CRTs than on monochromatic ones.  I have one CRT that can't get bright enough to use anymore, due to phosphor loss.11:43
siretartogra: do they feature spacial sound? ;)11:44
sistpoty|worksiretart: rss-glx does11:44
ograsiretart, patches accepted, i'm sure :)11:44
sistpoty|worksiretart: though it imho should play mp3/ogg instead *g*11:44
slangasekasac: mmm, I should probably ask here for realtime feedback - what are your plans for bug #230209?11:45
ubottuLaunchpad bug 230209 in thunderbird-locales "upgrade thunderbird locales for 2.0.0.x and include new upstream translations" [Wishlist,In progress] https://launchpad.net/bugs/23020911:45
slangasekasac: if you think this still belongs in 8.04.1, I need it in the archive today11:45
siretartsistpoty|work: not anymore, I disabled openal in rss-glx in the last upload11:46
siretartogra: /me runs away. screeming11:47
ograheh11:47
sistpoty|workheh11:47
=== elky is now known as elkbuntu
ion_benc: I’m sure you’ve already thought of what i’m saying, but here goes anyway: there probably should be a package that contains a /etc/kernel/prerm.d script that generates a last-good-boot from the current running system if one doesn’t exist, and the version of apt that removes the NeverAutoRemove rules from /e/a/a/01autoremove probably should depend on that package, in order to make sure a last-good-boot exists before any kernels are autoremoved in ...11:48
ion_... case the user happens to be running an earlier kernel because the newest one doesn’t boot for her.11:48
asacslangasek: not needed imo. I will talk to ArneGoetje about including it in the usual language pack update batch11:49
slangasekasac: ok, unmilestoning, thanks11:49
asacslangasek: i dropped  a comment too :)11:51
ograScottK, bug 235135, that fix wont work generally and for everyone... if you use asound-plugins instead of libflashsupport while pulseaudio is running (and claiming the device) on a non dmix capable soundcard, you wont have any sound from flash at all12:00
ubottuLaunchpad bug 235135 in flashplugin-nonfree "[MASTER] Please backport flashplugin-nonfree version 10 beta and asound-plugins from Intrepid so we can drop libflashsupport and the crashes it causes" [Undecided,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/23513512:00
mantienahi all12:23
mantienaI'm going to test 8.04.1 candidate images, maybe someone knows - are there any important bugs, which I should test with Ubuntu 8.04.1 candidate from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/cdimage/hardy/ ?12:27
ln-...12:28
halexer...12:29
ln-ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE12:29
=== tkamppeter__ is now known as tkamppeter
ln-how did that even happen?12:31
Picimantiena: Have you checked out #ubuntu-testing ? They might be able to point you in the right direction.12:33
Spadsln-: guh, unicode allows for all sorts of horror.  Try pasting a zillion combining characters with nothing to combine to sometime.  irssi in screen goes completely spare12:33
mantienaPici: I already asked this question at ubuntu-testing, but no answer :( in any case - downloading takes about 3 hours, so, I have some time to get an answer :)12:37
ScottKogra: I'm looking for a good recommendation on how to approach that bug.12:44
ograif we knew one hadry wouldnt suck so much with flash :)12:45
ograthe proper solution would be to have libflashsupport fixed, but that requires internal knowledge of flash code ...12:46
ograpulse expects to hog the device completely with nothing interfering .... but flash with pulse needs libflashsupport ... all other solutions wil end up with concurret access to the sound device which works or doesnt depending on the dmix capability of your driver/card12:48
=== ara is now known as ara_lunch
ScottKOK.  So maybe good is the wrong word.12:50
ograits kind of gambling to rely on dmix here but probably the only solution, i just wanted to point out that you wont fix it for everyone with either solution ... (one opportunity would be to just hide the crash through using nspluginwrapper in 32bit like fedora does, but thats no oportunity for hardy and also doesnt *feel* right)12:50
ScottKHow about least bad.12:50
ograyeah, "sucks least" is probably the right term :)12:50
ScottKIt just seemed that 'everyone will use pulse by default' was not the right assumption to use.12:51
ograwell, if libflahsupport would work as it did in gutsy it would all be fine ... but flash changed and the lib didnt keep up12:52
Companyubuntu should just default to pulse everywhere12:55
Companyand drop dmix12:55
Companywell, maybe not, because that means more poeple use swfdec instead of closed source12:55
ScottKCompany: Hardy is what it is at this point and won't change at that level.  It's to late for should.12:56
Companyoh right12:57
Companyi was thinking intrepid here12:57
ograCompany, right, thats what we will likely do12:57
Companybut flash isn't the only one talking to dmix - or did you make mplayer etc talk to pulse, too?12:58
ograi think mplayer has an opportunity, i'm not much into players myself12:58
ograsiretart would surely know ...12:58
Companyi don't have much of a clue about the hardy situation as i have everything customized - life of an upstream developer12:59
wgrantmplayer defaults to pulse.12:59
wgrantOr maybe I didn't end up doing that.13:00
wgrantBut it has the option.13:00
Companyalsa has the option to default to pulse, too ;)13:00
ograyes, thats how we do remote sound in LTSP13:00
persiaCompany: Yes, but as pulse uses ALSA for output, that ends up being a little odd.13:00
Companypersia: nope13:01
Companypersia: pulse only takes hardware devices13:01
ograwell, it uses the alsa driver to do so13:01
Companypersia: fedora 9 does it that way13:01
ogra(not the libs tough)13:01
Companyso they transparently moved all apps to pulse13:02
Companyalmost transparently13:02
ograheh13:02
Companyi was under the impression pulse only replaced esd in hardy13:02
persiaCompany: Almost transparently.  There's a number of side effects of the app -> alsa -> pulse -> alsa -> HW loop, but it's more transparent than hardy.13:02
Companypersia: i'm aware of the problems (like no mmap access) - but the fedora guys seemed pretty happy13:03
Companyyou could hack libflashsupport to check for a pulse output in alsa and if it exists prefer that over default13:04
Companydunno if that requires hacking alsa config to provide one though13:05
ograthat wont keep libflashsupport from crashing firefox13:06
ografirst of all libflashsupport needs to actually not segfault before we can even think about going on using it :)13:06
Companyoh, it's that bad?13:07
Companyignore me then :)13:07
ion_nspluginwrapper for 32bit would be nice indeed.13:07
ograit tears down FF if you go back and forward on a youtube site13:07
ograion_, well, it only hides the prob13:07
Companyi think you deserve it for not going entirely free :p13:08
ion_Yes, but as long as we have closed-source plugins, it might be best to hide the problem. :-)13:08
ogra(and surely many others as well, which is a bad sideeffect since such bugs wont be reported ot fixed)13:08
Companyseeing flash and nvidia blow up in your face is nice :p13:08
ograbuy intel :)13:08
Companyi have intel13:09
ograwell, that was a more generally meant shameless advert :)13:09
Companyubuntu should have more shameless adverts13:10
ograheh13:10
Companyput "everything works better than nvidia" on the cds13:10
ion_fglrx doesn’t. :-P13:11
ogra"you have to play this CD backwards to make it run on nvidia hardware"13:11
lagaheh13:20
emgentmorning13:23
TheMusoslangasek: Nobody has got back to me with anything. I'm going to post instructions to the bug once again to try and get people to help. If nothing happens, theres not much I can do.13:29
alex-weejevery time there's a kernel update it breaks my wireless, i have to rebuild svn madwifi and install it in place of the distributed madwifi13:44
persiaalex-weej: What is the difference between the two that causes you to do this?13:44
Hobbseealex-weej: it builds kernel-api-specific modules?13:45
alex-weejpossibly... let me try to load the distributed ones. i'll be back in 2 minutes!13:45
alex-weejhttp://pastebin.ca/105898413:51
alex-weejnot much to see...13:51
alex-weejwith the distro modules from l-r-m, n-m doesn't even think i have a wlan adapter13:51
wgrantalex-weej: It's not every kernel update...13:51
wgrantJust ABI-breaking ones.13:51
alex-weejbasically all of them :P13:52
alex-weejbut yeah13:52
persiaalex-weej: The right way to fix that is to determine what bit you need to make your device work, and ensure that this is available in the next update.13:52
alex-weeji was simply trying to say that with every new kernel release, the madwifi version is still ancient13:52
alex-weejor just built wrong13:52
alex-weejcause this has been going on for a very long time13:52
persiaalex-weej: It likely needs someone with affected hardware (e.g. you) to investigate, and generate a good bug report.13:54
=== ara_lunch is now known as ara
=== devfil_ is now known as devfil
alex-weejis already up here actually. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24/+bug/12270314:07
ubottuLaunchpad bug 122703 in linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24 "Upgrade Atheros drivers to snapshot/trunk to support AR5008/AR5418" [Low,In progress]14:07
alex-weeji wanted to test intrepid actually... see if it was fixed14:08
alex-weejbut no Live CD :(14:08
persiaalex-weej: I think that bug tells the story well.  Upstream keeps deciding that the versions you need aren't ready for release, and the kernel developers respect their opinion.14:09
alex-weejyeah i see that myself now.14:10
persiaProbably best to update one of the upstream tickets with your successful test report and help build confidence in the driver upstream, if it works for you.14:10
alex-weejannoying, as they claim all their efforts are going on ath5k now14:10
alex-weejand this chipset won't be supported for a while as there's no open HAL for it14:10
BenCpitti, doko, cjwatson: Is it possible to get makedumpfile MIRd today? :)14:53
* cjwatson <- not in ubuntu-mir and would rather not14:57
BenCcjwatson: ah, thought you were for some reason15:00
croessnerHi, somebody here, having experiences with installing hardy on Apple Xserve Intel? Where can I get (commercial) support on that?15:08
Picicroessner: This isnt a support channel. You might be able to find free help in #ubuntu or #ubuntu-server Canonical.com sells support, although I do not know the specifics of what hardware they will support it on.15:10
croessnerPici, thx, I know that this is not a support channel. At the other side, I did not know where to ask elsewhere. All the commercial supporters are PC supporters not Apple Xserve. So I thought asking the devs for help.15:12
BenCcroessner: canonical would be able to provide more information on support contracts15:13
ubuntuzisthenewwok who  is the guy making all the restart jokes15:24
ubuntuzisthenewwi just updated samba and openssl and i am told to reboot, what kind of joke is it ?15:24
ubuntuzisthenewwwhy don't i go use windows that is better than this ?15:24
ion_Eh.15:24
ion_Please read the topic.15:24
ubuntuzisthenewwsorry to be rude15:24
ubuntuzisthenewwyeah i'm in here complaining to the devs15:25
cjwatsonyou don't have to reboot if you're sure that you've restarted everything using the relevant libraries15:25
ubuntuzisthenewwyou guys. this isn't an issue or a bug15:25
ubuntuzisthenewwcjwatson: why doesn't ubuntu just do that for me ?15:25
cjwatsonunfortunately, while restarting server processes is relatively straightforward and we do that, restarting clients is infeasible15:25
ubuntuzisthenewwthis is not a good way to keep new users15:25
ion_So, you’d rather tell newbies ”please restart everything that depends on the following libraries”?15:25
cjwatsonand it can actually matter for the openssl updates, I'm afraid15:25
ubuntuzisthenewwcjwatson: yeah i have done 4 in the past month why is that ?15:26
ubuntuzisthenewwmy debian box has had about 2ish15:26
cjwatsonsee the changelogs15:26
cjwatsonwe provide extensive documentation with each update, for those interested in digging15:27
ubuntuzisthenewwcan you guys up in in dev fix your distro so we don't get new users jumping over to vista. which reboots far less often15:27
ubuntuzisthenewwno offense15:27
joaopintoubuntuzistheneww, like if new users had major concerns with the need to reboot, specially when they get a proper notification...15:27
cjwatsonwe're not really interested in a debate of this form15:27
cjwatsonbugs are bugs, and are given priorities15:27
cjwatsonbut sometimes we just disagree15:27
ubuntuzisthenewwthis is a bug15:27
ubuntuzisthenewwi'm filing a bug15:27
cjwatsonit's not especially clear that it is15:27
ubuntuzisthenewwits a bug15:28
ubuntuzisthenewwthank you15:28
ion_Meh.15:28
* cjwatson shrugs, if he doesn't even want to listen to us trying to explain ...15:28
ion_benc: Have you had a chance to look at my email (the grub last-good-boot debdiff), btw?15:30
ubuntuzisthenewwi have filed a bug https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/244250 good day15:35
ubottuLaunchpad bug 244250 in ubuntu "reboot every single update in the past month on ubuntu hardy nearly. massively decreasing my uptime." [Undecided,New]15:35
ion_I wonder how *uptime* is relevant.15:36
sorenim in ur apt eeting ur uptimez..15:36
ScottKIf you're selling hosting services and have quality of service provisions in the contract every reboot can cost you.15:42
cjwatsonI'm addressing the bug report; there is at least one real issue buried in there, I think15:43
sistpoty|workScottK: but then you wouldn't want a single point of failure as well, like only one box for a service? ;)15:43
ion_scottk: Such servers aren’t running a desktop that suggests a user to reboot. It is expected that such servers have admins that can handle the restarting of services in a way they see fit.15:44
ScottKTrue.15:44
BenCion_: yeah15:45
broonieOTOH, if you've got lots of state open then then rebooting can be rather inconvenient.15:45
=== lamont` is now known as lamont
cjwatsonplease see my comments in the bug report15:47
ion_benc: When the apt rule for not autoremoving old kernels is removed, perhaps apt should have a versioned dependency on grub (or another package to which the last-good-boot scripts may be split to from grub), in order to make sure a last-good-boot exists when the kernels are finally autoremoved.15:48
lamontJun 30 08:46:47 gw kernel: [ 1273.611780] audit(1214837207.018:23): type=1503 operation="inode_permission" requested_mask="::w" denied_mask="::w" name="/var/cache/bind/" pid=20209 profile="/usr/sbin/named" namespace="default"15:48
* lamont curses apparmor15:48
BenCion_: we can't add a dependency15:50
BenCion_: and we don't support partial upgrades...plus, not having last-good-boot (even in some skewed fashion) doesn't break anything15:51
ion_benc: I was thinking of a case where someone upgrades from, say, hardy to intrepid and afterwards runs an aptitude command that autoremoves old kernels, only to reboot later and notice that the intrepid kernel doesn’t boot for her.15:53
ion_Would be nice if *something* created an initial last-good-boot from the running system. Perhaps grub postinst?15:53
BenCion_: I thought the /etc/kernel/prerm.d/last-good-boot would handle that case15:54
cjwatsonwe do necessarily have to support partial upgrades to some extent15:54
cjwatsonwith the best of good will, upgrades will fail sometimes, and we don't want to leave the user's system unbootable in the middle of it15:54
BenCcjwatson: well, to the extent that it works15:54
cjwatsonwe should try to avoid making it worse, as a general rule ...15:55
mkrufkycan we merge the fix for bug #244005 (pull request included in bug report) ...  or do I have to send it to kernel team?15:55
ubottuLaunchpad bug 244005 in linux-ubuntu-modules-2.6.24 "sms1xxx OOPS on 64 bit kernels" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/24400515:55
BenCa kernel doesn't really allow itself to be uninstalled if it is the currently running kernel, IIRC15:56
ion_benc: Hm, that might be true... I was just thinking it would be best to make sure /etc/kernel/prerm.d/last-good-boot is already installed when removing the NoAutoRemove rules.15:56
BenCmaybe kernel-helper shouldn't be part of grub then...not sure where to put it15:57
ion_Perhaps a separate last-good-boot package, which just contains kernel-helper and the /etc scripts?15:57
BenCI feel like there should be someplace else to put it (if for no other reason than to avoid yet another MIR :)15:58
ion_Smaller delta from Debian’s grub as well.15:58
BenCthe extra script in grub doesn't really bother me delta wise...the changes to update-grub would still be there15:59
ion_Yeah15:59
wgrant5~/win 316:07
Riddellasac: what's the plan with network-manager?16:09
asacRiddell: bits are in ~network-manager PPA if you want to test.16:10
asacRiddell: is knetworkmanager more or less ready for 0.7?16:10
Riddellasac: no idea, I'll grab those ~network-manager packages and see if I can get anything working16:11
Riddellit should be, suse uses it for opensuse 11 I believe16:11
asacRiddell: yeah right. the gnome applet still needs a bunch of work too, so i if it basically works it should be fine16:12
dbmoodboh hi does any one know why -f --- the option to fsck on reboot was removed from ubuntu ?16:14
Spads_dbmoodb: experimentally, I can tell you that touching /forcefsck (the effect of -f on shutdown was to create this file) does have the desired effect on boot16:16
=== Spads_ is now known as Spads
dbmoodbyes but was was it removed ...16:17
dbmoodbwhy*16:18
Riddellasac: network-manager-0.7~~svn20080628t003601+eni2 not compiling for me in intrepid http://paste.ubuntu.com/23994/16:18
ion_Likely nobody happened to implement it in the Upstart reimplementation of the command.16:18
dbmoodbif all it does is make do that operation ... why is the option in upstart ?16:18
dbmoodbnot in *16:19
asacRiddell: hmm. dont you have hardy to test?16:19
* ion_ is compelled to repeat his previous line16:19
asacRiddell: you might be able to override CFLAGS so that warnings dont make compiler bail out for now16:20
mario_limonciellpitti, ping.  if you have a moment, I wanted to chat with you on the modalias detection on intrepid for fglrx/nvidia and jockey16:42
EtienneGquestion about debconf (yeah!)16:57
EtienneGusing DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive, should it still display notes of priority critical that are unseen ?16:57
EtienneG(ie, ssh/vulnerable_host_keys)16:58
cjwatsonEtienneG: no - noninteractive means noninteractive, regardless of priority16:59
mario_limonciellpitti, oh I just saw your message that you are on holiday until wed.  for the package fglrx-modaliases, currently we're dropping the aliases in /usr/share/modaliases/fglrx-modules.alias.override.  It doesn't seem that this is currently in the search path for Jockey.  What path did you want things to be put in instead so that detection worked properly?16:59
cjwatsonEtienneG: if you want "only ask critical questions", use an interactive frontend with appropriate priority configured16:59
EtienneGcjwatson, thanks, that confirm my understanding16:59
cjwatsonEtienneG: I'm curious as to what's behind your question17:00
EtienneGcjwatson, someone complains that DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive still prompt for openssh-server and ssl-cert (vuln cert/host keys), and on config file replacements17:01
EtienneGcjwatson, I think the way he set DEBIAN_FRONTEND is wrong; that is what I am going to check now17:02
cjwatsonEtienneG: right17:02
cjwatsonEtienneG: note that configuration file replacements are often *not* through debconf17:02
cjwatsonDEBIAN_FRONTEND will not affect many of those in the slightest17:02
EtienneGcjwatson, thanks, that is something else that needs to be taken into account17:02
cjwatsonwe don't have a good solution to that across the board; some packages use ucf which is debconf-based, but really dpkg's own prompts need to be glued into debconf; that will take a while yet17:03
EtienneGcjwatson, ok, I see17:03
EtienneGthe two packages that have prompted for conf file replacement are clamav-freshclam and samba-common17:04
EtienneGI will investigate17:04
EtienneGcjwatson, assuming conf file is indeed managed without the help of debconf, should a bug be filed ?17:04
EtienneGit is debatable, I am not too sure17:04
cjwatsonEtienneG: not generally17:11
cjwatsonEtienneG: it needs to be fixed centrally rather than piecemeal17:11
EtienneG'k17:12
cjwatsonEtienneG: incautious mucking about with configuration file handling code can be dangerous, so I don't want to encourage it to be done widely by people not very familiar with the packages17:12
EtienneGcjwatson, I am all good that17:12
cjwatsonEtienneG: however: if the user did not modify the configuration file in question and still gets prompted, then that is definitely a bug17:12
EtienneGcjwatson, re: ucf, should it honor DEBIAN_FRONTEND or not?17:13
cjwatsonEtienneG: this sort of thing sometimes happens when a package maintainer decides to edit the file in maintainer scripts as well as managing the file with dpkg, which is explicitly forbidden in the policy manual17:13
cjwatsonEtienneG: ucf asks all its questions through debconf and therefore automatically honours DEBIAN_FRONTEND17:13
EtienneGcjwatson, samba-common does indeed some mucking around smb.conf, if I read the postinst correctly17:14
EtienneGsed -e ...17:14
cjwatsonsamba -> painful case17:15
cjwatsonslangasek: ^-- ?17:15
=== thekorn_ is now known as thekorn
=== Kopfgeldjaeger2 is now known as Kopfgeldjaeger
sbeattiecalc: is the openoffice update intended to make 8.04.1 release?18:09
calcsbeattie: yes, probably need to talk to slangasek about whether it can still make it, sine it didn't get accepted until today18:11
calcs/sine/since/18:11
calcit fixes a crasher bug on gnome and kde18:11
sbeattieokay.18:11
calcapparently it affects many people, just not me :-\18:11
calcso it took me a while to be able to track it down18:12
sbeattieEww. Is that bug 236676?18:13
ubott2Launchpad bug 236676 in openoffice.org "OpenOffice 2.4 in Hardy AMD64, Locking assertion failure" [High,Fix committed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/23667618:13
calcyes18:13
calcit should be done in about 14hr on ia64 (if it takes as long as usual)18:13
calciirc it was actually caused by heap corruption in xrandr18:14
calcbut the symptoms were really strange :)18:14
jcristaucalc: was that ever fixed, other than by disabling the randr thing in ooo?18:17
calcjcristau: from what i could tell in the ooo-build changelog yes18:17
jcristauok18:17
calcyea they aren't disabling randr anymore afaict18:18
=== bdmurray_ is now known as bdmurray
=== evand_ is now known as evand
=== fta_ is now known as fta
=== smarter_ is now known as smarter
cody-somervilleslangasek, ping19:35
smagounevand: do you have a minute to chat about https://wiki.ubuntu.com/USBInstallationImages ? Are you writing the ISO-->USB tool from scratch?20:12
=== mathiaz_ is now known as mathiaz
evandsmagoun: sure.20:20
evandsmagoun: indeed, as it stands it's going to be written from scratch.20:20
smagounevand: Have you considered using Fedora's liveusb-creator? It looks like it does everything the Ubuntu tool needs, and as an added bonus it works on windows20:22
evandsmagoun: unfortunately I think this is going to be a little too tied to Ubuntu to reuse their tool.  Also, we can't use Qt for it as we'd like to put it on the CD and there is not enough space for Qt on that.20:24
evandI will take a closer look though and confirm though.20:24
smagounevand: ah, ok. I assume that the Ubuntu tool doesn't exist yet?20:27
evandsmagoun: correct20:27
slangasekcody-somerville: pong20:32
slangasekTheMuso: hrm, I see follow-ups to bug #191027 with no reply from you, though20:33
ubott2Launchpad bug 191027 in totem ""Failed to connect stream: Invalid argument"" [High,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/19102720:33
SolarWari'm trying to build my own ubuntu package- is this the correct place to ask questions?20:34
thomnope; try #ubuntu-motu20:35
thomthis is for development of the core OS :)20:36
SolarWaroh okay :)20:38
slangasekcjwatson: so, samba-common uses ucf, and I don't see any evidence that ucf would fail to honor DEBIAN_FRONTEND20:39
slangasekcjwatson: so I don't know what that's about20:39
ScottKsmagoun: Of course the Kubuntu CD already has QT on it, so maybe for Kubuntu.20:42
ograheh20:42
cjwatsonScottK: I doubt we'd want a different backend for different flavours20:46
cjwatsonif the Fedora one has frontend/backend separation then we could work with it20:47
ScottKRight, so we start with Kubuntu and Ubuntu can catch up for once.20:47
ScottKYes.20:47
ograsmagoun, given that -mobile looks into a wrapper around livecd-rootfs for building USB capable images my bet would be that its easier for you to build native images with that instead of converting isos20:50
* cjwatson would tend to agree20:53
smagounogra: my current plan is to teach liveusb-creator to install an existing Image Creator image onto a USB drive, rather than deal with an ISO directly or wait for -mobile to get something working. I need something that a) exists today b) works on windows and c) can be used by mere humans. liveusb-creator seems to be the only option.20:53
ograwell, the changes we need in livecd-rootfs are pretty minor and it would take me a day or two to adjust my classmate builder tool for using a squashfs built with changed livecd-rootfs ... the planned wrapper script will likely work similar to my tool or the virtual image builder scripts .... all operate quite similar with small differences20:57
mkrufkybrb20:58
ograsmagoun, we dont have liveusb-creator anywhere in the distro and i wouldnt expect it to work out of te box with an ubuntu setup ... so time has to be invested in any case, doing that on the existing proven tools we will as well go on using in the future sounds somehow like better invested manpower ...21:00
smagounogra: The problem is not how to create the images, it is how to get them onto a USB drive. I need a tool that does that.21:00
ograyou maean something like a graphical dd ?21:01
ogra*mean21:01
smagounogra: right, that's why I asked here in the first place. liveusb-creator seems to be the only option that exists today.21:01
smagounogra: exactly.21:01
mkrufkyargh, i said brb to the wrong room, again21:01
* mkrufky hides21:01
smagounogra: the reason I want a graphical dd is that I don't want a user picking the wrong device. 'dd if=C:\my.iso of=C:\' would be bad in this case.21:04
ograsmagoun, well, first step would be to get it packaged then, second to get it working with ubuntu at all, third backport to hardy (which i assume you target atm) that probably wont be faster than writing something from scratch21:04
* ogra wasnt aware windows had dd at all ... i always point users to rawrite21:05
* ogra reads liveusb-creator homepage21:08
ograheh21:09
ogra * Completely non-destructive install. There is no need to deal with formatting or partitioning your USB key.21:09
smagounogra: liveusb-creator worked out of the box on Hardy, so that's not a problem. I'm not familiar with rawrite, is that something I could give to (say) a marketing person without worrying about destroying his/her hard disk?21:09
ograi wonder how you overwrite an usb key in a nondestructive way :)21:09
ograsmagoun, i'm not even sure it works with USB devices, its from the time where you had to dd images to floppies under linux and rawrite was the equivalent to do so on windows21:10
ografrom the screenshots it looks very close to what we planned for the ubuntu iso->USB thing in pargue21:12
smagounogra: liveusb-creator will write an image to an existing filesystem on the USB disk, then install syslinux to make the USB key bootable. It even works, I used it a previous job.21:12
ograwell, one question is how it interacts with casper or whatever custom initramfs script you use for booting the installed system on the key21:14
ograit looks like it would be easy to customize to just grab ubuntu isos instead of fedora ones21:14
ograhmm21:16
ogra"Linux support for the liveusb-creator is still in beta, but you can easily test it by doing the following..."21:16
ograseems the oly released version is the winows tool yet21:17
davidmsmagoun, are you talking about moving image to a USB stick on Linux or Windows or both?21:26
smagoundavidm: both, really21:26
davidmcause on Linux it's a 10 line bash script if you want to be super safe, windows I have no idea21:27
davidmone line if you don't care about safe21:27
smagoundavidm: safe is the problem (and windows is the other problem)21:28
davidmSafe is prompt them to insert USB and wait for new USB drive to insert, prompt OK and then copy to device, done. WIndows hell if I know.21:29
ograugh, liveusb-creator works with device names ... should use UUIDs and descriptive names instead ...21:29
* ogra tries to install a hardy iso with a modified liveusb-creator ...21:30
davidmCould wrap a gui around a script and even make it cool looking.21:30
ograyeah21:30
ografor the linux side thats an afternoon of work for an experienced pygtk programmer ...21:31
ograbut smagoun wants a windows tool as well21:31
ogratedg, hey ... do you know these ? http://parker1.co.uk/eternity/21:32
ogra(check the videos, they are quite cool, somethig to consider to include)21:32
tedgogra, no I hadn't see them.  Just the pictures are pretty cool.21:32
ograyeah, and upstream seems very ubuntu enthusiastic21:33
* ogra twiddles thumbs waiting for liveusb-creator downloading the hardy iso ... i bet it will fail becaue we dont provide sha1 checksums in the archive for the isos 21:34
ScottKdoko: I've attached a patch for Bug #207150.  I'd appreciate it if you'd take a look.  If you like, I can upload it (or not), but thought I should check with you first.21:34
ubott2Launchpad bug 207150 in python-central "pycentral crashed with UnboundLocalError in read_pyfiles()" [Low,Triaged] https://launchpad.net/bugs/20715021:34
davidmogra, I've not used Windows in so long I have no idea how to approach it there, except maybe Cygwin?21:37
ograQT runs on windows as well as gtk does21:38
smagoundavidm: fedora has a tool (liveusb-creator) for getting ISOs onto USB. It uses QT, and runs on Windows.21:39
ograthe liveusb-creator git tree has a dd.exe and (7z.exe in the source intresting there is no license or sourcecode for it which breaks the GPL)21:39
ograit has only four functions and is really not very much code ...21:40
ograbut i still doubt our isos will work with it at all ... fedoras bootpocess and especially the initramfs is *massively* different to ours21:41
ograit will need a fair amount of adjustment and testing before you can even think about using it ... i tend to agree with davidm, writing a quick gui for a script will pretty much achieve the same functionallity ...21:42
davidmWonder if they got dd from here: http://gmgsystemsinc.com/fau/21:43
ograthey cheat by using a binary dd.exe21:43
ograwe can do pretty much the same (but properly licensed i bet)21:43
ogra"The Forensic Acquisition Utilities are distributed under the GMG Systems, Inc. Open License. "21:44
ograhmm21:44
davidmOr it could be from here: http://uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/rawwrite/dd-old.htm  That at least is GPL'ed21:45
ograno sourcecode anywhere on the fau site21:45
davidmogra, Nope, it's binary only21:46
ograyeah, the latter looks like something that can be used though21:47
ograah, well21:47
ogra"This version does not actually do any conversion but it allows the flexible copying of data under in a win32 environment. At the moment block devices under Win9x are not supported but that will be added soon."21:47
ogralast modifies in 200621:47
ogra*modified21:47
ogradoesnt look like fast progress21:47
davidmogra, nope, slow as in stopped.21:48
ograhttp://www.garloff.de/kurt/linux/ddrescue/ looks more recent and is GPL21:48
ion_dd_rhelp is a nice frontend for dd-rescue.21:50
davidmAh, yea that might be better.  Tell you the truth however I don't really care about windows too much, not my cup of tea.21:51
* ogra read frontend as in GUI above ... 21:51
ograso i looked for screenshots21:51
ograhttp://linux.softpedia.com/progScreenshots/dd-rhelp-Screenshot-30608.html21:51
ogra:P21:51
ograsmagoun, liveusb-creator is defnately no option for shipping it to customers until that dd.exe license issue is clear21:53
davidmis dd-rescue Windows?  I only really see Linux stuff21:53
ograhmm, it was linked from the fau page21:54
ograah, no from the rawrite page, sorry21:55
ograi guess the rawrite one is the best bet we have, even though its old and outdated, it claims to run on win2000 which makes me think it will likely work on XP as well21:56
smagounogra: the DD license is listed in README.txt, it is GPLv2.21:56
smagounogra: https://fedorahosted.org/liveusb-creator/browser/README.txt21:57
ograoh, right i looked at the different shipped license files21:57
ograheh, and it links to http://www.chrysocome.net/dd which looks suspiciously like http://uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/rawwrite/dd-old.htm :)21:58
ogra(not to say its the same content :) )21:58
davidmhttp://www.chrysocome.net/projects has dd for windows and rawWrite for windows, all under GPL but you need delphi!!!22:05
davidmWhich explains the development slowdown....22:05
ograyeah22:09
ogradownload is at 92% ...22:16
ogra*twiddle* *twiddle*22:16
davidmogra, years ago I wrote a .h file that let me rename .pas files. to .c and include the .h and it would compile under C.  I wonder if you could do that with delphi files.22:17
davidmThat was straight pascal however not object pascal22:17
ograno idea, i never touched dlphi in my life ... when delphi was recent there was also perl (and perl-gtk) for windows ;)22:18
ograDownloading ubuntu-8.04-desktop-i386.iso...22:20
ograDownload complete!22:20
ograVerifying filesystem...22:20
ograNot enough free space on device.22:20
ogra699MB ISO + 0MB overlay > 164MB free space22:20
ograLiveUSB creation failed!22:20
ograah well ...22:20
ograits an empty 2G usb key you silly thing !22:20
* ogra expected problems ... but surely not at that stage yet22:22
ograits funny because it offers me to use the full 2048M of the key to select as persistent space ... so it knows there is enough room22:28
* soren_ thinks he knows why Intrepid won't boot in kvm..22:33
soren_Hmm... where'd that underscore come from?22:33
=== soren_ is now known as soren
=== gnomefre1k is now known as gnomefreak
slangasekcody-somerville: would you be able to test that the fix for bug #220817 is good?22:52
ubott2Launchpad bug 220817 in openoffice.org "OpenOffice.org language packs pull in openoffice.org binaries" [High,Fix committed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/22081722:52
slangasekcody-somerville: i.e., that if you enable -proposed immediately, you don't get OOo pulled in right after a xubuntu install?22:53
* ogra wonders why he seems to get a handfull of mail duplicated once a week ... 22:55
ograi have gotten that "please compile git with curl" mail 18 times in ubuntu-devel-discuss now22:57
ograand a bunh of bugmail that comes dulicated at least once a wekk22:57
ogra*week22:57
ogradoes anyone else see that ?22:57
ScottKNo.  POP3 or IMAP?22:58
ScottKWhat mail client?22:58
ograpop3 googlemail ....22:58
ograi see it coming in at the google interface as well, its not an issue on my side according to that behavior22:59
ScottKRight.  I'd blame Google.22:59
ograyou mean an internal SMTP server that sends it over and over ?23:00
ograhmm, might be23:00
ScottKDunno.23:02
smagounogra: FWIW I got liveusb-creator to copy an MIC image onto a USB stick. I hacked l-c to do a straight dd, no non-destructive writing for now. Now to see if it works on windoze...23:11
ograwell, then just rebrand it and you got what you want ... we can put a package in intrepid and backport it from there so you have it available for hardy users in ome way23:12
ogra*some23:13
smagounyup, that's the plan (not sure it's going into intrepid/backports yet, I'll think about that one tomorrow :) )23:13
ograwell, if we need it i can package it in the distro, no probs here23:13
* ogra doesnt see a prob telling customers to use an ubuntu liveCD instead of having to maintain win software though 23:18
ograuhm, intresting, i cant ctrl-C liveusb-creator in the terminal i stared it in23:27
ogra*started23:27
=== Zic_ is now known as Zic
=== ecanto is now known as edson
=== edson is now known as ecanto

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