/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2009/02/24/#ubuntu-devel.txt

wgrantjdong_: With LP project<->team affiliations which are coming soon, comments by real people (ie. people connected to the project somehow) will be able to be shown as more important.00:02
fruchtixcould somebody explain the reasoning why debtags and ept-cache are in the ubuntu repository but not integrated in ubuntu at all?00:10
LaserJockperhaps nobody has had time/interest to integrate it yet00:12
directhexyeah, i started but i got bored00:12
directhexi might write it in intercal00:12
fruchtixif 1 person would care to promote it in a suitable way there might be enough peope on #ubuntu-motu who contribute?00:12
directhexideas are cheap. developers less so00:13
fruchtixenrico did all the word it needs from the developer side00:14
directhexi.e. feel free to make proposals, e.g. use brainstorm, but don't anticipate a flood of people to implement your ideas before anything else00:14
fruchtixbefore i waste my time the next weeks i am asking for the reasons why its potential use ignored by the core developers00:15
fruchtixuse/is00:15
LaserJockI didn't even know ept-cache existed00:15
LaserJockI know about debtags but I'm not sure if we've got anything that would really make use of them00:15
fruchtixits one of the smartest ideas on how to handle thousands of package descriptions in such a way that users find what they are looking for - since binary packages were invented00:16
fruchtixbecause traditional categories for packages are fine for Ubuntu's CD 100:17
fruchtixbut not for 20,000 packages00:17
LaserJockI think most people see the value in debtags (or at least the concept)00:17
fruchtixwhy the promotion without the debian community did not work is kind of logical. anything new is a danger to conservative people. but i dont get why the concept is completely ignored by ubuntu00:18
fruchtixwithout/within00:18
LaserJockI don't think it's completely ignored00:19
cjwatsonjust that nobody's had time to do anything interesting with it; as you say, it isn't really needed by the default installation so hasn't reached top-priority kind of status00:19
cjwatsonI think we'd welcome somebody working on it properly00:19
cjwatsonthere's been no explicit "debtags sucks, let's ignore it" kind of decision AFAIK00:19
slangasekKeybuk: will the new udev also declare a Breaks: on the old lvm2 (eventually)?00:19
fruchtixi am not even close to become an ubuntu developer. so its not the right task for me00:19
slangasekKeybuk: also, are the changes to libs-cleanup.patch and drop-realtime.patch in lvm2 intentional?00:20
fruchtixit requires a person with enough influence to poke the right people so the necessary promotion starts. the volunteers who do the work will come to you automatically00:20
cjwatsonI don't think it works like that at all00:20
cjwatsonlots of things are bottom-up not top-down, in my experience00:21
cjwatsonand volunteers CERTAINLY do not automatically materialise no matter what you do00:21
Keybukslangasek: I had to refresh them, quilt told me to otherwise it would kill kittens00:21
fruchtixpromotion is the key00:21
slangasekKeybuk: ah; the refreshed patches look rather... different from the previous revision00:22
KeybukBreaks - yes, it should probably have some of those00:22
Keybukslangasek: really? I didn't look at them00:22
cjwatsonanyone can do promotion00:22
slangasekKeybuk: both patches now patch less than they did before :)00:22
slangaseknot sure why that would've happened with a refresh00:22
Keybukslangasek: quilt is evil00:22
cjwatsonalthough I would suggest a more constructive attitude than "before i waste my time the next weeks i am asking for the reasons why its potential use ignored by the core developers" / "but i dont get why the concept is completely ignored by ubuntu"00:22
slangaseknot IME00:22
fruchtixthats not true. when the right people post a comment on their blog it creates huge waves of attention00:23
fruchtixwhen i dedicate 5 servers it gains me nothing00:23
cjwatsonconsider how the right people became the right people00:23
cjwatsonthey did the work00:23
cjwatsonanyway, this isn't my area of interest, I'm just advising; you can take it or leave it00:23
fruchtixfantastic for those who did the right things ages ago. maybe i become a hacker in my next life00:24
ScottKfruchtix: Whining about not being influential and not actually doing stuff isn't likely to help you reach your stated goal.00:25
cjwatsonso far your general tone has succeeded in persuading me to go off and do something else more productive. :-(00:25
fruchtixits just sad when you see for what rubbish some celebrities use their blog and a brilliant idea dies slowly because it gets no attention00:25
ScottKfruchtix: Around here doing stuff tends to get you more attention than whining or blogging.00:26
Keybukslangasek: looks like if you pop -a after building, quilt screws up - reuploaded with the original 2 patches00:26
fruchtixdude, this is not about writing code. nobody needs your code in this case.00:26
fruchtixthe code already exists. and a lot of data exists too00:27
fruchtixbut you see what reactions i get here on this channel? what do you think what reactions i get when i start "doing work", huh?00:27
LaserJockfruchtix: code does need to be written to integrate debtags into useful apps like gnome-app-install and synaptic00:28
cjwatsonhuh? the reaction you got from me was entirely due to your horrifically negative tone00:28
fruchtixso thats why i takes a person with a reputation to pick it up00:28
macofruchtix: or at least someone with a less-whiny tone00:28
Keybukthe people with reputations have an awfully large amount of work that they have to do already00:28
fruchtixmy tone? you feel my tone by text only?00:28
fruchtixthats amazing00:28
cjwatsonI'm entirely happy to support debtags work in any way I can usefully do so, but it isn't my area of expertise so I'd rather do something I'm expert in00:28
fruchtixi love this cyberspace thing00:28
ScottKfruchtix: No, that's why it takes someone whoe doesn't have a horrifically negative tone to take it up.  This may be in your grasp.00:28
macofruchtix: yes, you're full of biting sarcasm, thatd be tone.00:29
cjwatsontext is the way in which you're communicating, so you need to be careful about how things come across; I'm afraid that's life00:29
directhexyou're such an optimist, colin00:29
ScottKParticularly when you're trying to convince other people they want to work on something that interests you more than the.00:29
macocharisma might help00:29
fruchtixmaybe the situation creates the sarcasm and the feeling of anger for people who believe the gained all the fame for themselves instead of using it for the benefit of the project and the users00:30
directhexor maybe you just want free developers to work on your pet projects00:30
directhexwho can say, in this crazy world of ours00:30
fruchtixthats actually the sharing philosophy, even when your paycheck from canonical is sexy00:30
macohey uh you realise a big chunk of this channel gets no paycheck for FOSS?00:30
ScottKfruchtix: Most of the people talking to you don't work for Canonical.00:30
fruchtixafter all, its the code of upstream in most cases that makes you happy and proud00:31
fruchtixso how about you check your own tone when you talk to me?00:31
macofruchtix: who says people here dont work with upstream?00:31
fruchtixand how about this code of conduct. did i sign it yet or did you sign it?00:32
ScottKfruchtix: So far everyone here has been trying to give you helpful advice.00:32
fruchtixoh yeah?00:32
cjwatsonlike I say, I'm entirely happy to support debtags work in any way I can00:32
ScottKYes.00:32
fruchtixby judging my person?00:32
fruchtixby complaining about my "tone"?00:32
directhexScottK, i haven't, i've been gently dripping sarcasm as i usually do00:32
macoby telling you that if you want to get something working, then you should go make it work00:32
ScottKOK.  Except him00:32
cjwatsonYou've commented about your perceived inability to influence people; in that context I think comments about your tone are entirely reasonable.00:32
macodirecthex: no more than fruchtix has :P00:32
=== nhandler_ is now known as nhandler
fruchtixdude, if you seriously believe in this rubbish "if you want something done then do it yourself" then why the heck are we talking about a community?00:33
cjwatsonBecause that's pretty much a direct input into your ability to influence people.00:33
macofruchtix: what do you think a meritocracy is?00:33
directhex"community" doesn't mean "people doing stuff i want when i want it"00:33
macoof *course* if you want something done right you do it yourself00:33
ScottKfruchtix: If you seriously believe popping into an IRC channel and saying "everyone do this" works, you have no idea how the world works.00:33
macothat's how its been since humans evolved/were created/came from neptune00:33
fruchtixheard about co-operation?00:33
fruchtixheard about "i am dedicated to my work"?00:33
ScottKfruchtix: Yes.  You?00:34
fruchtixheard about "i care for ubuntu and i dont just hang around here because of my cool vhost"?00:34
slangasekKeybuk: ta00:34
* cjwatson looks at the upstream release he's preparing over --> there at 00:34 local time00:34
cjwatsonbecause I care about my work00:34
fruchtixperfect00:34
directhexokay, now the unexpected reality blast: if you want to see "something" done with debtags, why not make a concrete proposal which people CAN look at and comment on and cooperate on?00:34
cjwatsondon't preach at me00:34
fruchtixcjwatson: when did i address you personally?00:34
directhexrather than a handwavey "DO MY STUFF!"00:34
cjwatsonquite a bit, as it happens00:34
fruchtixaha00:35
directhexyou have a lose concept and a chip on your shoulder. sort BOTH to get results00:35
cjwatsonI gave you useful advice, you got all offended00:35
fruchtixcjwatson: and the person who pays your salery (your boss) tells you straight into your face "lamer, listen. if i need something done i do it myself. go on vacation"?00:35
directhexyou don't neccessarily need to write buckets of perl - just come up with a real proposal beyond "you guys should drop what you're doing, i command it so"00:35
macofruchtix: no, in that case you're being PAID00:35
directhexi'm spent, sarcasm mode back on.00:36
macofruchtix: unless you are intending to offer a cash bounty to the person who does what you want, don't be so bossy, please00:36
fruchtixso all of a sudden there is a difference between a paid job _for_ the community and a volunteer job _for_ the community?00:36
fruchtixso all of a sudden we all realize that we only move our arse for other people when the paycheck is sexy?00:36
macolook, hackers'll hack on whatever they want whenever they want00:36
fruchtixis that the free software spirit now?00:36
macothey don't need to take orders from anyway00:36
cjwatsonI believe the only person in this conversation who is paid by Canonical is me00:36
maco*anyone00:36
directhexhurrah for entitlement culture00:36
directhexkids these days00:36
* ajmitch scrolls up to see what started this rant00:36
fruchtixwell, thanks for the interview then. have a nice day00:37
directhexajmitch, "USE TEH DEBTAGS NAO!"00:37
cjwatsonso the paycheck rant is rather missing the point00:37
ajmitchdirecthex: ah ok00:37
macoyeah...00:37
fruchtixand btw - thanks for trolling me, too00:37
cjwatson(and in any case I was involved with free software long before I was paid to do so)00:37
directhexyou know, i think i WILL do "something" with debtags00:37
macothe point is, people will work on what they'll work on when they want to work on it, and if they dont want to work on what you want to work on, then you can do it yourself or find someone else to do it for you00:37
fruchtixits the cheap tricks of a young journalist. but it seems to work00:37
ScottKAnd oddly enough I've spent most of my FOSS time today working on stuff that other people asked me to do.00:37
directhexa bonsi buddy clone, written in visual basic.net, which picks a package at random and tells you its tags00:37
directhexsounds helpful!00:37
ajmitchdirecthex: you're a bad man00:38
macodirecthex: that's scary00:38
directhexajmitch, by design!00:38
macojust because person A finds something interesting doesnt mean person B will00:38
fruchtixdirecthex: paid by canonical or do you troll for hobby right now?00:39
macoor that B will have the skills even if they find it interesting00:39
directhexfruchtix, for the love of it00:39
fruchtixdirecthex: cool00:39
fruchtixi am sure you have your fans00:39
directhexoh, i do00:39
macofruchtix: did ya miss the part where cjwatson  is the only paid one here?00:39
* directhex fires up monodevelop, looks for some pictures of a purple gorilla00:40
ScottKAnd I'm pretty sure he's not on the clock at gone midnight local for him.00:40
cjwatsondefinitely not00:40
macoO_O00:40
macohow many hours a day do you spend on this colin?00:40
directhexScottK, don't most hackers only start being productive at 10pm? or is that just me?00:40
cjwatson... some00:40
ScottKDepends.00:40
cjwatsondoing a man-db upstream release at the moment, taking a bit longer than I'd hoped00:40
fruchtixso canonical gave up control over one of the most important ubuntu channels here on freenode. also interesting news and good to know00:41
macowhat?00:41
fruchtixbut yeah, launchpad is ready00:41
macocanonical never had control of this channel...00:41
fruchtixi can see the strategy00:41
maconot really00:41
ScottKfruchtix: Ubuntu has always been a community led distro.00:41
slangasekdirecthex: I for one would appreciate it if you didn't taunt people quite so mercilessly when they're already clearly aggravated...00:41
LaserJockfruchtix: is there a specifc thing you want done with debtags? specifically or ept-cache or is there more?00:41
macocanonical's probably got more tech support people than developers, i'd guess00:42
slangasekLaserJock: how's the moodle merge going? :)00:42
cjwatson#ubuntu-devel was open to non-Canonical contribution from the start, and had significant community involvement from the start (I was there, so I can be pretty sure about this)00:42
fruchtixScottK: that sounds quite romantic, but i think without Mark and his investment into Canonical ... most of you guys would suck on the nibble of Debian or other distros00:42
LaserJockslangasek: getting there. lots and lots of CVE reviews00:42
LaserJockslangasek: I'm waiting though on a MIR for smarty00:42
directhexfruchtix, most of the people you're arguing with are long-standing Debian Developers00:42
ScottKfruchtix: Of course the Canonical investment is critical, but there is a very substantial community involvedm.00:42
macofruchtix: you mean if ubuntu didn't exist, period?00:42
directhexslangasek, is that a "shut up" or a "stop working on Debtag Buddy"?00:43
cjwatsoncertainly I've been a Debian developer since 200100:43
ScottK... involvement.00:43
slangasekLaserJock: uh?  there's an MIR of a template engine required to fix a moodle security bug?00:43
fruchtixdirecthex: maybe thats why i am in the middle of my schizophrenia again. its the debian personality aspects00:43
slangasekdirecthex: 'yes'?00:43
macocjwatson: what would you say? more devs or 1-800-help-4-me people?00:43
LaserJockslangasek: not required, but I'm merging a new upstream release in00:43
LaserJockslangasek: the release fixes loads of bugs and security vulernabilites00:43
slangasekLaserJock: so I'm thinking that's not going to all be ready between now and Thursday and I should probably bump the milestone?00:43
LaserJockslangasek: the template engine is a split out lib00:43
* ScottK decides to go pick up his daughter from the mall since that's more productive than this discussion.00:43
macoScottK: the computer-y one? i say "hi"00:44
cjwatsonmaco: more developers00:44
fruchtixif you would be able to isolate the technical aspects of the work of a debian person, then well, then we would not need Mark and Canonical to create ubuntu as a "helper" for the broken social aspects, right?00:44
slangasekLaserJock: oh, it's code that's already in the existing moodle package?  that doesn't require a full MIR, just a bug saying that00:44
macofruchtix: the social aspects arent the problem00:44
LaserJockslangasek: well, kees asked for it. It's all there00:44
macofruchtix: its the ease of use stuff00:44
LaserJockslangasek: but then he went on vacation so I'm not sure where it stands00:44
macofruchtix: i mean, yeah, there's the coc stuff....but really....the 6mo release cycle and the aim for simplicity is what brings people to ubuntu, i think00:45
macoits the reputation for being fairly easy to use00:45
maco....that's why my mom uses it00:45
fruchtixmaco: you dont know much about debian then. i am observing the situation since 8-9 years. and its 95% home made ... and social aspects00:45
slangasekLaserJock: "if a new source package contains only code which is already in main, it may not need a full report. Submitting a bug with an explanation is sufficient." https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MainInclusionProcess - so if that's the case for smarty, upload and we'll fix up the overrides...00:45
macofruchtix: what do you mean 95% home made?00:45
fruchtixmaco: problems made by debian developers for other debian developers00:46
slangasekhe means that he's Patrick Frank00:46
cjwatsonsocial problems were one reason we founded Ubuntu rather than simply funding work on Debian, but far from the only one00:46
* maco is very confused00:46
fruchtixslangasek: how is helix? are you still doing her?00:46
LaserJockslangasek: it's bug #32736700:46
ubottuLaunchpad bug 327367 in smarty "MIR: please promote smarty to Main" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/32736700:46
ajmitchslangasek: that would explain a lot00:46
slangaseksorry, should've gone with my gut 20 minutes ago00:47
directhexthat took longer than required00:47
macoO_o00:47
cjwatsonI hadn't twigged to the debtags connection00:47
directhexwhat's the connection?00:48
cjwatsongoogle00:48
slangasekhas Patrick expressed interest in debtags before?00:48
cjwatsonyes00:48
Keybukdidn't he once threaten OFTC with legal action?00:49
slangasekfreenode, yes; OFTC, I don't know00:49
directhexpreemptive dispatch from #ubuntu-motu ?00:50
ajmitchno, he's just ranting away in -server now00:52
LaserJockslangasek: the moodle changelog has 26 security fixes and 20 debian bugs fixed since our current version00:55
LaserJockslangasek: I was guessing that would get me a FF exception00:56
LaserJockin Debian we've got a buildable package that has incorporated almost all of Ubuntu's diff00:57
LaserJockso I just need to test to make sure it's not totally broken, get FFe approval, and then I can upload00:57
cjwatsonmy apologies to this channel for being drawn in too far by a troll00:58
Keybuk*sigh* you make one little change to the task_struct, and you have to rebuild almost the entire kernel :-/00:58
slangasek<snerk>00:58
TheMusoKeybuk: If you are using the build system used by the Ubuntu kernel, that happens even if you make a config tweak unfortunately. That can probably be fixed up though.00:59
directhexcjwatson, maybe you just see the good in people. i called you an optimist half an hour ago ;)00:59
cjwatsonI'm only sorry that this means he'll probably infect our mailing lists for a while01:01
slangasekmm, really?01:01
macoits a moderated list...01:01
cjwatsonubuntu-devel is; ubuntu-devel-discuss and others would require more effort to keep clean01:01
macoyeah01:01
LaserJockit might also ruin people's desire a little to actual do something with debtags01:01
cjwatsonright, that concerns me more01:02
cjwatsonI do think it's a useful system01:02
macoLaserJock: just because itd make the jerk happy?01:02
LaserJocknot necessarily01:02
LaserJockbut getting involved in a "war" with him every time you try to do something would be pretty demotivating01:02
LaserJockas well as people just getting tired of the subject01:02
StevenKAnd the author01:03
cjwatsonthe author?01:03
directhexi couldn't spot the name of the real author. google failed to find much from what /whois revealed01:03
cjwatsonEnrico Zini01:03
slangasekdirecthex: if you're referring to our guest, the name is Patrick Frank01:03
cjwatson(who as far as I can tell is nothing to do with fruchtix, and is generally a very laid-back nice guy)01:04
slangaseka google on that name and debian or ubuntu is... elucidating01:04
LaserJockslangasek: so do you think I can get a FFe by Thursday?01:07
directhexhm. flashes of obnoxiousness01:07
slangasekLaserJock: "by 6pm" is also "by Thursday", so sure01:08
directhexi think dragging erinn into the above little troll session was pushing it rather hard though. i do wonder about people like that01:08
directhexthen i mentally file them in the same bin as boycottnovell contributors, and sleep easy! \o/01:08
slangasekdirecthex: stick around long enough and he'll give you plenty more fodder for wondering01:09
directhexslangasek, we'll see where my NM application takes me!01:09
slangasekdirecthex: the condensed backstory there, btw, is that he had a habit of joining #debian-women, each time with a different alias, despite being told his presence was unwelcome and inappropriate; and as an op there I both a) got good at identifying him, b) pissed him off to no end01:11
Hobbseeoh, he's been here too?01:11
slangasekyes01:11
StevenKAnd -server01:11
* maco snorts01:11
macoHobbsee: that sentence told you who was being talked about?01:11
slangasekthe buzzing was probably enough to make that clear :)01:12
Hobbseeoh, paddy.  right01:12
StevenKHe is one of those people that wanted debian-women to stop existing, isn't he?01:13
* StevenK tries to remember01:13
directhexStevenK, highly likely, given the above descriptions01:13
macojames_w is warning #ubuntu-women ops01:15
StevenKA k-line sounds appealing right about now01:16
HobbseeStevenK: well, that's the aim.01:16
Hobbseeor at least, likely to be the end result01:17
cjwatsonI was going to say, surely the aim is to keep the network productive ...01:17
StevenKHah01:17
cjwatsonA K-line would surely just get him more wound up, anyway; we already know he morphs01:18
ajmitchhe's trolling #ubuntu-ops now, they can deal with it01:19
directhexhe needs a hobby01:20
directhexwell, a DIFFERENT hobby01:20
slangasekStevenK: not as such; he just wanted debian-women to not have ops that would kick him from the channel01:20
StevenKPity that he has moved on from annoying Debian to us. :-/01:21
directhexStevenK, gotta go where the slangasek is!01:21
macoslangasek: all the better to troll them with?01:21
Keybukthey all come our way eventually01:21
slangasekStevenK: he goes back and forth on which community to harrangue01:22
Keybukit'll be Sven Luther before too long01:23
KeybukFriendly01:23
macocan we send him to...i dont know...whatever community has Theodore de Raadst? that could be amusing.01:23
maco(cant spell that name, you figure it out)01:23
directhexmaco, openbsd01:23
macodirecthex: the point was theodore, not the community ;) i hear he likes to argue on the internet01:24
directhexmaco, newsgroups, probably. these days, newsgroups are where you go if 4chan is too civilized01:24
directhexmaco, it's where you can find some of my critics, for one thing ^_^01:25
StevenK4chan? Civilized?01:27
* StevenK chokes01:27
macoStevenK: ok so we're laughing at the same thing01:27
KeybukI think directhex was aiming for irony01:27
StevenKDuh :-P01:27
directhexKeybuk, too sleepy for sarcasm01:27
directhexKeybuk, irony will have to do01:27
* Hobbsee suggests the channel go back on topic? ;)01:28
macooh right01:28
Keybukdevelopment01:28
ajmitchHobbsee: that'd just be boring01:28
cjwatsonsigh, I meant to do gparted 0.4.2 today01:28
cjwatsonI guess that will have to be tomorrow, I'd rather not do it while half-asleep01:29
Keybukcjwatson: I meant to do lots of things today :-/01:29
Keybuktoo much lvm inotify madness01:29
cjwatsondid you make any significant progress by the end of the day?01:29
directhexHobbsee, i've hit 90% of my jaunty goals already, though \o/01:29
cjwatsonthere were a few too many trees for me to see the forest01:29
Hobbseedirecthex: \o/01:29
Keybukcjwatson: I believe I have fixed the bug01:29
slangasekI'll be trying to confirm that as soon as amd64 binaries are available01:30
Keybukyeah, the buildds are on a go-slow today01:30
directhexis openjdk still building on arm?01:30
StevenKYes01:30
StevenKAnd koffice, and kdebindings01:30
directhexStarted on 2009-02-1801:31
directhexand that really isn't a dead build?01:31
slangasekLaserJock: I don't see that a FFe request was actually filed?01:31
StevenKsbuild will kill a build that spins for 150 minutes with no output, IIRC01:32
Keybukit's ARM01:32
Keybukit has to save up for compilation in installments01:32
slangasekwait, was that a mortgage joke?01:34
Keybukno, more of a "collect each monthly part and they build up to this nice collectable executable"01:34
Keybuk"pay by direct debit and get this attractive binder FREE"01:35
slangasekoh, so it's not about adjustable-rate mortgages01:35
Keybukno, are adjustable-rate mortgages especially on your mind right now?01:35
macoi guess that means i no longer have that excuse to not use lvm (excuse being: it usually breaks badly during devel time) and should download a daily cd to install and test with01:35
slangasekKeybuk: not particularly, I was just grasping at straws trying to parse "compilation in installments" :)01:35
KeybukI wish I had a variable rate mortgage01:36
Keybukmine's fixed01:36
Keybukand now the interest rate is practically non-existant01:36
RAOFBelow inflation, for some people.01:36
slangasekwe have one on the condo that we haven't been able to sell, and it keeps costing us less and less every quarter01:36
slangasekKeybuk: refinance? :)01:36
Keybukslangasek: still in the fixed period01:36
cjwatsonso should I be rebuilding d-i against the new udev once it builds everywhere01:36
cjwatson?01:37
Keybukthere's penalty clauses for early closure01:37
Keybukhave only a year or so left01:37
macoand will an email go out when there's a daily cd available with a hopefully-working udev/lvm combination?01:37
slangasekKeybuk: sure; I assume you've looked at the math then, to determine whether it's worth paying the penalty01:37
Keybukslangasek: yeah, marginally not worth it01:37
cjwatsonI suspect that without a d-i rebuild the alternate install CD will have slightly hosed LVM01:37
Keybukit wasn't really that high interest rate to begin with01:38
slangasekmaco: not explicitly; but if the bugs are still closed tomorrow, tomorrow's CD will have the fix01:38
StevenKslangasek: Still can't sell the condo? :-/01:38
slangasekStevenK: nah - bearing in mind that it's still winter here, so the market is only just starting to pick up01:38
StevenKslangasek: The housing market hibernates for the winter?01:39
slangasekStevenK: yes01:39
StevenKOdd01:39
slangaseknobody wants to buy a house when they don't have enough light to look at it first01:39
Keybukhurrah, my new kernel built \o/01:40
Keybuknow to remember what I was going to do with it01:40
slangasekmake kernel panckaes01:40
slangasekpancakes01:40
macoslangasek: ok. / keeps filling so it seems i need to switch to lvm so i'll be able to resize it next time i fill it.01:40
slangasek:)01:41
Keybukslangasek: it is Tuesday here ;)01:41
slangasekTuesday is kernel pancake day?01:41
StevenKmaco: You have things like /usr and /var seperated?01:41
KeybukTuesday is Pancake Day01:41
Keybukslangasek: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancake_Day01:43
slangasekKeybuk: wow, a cultural reference that totally eluded me :)01:43
Keybukslangasek: I'm not entirely sure you knew about that01:43
Keybukif not, that was an amazing piece of annual timing for a pancake joke01:43
slangasekapparently so :)01:43
LaserJockslangasek: no, I didn't file one as I don't have the packages finalized01:49
LaserJock*package01:49
slangasekLaserJock: oh.  I guess that means I can't give you an FFe by 6 today01:50
LaserJockslangasek: why did you want it by 6 today?01:52
slangasekLaserJock: because after 6, I'm not available to approve it until tomorrow :)01:52
LaserJockslangasek: 6 pacific time or central?01:53
slangasekpacific01:53
LaserJockso 7 min01:53
slangasek:)01:53
LaserJockhmmm, that's rather tight01:53
slangasekas opposed to -113 min01:53
slangasekLaserJock: don't sweat it01:53
LaserJockwell, let me work on it and get it done now01:54
LaserJockif I get it in 7min fine01:54
LaserJockif not tomorrow will due01:54
LaserJock:-)01:54
LaserJockI need to get this bugger out the door01:54
LaserJockI've already spent quite a few hours digging through CVEs and inline patches01:55
Keybukhmm01:58
Keybuktoday's daily live is unwell01:58
slangasekknown ubiquity bug, milestoned01:58
Keybukthe fork-bombing nautilus?01:59
slangasekinstall python-numpy by hand before invoking ubiquity if you want to use it01:59
slangasekoh, no, that's not what other people reported with it :)01:59
StevenKNautilus now fork-bombs the system?01:59
Keybukseems to01:59
KeybukI get about 1,000 little "Starting File Manager" things along the bottom02:00
StevenKOw!02:00
slangasekStevenK: it was mentioned in reference to update-manager mem usage, and didn't want to be outdone02:00
StevenKBwaha02:01
slangasekKeybuk: can you spot any obvious reason why the fix in bug #291752 was wrong?02:02
ubottuLaunchpad bug 291752 in cryptsetup "[regression] cryptsetup does not work on raw encrypted drives" [Critical,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/29175202:02
slangasekKeybuk: checking for the device node, but not checking that vol_id returns something meaningful for the device, caused a regression for at least one user who says his crypted rootfs doesn't mount right anymore in intrepid02:03
macoStevenK: no, i dont. just / and /home. i have to apt-get clean after each round of updates because i have gnome and kde installed and that leaves only 1gb for updates...which it is very easy to hit02:04
Keybukslangasek: the vol_id check in the initramfs?02:04
Keybukthat's probably important02:04
cjwatsonhmm, evand fixed that ubiquity bug in bzr but didn't upload02:04
cjwatsonguess I'd better do that now so that it makes the next daily build02:04
slangasekKeybuk: I gather that it is important, but can you explain to me why checking for the device node isn't sufficient?  There are two opposite use cases here, and while the short term fix is probably to revert to the intrepid-release handling, I'd like to get a handle on a more complete fix02:05
StevenKcjwatson: I saw the commit message that added -numpy, and then he fixed the code, does it still depend on numpy?02:05
Keybukdevice node can exist, but have no filesystem inside it, because other things need to do magic02:05
Keybuke.g. md and devmapper devices02:05
Keybukthe device node shows up when you create the name02:06
Keybukbefore you load the table02:06
slangasekKeybuk: aha02:06
slangasekthat makes perfect sense then02:06
cjwatsonStevenK: haven't checked, but will02:06
Keybukso you need to check02:07
Keybuk 1. does the device node exist? [ -e ]02:07
Keybuk 2. has udev finished with it? udevadm settle02:07
Keybuk 3. has it got a filesystem inside it? vol_id02:07
slangasekyep02:08
slangasekthanks, that tells me what I need to know02:08
Keybukhmm, u6y hangs at the partitioning stage now02:09
cjwatsonStevenK: dependency is all gone02:10
StevenKcjwatson: Yay02:10
cjwatson(r3057)02:10
StevenKcjwatson: The changelog still mentions adding the dependancy02:15
cjwatsoneasily fixed02:18
* Keybuk decides to go to bed02:26
KeybukI'm now too tired to test this, and it's only 38% through installing02:26
Chipzzgn Keybuk :)02:26
cjwatsonKeybuk: I *think* that might be fixed by ubiquity in bzr02:28
cjwatsonI guess we'll find out tomorrow02:28
RAOFYou know, evolution is stupendously bad at handling my imap folder with ~200K emails in it.  How would one debug "spends 30minutes thrashing the disc when updating message list"?02:41
TheMusoarthur-: Probably worthwhile archiving some of that mail. :) I am finding even mutt is starting to chug with big Maildir boxes, granted this is over a network, but still.02:48
TheMusoRAOF: ^^02:48
TheMusoarthur-: sorry02:48
RAOFHeh.02:48
RAOFI'm guessing it's something to do with evolution's new sqlite-backed folder thingies; it used to handle this pretty well.02:49
lifelessRAOF: grab evo trunk02:55
lifelessRAOF: that was bugfixed02:55
RAOFlifeless: Sweet.  And will be in Jaunty release, because trunk is going to become 2.26?02:55
CaesarHey, is there anything documented anywhere about exactly how and when the cessation of support for Dapper is going to be done?02:57
CaesarLike I know the LTS gets 3 years of support on the desktop02:57
CaesarSo that means sometime in June it runs out02:57
CaesarSo what will still get support (i.e. server-wise) after that date?02:57
ScottKI think that's a good question.02:58
lifelessRAOF: one hopes, don't know for sure.02:58
ScottKMy personal theory is that anything that needs X is toast.02:59
TheMusoIs it just me, or is there no logout/restart menu options in the GNOME system menu any more?02:59
* TheMuso keeps doing keystrokes to get there, always forgetting they are not there, and ending up in about Ubuntu02:59
RAOFI see that to, although was blaming gdm-new for it.02:59
firefly2442Caesar: server is apparently 5 years as per this page: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases02:59
TheMusoRAOF: No, its either a gnome-panel, or gnome-session bug I think.03:00
Caesarfirefly2442: yeah, but what constitutes "server"?03:00
TheMusoMore likely gnome-panel03:00
firefly2442Caesar: ahh I see the issue03:00
CaesarAnd when in June 2009 does desktop EOL?03:01
CaesarJune 1 or June 30?03:01
pwnguinheh, it's just a bug in the X "server" ;)03:01
CaesarThese sort of things aren't clearly spelled out (at least not on that page)03:01
cjwatsonNick Barcet was working on that, specifically on creating full lists of packages03:03
cjwatsonI don't know where he put the output though03:03
cjwatsonnijaba: ^-03:03
ScottKI'm also curious if the packages will be removed (as is normally done for an obsolete release) or left on the mirrors.03:05
macoTheMuso: FUSA03:05
TheMusomaco: FUSA?03:06
macoTheMuso: no more shut down in the menu because it was duplicating FUSA03:06
cjwatsonI don't think we're likely to be able to remove them in any sane way03:06
cjwatsonperhaps unfortunately, but there it is03:06
TheMusomaco: But what is FUSA?03:07
cjwatsonremoving them would require regenerating all the index files and other such invasive things03:07
TheMusoYOu say they duplicated FUSA, so I am confused.03:07
TheMusoOh!!! Fast switch user applet03:07
macothere ya go03:09
TheMusogrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!103:09
TheMusooops sorry03:09
macowas called away for "this thing in the fridge that's been here for weeks..what is it?"03:09
* TheMuso goes to another window03:09
maco(it was vegetable sushi)03:11
* TheMuso digs for a gconf key.03:11
firefly2442I have a general development question, how does Ubuntu deal with people contributing who live all over the world? It must be difficult for people who are able to contribute code but lack the communication skills because of a language difference to "sync" into the project and where it's headed.03:18
cjwatsonpeople do need to have some English ability, in practical terms (if nothing else they need to be able to read everyone else's code, including comments)03:18
cjwatsonand we do need to be fairly tolerant of language barriers, although yes it can be challenging03:19
cjwatsonlocal groups help a bit03:19
cjwatsonmost of the practical problems we see are timezones and just plain not being in the same room03:19
firefly2442cjwatson: so in you're opinion would you say text based communication is a major hindrance to OSS communication and development?03:22
macofirefly2442: better shot with text than spoken03:22
Hobbseefirefly2442: not a lot of the time03:22
macoat least text has google translate03:22
macoand many of the people around here are polyglots so finding someone that speaks your language and can pass on a "hey i have this patch that fixes ____" messages shouldnt be hard03:23
macoi cant think of any programming languages that aren't english-based though, so i would guess if you can program you know at least a few words of english....like integer03:24
cjwatsonfirefly2442: that's a bit of a leap from what I said :-)03:24
cjwatsonI agree with maco's comments03:24
firefly2442ahh ok thanks, I'm just curious because I'm looking into OSS community management for a paper03:25
cjwatsoncertainly I've seen a number of instances where it was very difficult to communicate with somebody in person, but e-mail allowed them to spend more time composing their words03:25
cjwatsonso in fact I actively disagree that text-based communication is a hindrance03:25
TheMusoYay, tweaking a gconf key and removing the fast user switch applet got some sane options back. Now, how to replicate that for a11y profiles in casper... :|03:26
firefly2442good point, people are probably more apt to spend a long time composing a thoughtful email than just saying whatever pops into their head03:26
cjwatsonwell, some people may simply be unable to follow and participate in a spoken conversation03:26
cjwatsonthat requires better English skills than following and participating in a written conversation03:27
cjwatson(I generalise a bit but I think this is mostly pretty uncontroversial)03:27
cjwatsonspeaking of timezones: /me -> bed03:28
firefly2442cjwatson: night, thanks for the suggestions03:28
firefly2442I should probably head off too, thanks all03:30
macohaha oh yeah, text communication in a 2nd or 3rd lang is much easier than in person03:32
ScottKDo we have a standard package to substitute when a Debian package depends on locales-all?04:16
macois this back to the thing where locales are trying to bring half of gnome into kubuntu?04:19
ScottKNo, this is a package in universe that's depwait for locales-all because we don't have such a package.04:20
slangasekhuh, why do we patch out locales-all?04:29
slangasekOTOH, why does any package build-depend on it, I think there's a recipe for generating locales for local use as part of a build?04:30
LaserJockphew, finally got a Jaunty VM up-and-running again04:32
macoLaserJock: can you IM me? like, the not-IRC way. i'm trying to see what pidgin's doing04:33
* LaserJock status update-manager04:35
LaserJock*stabs04:35
* maco joins in and stabs pidgin04:35
* highvoltage <3 pidgin04:42
ScottKslangasek: rmadison locales-all produces a blank stare in response and bgoffice-computer-terms is the package that build-dep on it.04:44
ScottKSince i386 is caught up I was looking for arch all fixes I could throw at the buildd's.04:45
grndslmdoes the liveCD every use the HD, say a HD that already has a 1GB swap partition??04:49
grndslm... or must everything be done in RAM?  I'm guessing this one04:49
ScottK\o/ - Just filed a sync request for Spamassassin.  It will be the first time since Dapper we've been in sync.04:52
LaserJockcongrats04:54
ScottKThanks.04:58
macognyes itll use existing swap05:02
macogrndslm: yes itll use existing swap05:03
grndslmkk... i figured it ought to05:05
grndslmone more question i've asked before, but didn't ask properly...  how do various ubuntu repositories work?  For example, if I only want to accept security upgrades & not feature upgrades... will the feature upgrades still creep into the security repository??  Downloading the entire package for any upgrade confuses the heck outta me.05:07
macosecurity just has security updates. updates has bug fixes.05:07
macowell it's possible that a security update will be newer than whats in updates05:08
grndslmmaco:  i get that much.... but eventually, they've got to start converging, right?05:08
macobut updates isnt features, just bug fixes05:08
grndslmhmm... so the regular repository is where feature upgrades come in?05:08
ScottKPost release, except for a very few exceptions, we don't do feature updates.05:08
macono they dont at all05:08
ScottKWe do those in the next development release.05:09
macowe dont do version upgrades post-release unless there's a very good reason....like massive amounts of security patches that can only be gotten up changing versions05:09
grndslminteresting05:09
ScottKThe one other sort of exception is kernel patches to support newer hardware on LTS releases.05:09
macoso if big glaring security problems and bugs require patching such that half the code changes anyway...then an upgrade might happen05:10
macoScottK: when did that start?05:10
ScottKIt was done some for 6.06.2 and more for 8.04.x05:10
ScottKIt became clear that "LTS, but will only run on two year old hardware" wasn't going to fly.05:11
macohaha05:11
macoi see05:11
grndslmone last question... inspired by the ubuntu forums...  when will ubuntu come out with a rolling release model?  =-P05:12
grndslmto heck with separate security and bug-fix repos05:12
macogrumpy groundhog?05:13
grndslmthat long?05:13
grndslmthat's like 23 releases away05:13
macono, thats the name for the mythical "if you use everything as soon as it hits the repos"05:13
macoif ubuntu had something akin to debian experimental, that's the name that was chosen. it hasnt actually happened.05:13
macoyoud have to just go for debian sid05:14
grndslmnever thought about that05:14
macoAFAIK there are no plans to go Arch-style05:14
grndslmi still like ubuntu's hardware setup better... even more sane defaults than debian.  I couldn't get an intel wireless chip to work with debian outta the box... had to wait for ethernet!05:15
grndslmbut I'll prolly have to check out debian sid and arch pretty soon05:15
macoi couldnt get ethernet to work on windows outta the box...had to wait for sneakernet! :P05:15
macowell anyway if intel's firmware was open, we'd be good05:16
macothough i do have to wonder how long ago this was05:16
macobecause i though with the iwl* drivers that binary firmware problem was gone05:16
grndslmi just tried debian 5.0 and no go on my laptop05:16
macooh ok ..that should have iwl, i would think...05:16
grndslmi was pretty sure intel was supposed to have open drivers, which is why I've always bought Intel-based lappies05:17
macoyes the drivers are open05:17
grndslmbut the firmware isn't?05:17
macoits the firmware and i think some sort of firmware-controlling daemon that aren't05:17
macoright05:17
grndslmmore confusion05:17
macoim not sure how much more was opened in the ipw --> iwl transition05:18
grndslmanyway, i'll let you guys get back to work  ;)05:18
grndslmlata05:18
grndslmoh yea, about the liveCD issue... if the hard drive only has windows installed, then it can't use the HD, right?05:19
macoright05:21
grndslmfigures...05:21
grndslmaight, i'm really out this time05:21
grndslmtake it e-z05:21
ScottKDid the publisher run last time?  It seems like there stuff still "ACCEPTED" that was done well before 3 after.05:30
LaserJockis apache2-mpm-prefork the "default" apache package?06:25
slangasekit's the one required for use with libapache2-mod-php506:26
StevenKLaserJock: If you need php or a non-threaded apache, go -prefork, otherwise, pick -worker06:27
LaserJockI need PHP unfortunately06:27
LaserJockwell, neither help me out I guess06:28
StevenKWhy?06:29
LaserJockI'm trying to force either mysql or postresql but apache pulls both in06:29
LaserJockso then things get messed up06:29
slangasekhrm?  apache does?06:29
LaserJockthrough aprutil06:29
slangasekah06:30
LaserJockaprutil deps on mysql, postresql, and sqlite06:30
* slangasek tricks upstream into also depending on odbc06:31
LaserJockthere isn't a way to test what packages are also being installed in postinst is there?06:31
slangasekno06:31
StevenKslangasek: And Oracle, for good meaurse?06:31
slangasekStevenK: sure, why not06:32
slangasekStevenK: just the server though, not the client libs06:32
LaserJockI'm sort of close to picking a DB and telling everybody else to go figure it out06:32
slangasekLaserJock: dbconfig-common?06:33
LaserJockah, well, I haven't looked at that yet06:33
LaserJockwe were using wwwconfig-common06:33
slangasekah06:33
LaserJockbut the vast majority of the bugs are due to DB setup issues06:33
slangasekwwwconfig-common suggests: apache | apache-ssl.  Vintage. :P06:34
LaserJockmoodle is often uninstallable in Intrepid06:34
LaserJockupgrades seems to be breaking decently often06:34
slangasekis it really appropriate to fix all of this at the same time as fixing the security vulns, though?06:34
LaserJockwell06:35
LaserJockfor me personally I'm just trying to get a good, installable version of moodle for Jaunty06:35
LaserJockthe security stuff is a added benefit06:35
LaserJockright now it's uninstallable for most (if not all) people06:36
LaserJockso for a Main app I'd think that'd be an issue06:36
LaserJockbut I'm just a chemist and working with server/webapp stuff is not trivial for me :(06:38
LaserJockit sure looks like dbconfig-common would help us out06:40
slangasekLaserJock: but I think refitting it with dbconfig-common is beyond the scope of the merge request that's currently targeted for alpha-507:02
dholbachgood morning07:06
Nightrosehello07:06
macohello dholbach07:07
dholbachhi maco07:07
=== hunger_t is now known as hunger
grndslmIs there any more firmware/drivers that jockey enables besides Nvidia, Ati, Broadcom, & Atheros... specifically in terms of networking?08:29
slytherinpitti: next time you refresh ubuntu-meta, can you please take care of bug 331256.08:30
ubottuLaunchpad bug 331256 in ubuntu-meta "Please remove libpt-1.10.10-plugins-* from ubuntu-desktop dependencies" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/33125608:30
grndslmcan somebody help me figure out what restricted firmware/drivers jockey enables??  /usr/bin/jockey-gtk doesn't seem to be helping me much08:33
slytheringrndslm: take a look at files in package jockey-common. It should contain one handler for each of the driver category.08:35
grndslmslytherin:  sweet... thanks08:35
grndslmsoo... it's just b43 (and how is that different from broadcom_wl?), fglrx, nvidia, & sl_modem for software modems??08:46
grndslmit doesn't even handle madwifi?08:46
grndslmI guess madwifi prolly isn't good enough to be in jockey, tho... which kinda makes sense now08:47
grndslmstill... what's the difference between b43 & broadcom_wl ??08:48
grndslmahem.. slytherin08:48
slytheringrndslm: I have never heard about broadcom_wl, is that new driver in latest kernel?08:49
grndslmi'm on 8.04.208:49
grndslmit's in /usr/share/jockey/handlers08:50
directhexgrndslm, /usr/share/jockey/handlers/broadcom_wl.py exists in intrepid08:52
directhexand jaunty08:53
grndslmdirecthex:  i wouldn't doubt it... i'm trying to find out how that's different from the b43-fwcutter08:53
slytheringrndslm: I suppose it is just the name that is changed. And probably it has handling for b43legacy and b43. In hardy there was only one driver for all cards if I remember.08:54
directhexslytherin, /usr/share/jockey/handlers/b43.py also exists on jaunty. why we have two, i dunno08:55
grndslmslytherin: there's b43 & b43legacy in my /lib/firmware/08:55
grndslmon hardy08:55
slytherinwait, I remember now. broadcom_wl is new driver and it is different from b43.08:56
slytheringrndslm: the best person to ask is pitti. But he seems to be away at the moment.08:57
grndslmi guess i'll just drop him an email and see what he says08:58
directhexfighting crime from his orbiting skyship, no doubt08:58
=== mvo__ is now known as mvo
davmor2are any of the notifyosd guys around?09:07
seb128don't ask to ask just ask?09:08
seb128who do you call notifyosd guys? you don't accept reply from non notifyosd people who know about what you would ask there?09:09
davmor2seb128: I suppose anyone can answer but I thought they would have a better working knowledge of what was supported and not09:10
seb128hard to say since you don't ask your question09:10
seb128we could avoid such pointless discussions if you just ask what you want to know09:10
seb128sorry for the rant there ;-)09:11
davmor2I'm having an issue with pidgin not triggering notifyosd but I'm not sure if irc is supported by it yet09:11
seb128no it doesn't work on IRC09:11
davmor2seb128: and in future I'll just ask, thanks dude09:11
seb128you're welcome09:12
seb128see it's easier this way ;-)09:12
davmor2also seb128 any idea why it seems to put an envelope in the system tray I thought that was for evo when you got mail09:13
seb128that's the message indicator09:13
seb128it's there if you have evolution or pidgin running09:13
davmor2I don't have evo open only pidgin09:13
seb128and the icon should change when you get a message09:13
seb128well in this case you should have pidgin listed when clicking on it no?09:14
* directhex is still sad @ the idea of not having a "next track" button on banshee popups09:14
davmor2yes that's correct :)09:14
davmor2thanks again09:15
macohey by the way, is it a function of the new notification system that pidgin's buddy list is now invisible for me (not in window list or alt+tab) since i manually turned off system-tray-icon or is this a bug?09:16
TheMusoHrm. Where did /etc/adjtime go? I see base-files creates it in its postinst, but none of my jaunty systems have it, and a powerpc alternate install fails because powerpc-utils can't find it.09:16
seb128maco: is it open on screen?09:16
macoseb128: by invisible, i'm not joking. it must exist somewhere...it flickers into visibility for a moment when i quit it. its certainly running since there are notifications and i can receive messages...but the window itself seems to be hidden somewhere that i can't un-hide it09:17
macothe notification/tray icon had a "hide buddy list" feature09:18
seb128maco: did you try to select pidgin the message indicator menu to open it?09:18
macoim in kde09:18
seb128+in09:18
seb128maco: well you did shoot yourself in the foot apparently then09:18
macohahaha09:18
seb128maco: ie you turned the notification icon but don't use the message indicator and don't run the right desktop environment09:19
macoi get the notification icon for notifying of new messages, however i was under the impression that setting pidgin to not live in the tray meant that it would not attempt to hide, ever09:20
seb128wrong impression09:20
maco>< crap09:20
davmor2seb128: any idea how the envelope should change other than listing the chat and time?  should the flap open or something?09:20
seb128davmor2: not sure, the icon should be different but that might be buggy right now09:21
slytherinseb128: just FYI ... I updated gst-plugins-bad-multiverse to bring in sync with -bad, will update ugly-multiverse sometime this week.09:22
seb128slytherin: cool09:22
davmor2seb128: I'd of thought that changing it to an open envelope would of made sense for unanswered messages in case your away at the time.09:23
slytherinseb128: I also added some arguments to configure in debian/rules to disable some plugins that get by default but are not included in the package. Reduces build time a lot.09:24
seb128oh good too09:24
cjwatsonTheMuso: see util-linux changelog09:32
cjwatsonKeybuk: ^- powerpc-utils is a difficult one - without having looked I suspect it's coping with known problems on powerpc systems where the firmware time gets reset to the Mac epoch on battery failure, or some such. Do we really need to delete /etc/adjtime, rather than just deleting the code that used it?09:33
Siliciumfrom where is the Default Nautilus-Desktop Background Color loaded if its not set in gconf?09:50
seb128Silicium: what do you call nautilus-desktop background color?09:53
seb128it's an image by default09:53
Siliciumnautilus/gdm ans so on09:54
Siliciumthe color i see between GDM and finaly loaded gnome09:54
Siliciumthis is the "background color" set in the settings09:54
Siliciumbut i cant find it in the gconf of liveCD09:54
Siliciummay is hardcoded?09:55
NgKeybuk: so if jaunty is failing to assemble a root LVM after last night's udev/lvm updates, what would you want/need to know? :)09:56
seb128Silicium: it's a gdm.conf setting09:56
Siliciumok thanks09:56
seb128that will be changed soon09:56
ograasac, why does my FF open a ton of windows after the last upgrade ? (add-ons, the print dialog)10:03
* ogra could understand add-ons to make him chek if everything is still ok, but why the print dialog ? 10:05
directhexogra, you don't print a copy of the "your firefox has been upgraded" screen for your wall?10:08
asacogra: dont know about the print dialog10:08
asacogra: the addons dialog opens when there have been addons upgraded/disabled10:08
ogradirecthex, i do ! but the wall is full :P10:08
ograasac, yeah, thats what i suspected, but the print dialog is a bit strange10:09
directhexogra, phoenix 0.6 has been upgraded!10:09
asacogra: maybe print dialog opened because the "random menu item activates" bug?10:12
asacdid you click somewhere before it popped up?10:12
ograno, i rebooted and started FF, evo and xchat10:13
asacogra: heh. so maybe it wasnt firefox print ;)?10:13
ografrom the panel where i have shortcut icons10:13
ograwell, FF came up with it, evo usually takes a while10:13
ograand i dont think chat has any print dialog10:14
* ogra checks10:14
asacogra: ok. let me know if you can reproduce the print thing10:14
* ogra logs out again10:14
ograhmm, add-ons again ... no print dialog10:16
ograwhoops !10:16
mdzmvo: I see no notification icon for update-notifier anymore in jaunty; is this part of the new notification system changes?10:16
ograi was wrong, FF blinked in the tasklist after xchat came up, clicking the task entry shows the print dialog10:16
* ogra tries a third time10:16
mvomdz: yes, this is what the design team asked for. no icon, just update-manager starting up automatcially for updates every 7 days (and immediately for security updates)10:17
mdzmvo: :-(  where should I send my feedback?10:18
mvomdz: there is a long debate on ubuntu-devel about it10:18
mvomdz: there is also a gconf key to get the old behaviour back10:18
ograasac, hmm, apparently reliably reproducable ...10:18
ograi get the print dialog on every login in FF now10:18
mvomdz: and yes, I like the icon too10:19
ograandthis time i only started FF10:19
ograi also seem to get the add-on dialog every time now10:19
mvomdz: seb128 had the idea that we keep showing the icon but auto launch after 7 days if it was not clicked. I like that proposal10:19
asacogra: do you stop your FF sometimes? or always just "log-out"?10:19
ograasac, the latter10:19
ograi want to keep my session10:20
ograwithout saving it10:20
asacogra: please check your localstore.rdf10:20
mdzmvo: the restart dialog popping up all the time is also excessive10:20
asacogra: does it a) have proper permissions, b) a recent modification time, c) contain any hints about the print dialog?10:20
ograogra@osiris:~$ ls -l /home/ogra/.mozilla/firefox/x1utrcmr.default/localstore.rdf10:20
ogra-rw-r--r-- 1 ogra ogra 10296 2009-02-24 11:01 /home/ogra/.mozilla/firefox/x1utrcmr.default/localstore.rdf10:20
ograogra@osiris:~$ grep print /home/ogra/.mozilla/firefox/x1utrcmr.default/localstore.rdf10:21
ograogra@osiris:~$10:21
ogradoesnt look like10:21
asacogra: -i ?10:21
asachmm10:21
ogranope10:21
ogra-i doesnt change it10:21
asacogra: what extensinos installed?10:21
ogragrab n drag and ubufox10:22
seb128mdz: "all the time"? you probably had a broken upgrade which it's trying to reconfigure and which is breaking again or similar?10:23
mvomdz: right, all actions that used to show notifications are now launched directly (including reboot, interactive upgrade hooks etc). some concerns on the ML about this include that stuff that opens out of the blue will remind windows user of spyware/viruses (where this apparently happens too)10:23
mdzseb128: no, I just haven't rebooted10:23
asacogra: disable g&d?10:23
mdzand so each time I upgrade, the dialog pops up10:23
seb128mvo: btw any clue about bug #333557?10:23
ubottuLaunchpad bug 333557 in python2.6 "pygobject/python2.6/dpkg upgrade failure" [High,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/33355710:23
mdzmvo: is there a bug open about this?10:24
mvomdz: about the dialog comming up all the time? or the new behaviour in general?10:24
mdzmvo: either, or both10:24
mdzshould they be considered separate issues?10:24
mvoseb128: I have a look, but it looks like a simple file conflict?10:25
ograasac, no change10:25
mvomdz: there is a bug about the new behaviour, give me a sec I look for the number. update-notifier gets bugreports about it all the time basicly, because people think its broken (no icon anymore)10:26
seb128mvo: I don't think so, look at the path that's not a full one and those are not conflicting10:26
* ogra wonders if there is any evil javascript on a website that triggers it, nut i didnt have it on yesterdays upgrade10:26
ogra*but10:26
asacogra: err. you have zillions of tabs?10:26
ograand the list of pages didnt change much10:26
mvoseb128: I suspect it has something to do with the new shared location to install stuff, but i will have a closer look in a bit10:26
ograyes, a bunch, but since yesterday only some LP tabs were added10:26
ograand i rebooted yesterday as well10:26
seb128mvo: thanks10:27
seb128$ dpkg -c /var/cache/apt/archives/python-gobject-dbg_2.16.1-0ubuntu1_i386.deb | grep gobject.so10:27
seb128-rw-r--r-- root/root    243986 2009-02-23 11:44 ./usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/gtk-2.0/gobject/_gobject.so10:27
seb128-rw-r--r-- root/root    246472 2009-02-23 11:44 ./usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/gtk-2.0/gobject/_gobject.so10:27
seb128-rw-r--r-- root/root    333165 2009-02-23 11:44 ./usr/lib/python-support/python-gobject-dbg/python2.6/gtk-2.0/gobject/_gobject.so10:27
seb128$ dpkg -c /var/cache/apt/archives/python-gobject_2.16.1-0ubuntu1_i386.deb | grep gobject.so10:27
seb128-rw-r--r-- root/root    122172 2009-02-23 11:44 ./usr/lib/python-support/python-gobject/python2.6/gtk-2.0/gobject/_gobject.so10:27
seb128-rw-r--r-- root/root    121756 2009-02-23 11:44 ./usr/lib/python-support/python-gobject/python2.5/gtk-2.0/gobject/_gobject.so10:27
seb128mvo: ^10:27
seb128see no conflict10:27
ogradoko, is our java built with freetype support ?10:29
=== mvo__ is now known as mvo
mvomdz: about the auto launching, bug #331054 and #332945 are probably interessting (both already closed as invalid though)10:31
ubottuLaunchpad bug 331054 in update-notifier "Do not launch in background" [Undecided,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/33105410:31
ubottuLaunchpad bug 332945 in update-notifier "[Jaunty] Removal of Update Notifier is WRONG" [High,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/33294510:31
mvomdz: there is also the mailing list discussion10:31
mdzmvo: thank you10:31
mdzmvo: I'm bringing it to the attention of the design team10:31
mvomdz: I think it has there attention already :)10:32
mvomdz: i.e. they replied in it10:32
liwmvo, do-release-upgrade has no manpage?10:37
mvoliw: no :(10:37
mvoliw: I should attend to your manpage write course10:37
liwmvo, that needs fixing one of these days... I'll gladly help :) in the mean while, is there a way for me to instruct it to not check for free disk space? my chroot doesn't have /proc mounted10:38
mvoliw: unfortunately not. could you just mount /proc as a workaround? (mount or bind mount)?10:39
mvoliw: I plan to add some switches soonish10:39
mvoliw: do make it possible to have more control, but currently its a bit set-in-its-ways when it comes to that10:39
liwmvo, I can mount /proc, no problem, it's just slightly less convenient to have to do that (when creating, testing, and destroying chroots)10:40
mvoliw: ok, I will make it a option for you later today, ok?10:42
liwmvo, nah, don't worry, I've adapted already, no need to hurry this10:42
liwapropos the manpage thing: I gave a presentation in Finnish on it, so perhaps I'm ready to give one at the next UDW or something (uds?)10:43
liwalthough I'm sure Colin would hate my style of manpage writing :)10:43
liwoops10:43
liwthe things you do when you're used to using kvm instead of chroot... I let do-release-upgrade reboot, and it rebooted the whole computer, of course, not just the chroot10:44
* liw waits for the desktop to boot (root is on usb, so it's very slow to boot) and ponders aliasing chroot to kvm10:46
dokoogra: what do you mean? java has it's own selection scheme for fonts10:49
ogradoko, http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?thread_name=892226.3959.qm%40web62005.mail.re1.yahoo.com&forum_name=ltsp-discuss10:50
ogradoko, see the last mail, we have a longstanding issue with ltsp where java gets unusably slow on remote X connections, appartenly only installing a fontserver solves that, i was wondering if thats solvable in a better way10:51
dholbacheverybody welcome rcmorano - he's from Guadalinex and doing great work on Ubuntu too!11:12
rcmorano:]!11:12
* ogra waves to rcmorano 11:13
LLStarksmorning11:13
NgKeybuk: tracked it down... for some reason the initramfs had something wrong with its cryptroot hook. re-generated it after doing a manual cryptsetup+boot and it works again. bit weird that that happened though11:17
TheMusocjwatson: thanks11:18
LLStarksthemuso11:19
LLStarkspulse 0.9.15 is a resource hog.11:19
TheMusoLLStarks: talk to upstream about it11:19
TheMusoLLStarks: tried turning off glitch free?11:19
LLStarkseh?11:20
LLStarksi'm just using whatever you packed.11:20
TheMusoLLStarks: Yes, but I only made that package available for testing, expecting people would go to upstream and report problems. The only thing thats different is a few settings changes to better suit Ubuntu.11:23
liwdholbach, the next UDW is sometime during the summer, yes?11:33
dholbachliw: yes11:33
liwdholbach, six months from January 19 would be July 19.. do you have exact dates already?11:35
dholbachliw: no11:35
liwdholbach, I'm asking so that I can plan my summer so that if possible, I can give the manpage writing tutorial :)11:35
dholbachsorry, no dates yet11:35
liwdholbach, no worries, I realize it is very early for that11:36
dholbach:-)11:36
directhexUDS is may, isn't it?11:38
liwdirecthex, yes11:38
directhexoh balls..... wife's birthday......... even if i can get sponsorship, i don't know if it's wise to play that particular card11:39
cjwatsonI've implemented the changes described in https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2009-February/027427.html. Please let me know if there are any problems12:00
directhexseems sound to me, cjwatson12:13
PecisDarbsis new gdm theme is oficial? :)12:22
pittigrndslm: hey12:22
pittigrndslm: madwifi is handled, but not with a special handler12:23
pittigrndslm: I have a bug about that12:23
pittigrndslm: the b43 handler does use b43-fwcutter, it doesn't reinvent the wheel12:23
pittigrndslm: so what's your question?12:23
pittislytherin: thanks for pointing out12:25
=== JanC_ is now known as JanC
alex-weejis gdm2 going to be in 904?12:32
=== thunderstruck is now known as gnomefreak
seb128alex-weej: no12:33
seb128alex-weej: it's available in the desktop team ppa as gdm-new if you want, might to universe but we have no interest to switch by default, it brings nothing to use and add quite some limitations12:34
alex-weejoh ok12:34
alex-weeji used it on fedora 10 the other day and thought it actually looked more featured, but i didn't really dig into it12:35
Siliciumis there a channel for questions who can answered in #ubuntu?12:36
Siliciumso then i dont need to ask it here...12:36
Siliciums/can/can't12:36
cjwatsonif you mean "which can't be answered", then you could try #ubuntu+1, but if they can't help then that is still not a valid reason to ask here12:36
alex-weejSilicium: you could always try http://answers.launchpad.net/ -- that way your questions won't be lost after about 5 seconds when they scroll off the buffer ;)12:36
cjwatsonif IRC can't help, try mailing lists, web forums, answers.launchpad.net, or a bug report if that's appropriate12:37
Siliciumcjwatson: thats to slow12:37
Silicium:/12:37
cjwatsonSilicium: I'm afraid that still doesn't justify asking here12:40
Silicium:D12:40
Siliciumso, i actually dont want everytime use this chan12:41
alex-weejseb128: i take it it breaks FUSA and guest session then12:41
seb128alex-weej: that yes12:42
seb128alex-weej: it also has no gdmsetup = no way for user to enable autologin or timedlogin12:42
seb128alex-weej: it has no settings migration, no theme support12:42
Siliciumargh damn shiat12:42
alex-weeji see. is it actually even considered ready yet?12:43
alex-weej(by upstream)12:43
=== thunderstruck is now known as gnomefreak
seb128alex-weej: GNOME ships it since 2.2412:44
seb128alex-weej: it doesn't add useful features over the old version out of some bling (fading, etc) but some things are not there yet, we don't think changing would benefit our users12:45
seb128alex-weej: and we got too many complain about GNOME breaking things (gnome-session-saving, audio, etc) recently, we want a "stable" cycle and not another flameware about new rewrittes dropping useful feature for no user win12:46
alex-weejsure, you don't need to defend yourself, i understand :)12:46
alex-weej(but saying what you just said... notify-osd seems to have ruffled those exact same feathers)12:46
seb128alex-weej: I'm just explain the choice not defending myself there ;-)12:47
apwpitti, seems there are a few niggles with apport suspend/resume still.  i've pushed up a couple more fixes, merge proposal here: https://code.launchpad.net/~apw/apport/suspend-resume/+merge/389912:53
dokomvo, seb128: any clues about the python-gobject-dbg/dpkg conflict?13:11
seb128doko: no13:11
seb128I'm pretty sure that's not a python-gobject issue though13:11
mvodoko: I just ran it through my auto-upgrade tester and did not get it there13:12
seb128nothing special changed there and my local build didn't have the issue13:12
seb128mvo: do you have an uptodate jaunty, does apt-get install python-gobject-dbg works?13:12
dokodo you have python2.6 installed as well?13:13
seb128doko: you have to since the current pygobject depends on it no?13:14
mvolet me check via chroot13:14
Keybukcjwatson: it's only deleted if it's not being used13:14
Keybuksince otherwise it gets written with increasingly random values on shutdown13:14
Keybukcjwatson: I didn't know base-files created it, it shouldn't13:15
pittiapw: thanks, merged; running test suite now13:16
PecisDarbshi people, is there any plans to get rid of evolution-indicator dialog thingy in Jaunty? :) it drives me m(a)*d13:16
apwpitti, thanks ... sorry for so many iterations, this thing is sooo hard to test properly without crashing kit every time13:17
pittiapw: no problem at all :)13:17
pittiapw: erm, you don't have a "fake" susres.crash for testing the UI?13:17
apwpitti, ?13:18
pittiapw: I mean you actaully have a machine where suspend fails, and do that to test the GUI?13:18
dokoseb128: no, doesn't. but it depends directly on python2.5, which it should not13:18
apwpitti, na, i can fake everything to test the UI component13:19
cjwatsonKeybuk: doesn't it only get written on shutdown if you turn on that code? or is that unconditional?13:19
apwbut as i found with the last iteration if you don't actually crash it13:19
Keybukcjwatson: it was unconditional in the init script13:19
Keybukso I made it conditional on the existance of /etc/adjtime13:19
apwyou don't really run it quite the way that a crash does ...13:19
cjwatsonKeybuk: how do you propose to fix the powerpc problem? adjtime was actually a useful "this is a reasonable minimum time that it could possibly be"13:19
Keybukcjwatson: what _is_ the powerpc problem?13:19
NCommanderdoko, should have openjdk-6 finished building on ARM? It's been going for a week, and I think it might be stuck in an infinite loop (the Debian build only took 3 days ...)13:19
pittiapw: right, you should keep a real .crash file around and just cp it to /var/crash for UI testing13:19
cjwatsonKeybuk: I described it earlier13:19
Keybukcjwatson: i don't have an e-mail?13:20
Keybuk(or a bug report)13:20
cjwatsonoh, hmm, maybe I misdescribed it though13:20
cjwatson09:33 <cjwatson> Keybuk: ^- powerpc-utils is a difficult one - without having looked I suspect it's coping with known problems on powerpc systems where the firmware time gets reset to the Mac epoch on battery13:20
pittiapw: I'll do another fix, and then upload13:20
cjwatson                 failure, or some such. Do we really need to delete /etc/adjtime, rather than just deleting the code that used it?13:20
cjwatsonKeybuk: you were replying to me so you clearly saw it :-P13:20
KeybukI just see the bits you say13:21
apwpitti, cool13:21
KeybukI don't see how adjtime solves that13:21
Keybukadjtime is for dealing with drift between the two clocks13:21
Keybuknot one clock always saying 1 Jan 197013:21
cjwatsonbase-files updates adjtime every upload to a reasonable minimum time13:21
dokoNCommander: which Debian build?13:21
cjwatsonI think Santiago just updates it to the current time or thereabouts13:21
cjwatsonwe actually don't have anywhere else to say "hey guys, it's at least 2009" ;-)13:21
cjwatson09:16 <TheMuso> Hrm. Where did /etc/adjtime go? I see base-files creates it in its postinst, but none of my jaunty systems have it, and a powerpc alternate install fails because powerpc-utils can't find it.13:22
Keybukcjwatson: that doesn't fix the problem though13:22
NCommanderdoko, openjdk-6 on Debian on armel took three days. The last upload to Ubuntu has been going for almost a week, and has been spitting out the message "Compiler still running" for most of that time :-)13:22
Keybukand would cause others, since suddenly hwclock would be using adjtime again13:22
dokoif it is based on the same package, then it looks like a problem. but imo these are the arm specific optimizations13:22
Keybukfor everything13:22
cjwatsonit doesn't *fix* it, but sometimes a vague approximation of recent time is better than 190413:22
dokoNCommander: which version was the Debian build?13:22
cjwatson(which is the Mac epoch, and happens to be negative Unix time, which breaks some things in fun ways)13:22
NCommanderdoko: 6b11-9.113:23
cjwatsonKeybuk: calm down, I'm not saying "argh we must reintroduce adjtime" :-)13:23
Keybukone obvious solution is ntpdate ;)13:23
cjwatsonKeybuk: I think I may have misdescribed the powerpc-utils problem, though; it looks to me as if it ships an hwclock port13:23
cjwatsonKeybuk: one of the breakages caused here is that the desktop refuses to start :-P13:23
dokoNCommander: that's some months old ...13:24
cjwatsonanyway, I suspect what we actually need to do here is port powerpc-utils' clock to the new world order13:24
cjwatsonor figure out whether it can be thrown away in favour of hwclock13:24
Keybukright13:24
Keybukif we need minimum time support, that can be patched into hwclock itself13:24
cjwatsonmaybe it could use the timestamp of its executable as a minimum time or something13:25
mvodoko, seb128: I have the error now, I look at it13:25
seb128mvo: thanks13:25
Keybukcjwatson: that's actually not bad idea ;)13:25
mvoits pretty clearly a python-support issue it seems :/13:25
cjwatsonanyway, I think minimum time was a red herring in response to Luke's actual bug - I hadn't looked at the code yet when I brought that up13:26
cjwatsonso sorry about that13:26
seb128mvo: I would guess so too13:26
NCommanderdoko, I was asking if these kind of build times are normal.  openjdk-6 uploads on ARM have taken two days13:26
NCommanderdoko, so I'm starting to wonder if something has gone horribly horribly wrong13:26
mvo*sigh*13:27
mvoyeah for two implementatons of the same13:27
liwmvo, hmm, do-system-upgrade -d removes system-cleaner(-gtk), but doesn't install computer-janitor -- when I tested this earlier with apt-get dist-upgrade, it worked; should I introduce a transition package?13:27
cjwatsonpowerpc-utils.postinst copies /etc/adjtime into /var/lib/hwclock/, apparently due to Debian #28060513:27
ubottuDebian bug 280605 in powerpc-utils "/sbin/clock: Newer FHS require adjtime in /var/" [Normal,Closed] http://bugs.debian.org/28060513:27
cjwatsonand that's the thing that's actually failing13:27
Keybukheh13:28
Keybukbtw. can base-files be made to not create /etc/adjtime on non-ppc machines?13:28
dokoseb128: python2.5 dependency is hardcoded in control.in. please remove it for the next upload13:30
dokosame for the -dev package13:30
seb128doko: ok13:31
cjwatsonKeybuk: in principle sure but I suspect there is really no reason not to fix powerpc13:31
Keybukcjwatson: what I mean is, if base-files is creating it, then hwclock will use it unconditionally13:32
Keybukeven on x8613:32
Keybukthat's the reason it gets removed in the hwclock postins13:32
Keybukto stop it being used13:32
cjwatsonright, I'm just questioning the "on non-ppc machines" bit13:32
Keybukah ok ;)13:32
sorencjwatson: You have a local mirror, right? Does it also mirror all the installer bits? I can't seem to get debmirror to grab enough stuff to make jigdo happy.13:35
cjwatsonyes, it does13:36
cjwatsonttp://paste.ubuntu.com/122373/13:36
cjwatsonhttp://paste.ubuntu.com/122373/13:36
sorencjwatson: Aha!13:37
mvo_seb128, doko: http://paste.ubuntu.com/122375/ - so now its just "lets fix pysupport (or switch to python-central ;)"13:41
dokomvo: now quick, seb128 just left, lets switch to python-central ;)13:43
sorencjwatson: That doesn't grab updated installers in -updates, does it?13:43
cjwatsonsoren: nope13:43
sorencjwatson: Alright. Thanks!13:44
=== chand_ is now known as chand
=== __iron is now known as iron
* Keybuk has coffee now13:54
* cody-somerville has cranberry juice.13:55
* directhex has savaged his fingertip with a pair of pliars13:55
* Laney cannot figure out why n != S n'13:56
* Laney has to go mark first year undergraduate presentations now. wish me luck13:57
superm1slangasek, can you poke the mythbuntu daily builds so we can get to checking for alpha5 rc?  it looks like a hash sum mismatch again from apt-get update again (http://people.ubuntu.com/~ubuntu-archive/cd-build-logs/mythbuntu/jaunty/daily-live-20090224.log)14:03
superm1slangasek, er well hold off i think.  looks like there is something wrong with clock-setup in the current ubiquity anyhow, so we'll need to wait for one more at least14:05
tjaaltonKeybuk: how come DM_TYPE can be empty? broke multipath here :)14:19
Keybuktjaalton: no idea?14:20
Keybukdo you mean the table type?14:20
Keybukyou can create devmapper devices with no table14:20
tjaaltonKeybuk: it used to work until I reinstalled the box today. kpartx rule doesn't finish14:20
tjaaltondevice-mapper table, I guess14:21
KeybukI don't think anything's changed there recently?14:21
tjaaltonnot there, but in udev?14:21
tjaaltonKeybuk: how did I get the debug info again, from busybox14:23
tjaaltonI mean the options for udevd14:25
Keybuktjaalton: --debug14:30
tjaaltonKeybuk: ok, DM_TYPE was exported by kpartx_id, and not having it in the image doesn't help :)14:41
tjaaltons/was/would be/14:41
=== Koon is now known as ttx
=== ttx is now known as ttx_
=== ttx_ is now known as ttx
tjaaltonKeybuk: that didn't help much, the rule is still not finished. I suspect this has something to do with the inotify changes in udev/devmapper15:07
apwis there a way to tell if a package is a standard seed.  i want to know if checkbox is a default install on desktop and server15:07
Keybuktjaalton: rule is still not finished?15:08
tjaaltonKeybuk: kpartx.rules15:08
Keybukoh, that's multipath-tools crack?15:08
Keybukhas that _ever_ worked?15:08
tjaaltonyes15:08
tjaaltonyes15:08
tjaalton:)15:08
Keybukwhy isn't it "finished" ?15:08
cjwatsonapw: apt-cache show checkbox, look for the Task field15:08
apwso those are the tasksel tasks?15:08
tjaaltonKeybuk: you tell me :)15:09
tjaaltonI'd like it to reach the 'kpartx -a.. ' phase15:09
tjaaltonbut it doesn't15:10
KeybukI don't know, i've never read that rule15:10
Keybukif it doesn't _reach_ something, then something before it is taking over three minutes15:10
tjaaltonit worked fine until the reinstall15:10
cjwatsonapw: yes15:11
cjwatsonapw: those are constructed by dependency-expanding seeds15:11
apwcjwatson, rocking thanks ... yeah seen those in the germinating phase for CD creation, terifying15:12
savvasis mvo responsible for the gdebi source package? or should I subscribe ubuntu main sponsors? there's a patch for bug 19090715:13
ubottuLaunchpad bug 190907 in gdebi "[kde] Applications cannot read Greek folder names" [Undecided,In progress] https://launchpad.net/bugs/19090715:14
Riddellsavvas: if it's for the KDE side you can poke me (subscribing ubuntu main sponsors a good idea too)15:15
mvosavvas: thanks, you are quick :) I know about the patch, I think its good, but I need to look a bit closer. but if Riddell could have a look that would rock of course15:15
mvoRiddell: if you think its fine, I apply it, it looks good to me, but I know much less about pykde than you :) I tried to contact martin.boehm too15:16
savvasRiddell: ok, noted :)15:16
savvasthank you both for reviewing it :)15:18
highvoltage\o\ \o/ /o/ dholbach! \o\ \o/ \o/15:37
dholbachhighvoltage: hm? :-)15:37
highvoltagesorry, just couldn't keep it in15:37
dholbachhehe15:37
* dholbach hugs highvoltage15:37
directhexthere's one compelling reason to go to UDS15:38
Laneybooze?15:38
directhexdholbach-hugging!15:39
davmor2ice cream eating comp15:39
dholbach:-D15:39
directhexmmm ice cream15:39
grndslmpitti, you still around?15:42
pittigrndslm: hi15:42
grndslmpitti: heya... whole reason i'm asking you about jockey drivers is because i'm trying to use remastersys to create a distro with [at a bare minimum] all the restricted drivers15:42
grndslmsoo... i know i need to install madwifi, b43-fwcutter, and is there anything else?  main question in the email is what's the diff between b43-fwcutter and broadcom-wl15:43
grndslmpitti:  any hints?15:45
pittigrndslm: I got your mail; do you prefer IRC or email answer?15:47
grndslmhonestly doesn't matter... irc since we're already here ;)15:47
pittigrndslm: b43 and broadcom-wl are two totally independent drivers15:47
pittigrndslm: wl is shipped in l-r-m (including firmware), b43 is in the main kernel (free module), but needs non-redistributable firmware (through b43-fwcutter)15:48
pittigrndslm: so you should ship either15:48
pittigrndslm: jockey also provides installation of nvidia and fglrx drivers15:48
grndslmpitti:  i'm mostly worried about wireless for now, so then jockey can be used to setup graphics later15:48
grndslmpitti:  what is l-r-m?15:49
pittigrndslm: linux-restricted-modules15:49
directhexlinux-restricted-modules15:49
grndslmahh... so if i have l-r-m on hardy, i've already got the wl driver?15:49
pittigrndslm: I think it was added to linux-backports-modules in hardy; please check the package contents and changelog15:50
pitticould also have been l-r-m, though15:50
grndslmpitti:  how do i change package contents & changelog? =D  and is it possible to install both graphics drivers and have the LiveCD just automatically choose one *after* installation?15:54
grndslm*check pkg contents15:54
pittigrndslm: dpkg -S /path/to/installed/file gives you the package which ships a filel15:54
pittigrndslm: no, you can't *install* the graphics drivers, you can at most ship them15:54
grndslmsoo.. just have the debs already downloaded for both of them?15:55
pittifirst, the 4 nvidia drivers conflict to each other file-wise, and second they do a lot of fiddling with the OpenGL libraries, etc.15:55
grndslmsounds about right15:55
pittisame with fglrx15:55
pittiyou really only want to install this on systems which actually use fglrx15:56
grndslm4 nvidia drivers?  you mean different versions of the same nvidia driver?15:56
grndslmany nvidia version should work on all gfx cards, eh?15:57
pittigrndslm: right; unfortunately they all support a different set of models15:58
pittigrndslm: unfortunately not; if that were so, we wouldn't have four in the first place15:58
grndslmwow... never realized that15:59
grndslmpitti:  is this the same wl driver we're talkin' about?  http://pastebin.ca/134592315:59
pittigrndslm: that one, yes16:00
grndslmit's in linux-restricted-modules... so i guess i'm all good to go in the networking department then?16:00
grndslmpitti:  no more wireless drivers i need to add?16:01
pittigrndslm: we don't have other packages related to that, no16:02
pittigrndslm: you might want to include ndiswrapper16:03
pittigrndslm: jockey doesn't support it, but it's not terribly hard to set it up manually, or with ndisgtk16:03
grndslmpitti:  it's useless without firmware tho isn't it?16:03
pittigrndslm: s/firmware/a windows driver/16:03
pittibut it provides the infrastructure to use the bits from windows driver CDs16:04
* pitti never used it so far16:04
grndslmi'll never understand the difference between the two16:04
pitti3v1l16:04
Keybukcody-somerville: how does one check/set the keyboard layout in XFCE?16:04
pittigrndslm: firmware runs on the device, a driver runs on your computer16:04
grndslmi guess i should just install it incase somebody actually has their driver cd16:04
pittigrndslm: well, "driver" usually encompasses firmware, too16:04
cody-somervilleKeybuk, in Jaunty?16:04
Keybukcody-somerville: in general16:04
cody-somervilleIn Jaunty, Applications > Settings > Keyboard. Click the layout tab.16:05
grndslmpitti:  i get that part, but how does downloading broadcom firmware & stripping it lead to a linux compatible solution?16:05
Keybukcody-somerville: where is "Applications" ?16:05
KeybukI have something that looks like a spanner on the task bar16:06
cody-somervilleKeybuk, Same place it is in Ubuntu - upper left corner.16:06
Keybukthat has Settings16:06
Keybukand has Keyboard Settings16:06
Keybukbut that has no "Layout"16:06
Keybukthis is not Xubuntu, btw16:06
cody-somervilleWhat version of Xfce is it?16:07
Keybukcody-somerville: 416:07
Keybuk4.4.316:07
cody-somervilleKeybuk, You might have to add the keyboard layout switcher applet in 4.416:07
grndslmpitti:  thanks for the help, man!!  you're too good.16:07
pittigrndslm: my pleasure, good luck with your project16:08
grndslmbut i gotta go for now, so ttyl16:08
grndslmthanks!16:08
Keybukcody-somerville: I can't see such a thing in the list16:09
cody-somervilleKeybuk, xfce4-xkb-plugin is the ubuntu package16:10
Keybukcody-somerville: this isn't Ubuntu ;)16:10
cody-somervilleWell, I don't think 4.4.x supports that really. You could use xfce4-xkb-plugin but you'd have to define the list of layouts in xorg.conf.16:11
Keybukthere's no xorg.conf here ;)16:12
cody-somervilleKeybuk, The latest version of xkb-plugin can use libxklavier16:12
cody-somervilleand there is always xfkc16:12
KeybukI don't really want to change this much16:13
cody-somervilleKeybuk, Then your only other option is to replace the actual keyboard :P16:14
Keybukcody-somerville: lol16:14
Keybukactually, I want to test whether moblin even lets you set a keyboard16:14
Keybukbecause I don't think it does <g>16:14
dholbachseb128: chpe says r3325 of gnome-terminal fixes the memory corruption16:17
dholbachgnome bug 57254916:17
ubottuGnome bug 572549 in general "Memory corruption in gnome-terminal" [Critical,Resolved: fixed] http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57254916:17
seb128dholbach: you have upload right feel free to backport the change ;-)16:17
seb128I'm too busy to work on that today16:18
seb128and we have a meeting in 11 minutes now16:18
seb128dholbach: but thank you for keeping track of the issue ;-)16:18
dholbachseb128: no worries, I'll do it16:18
seb128dholbach: if nobody backport it next tarball are due in a week16:18
dholbachright-o - I just want to try it myself and if it helps to save the work of others, it might be worth it :)16:19
seb128thank you16:19
dholbachseb128: you're lucky - gnome-terminal does not use quilt, so I'll add the patch ;-)16:20
seb128dholbach: he he, it might be using bzr though since mvo touched it so be carreful ;-)16:20
dholbachseb128: you'Re right, it does16:21
mvoseb128: which one (sorry, my network hates me)16:23
seb128mvo: g-t16:25
mvoyep, bzr!16:28
mvoRiddell: did you had a chance to look at the patch?16:32
Riddellmvo: not yet16:32
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=== dholbach_ is now known as dholbach
mvoliw: I commited the skip-free-space-check16:38
seb128slangasek, pitti: what do you think about updating shared-mime-info to 0.60, it adds a bunch of mimetype definitions16:43
pittiseb128: what do these do? for opening files with programs?16:44
seb128the debian version also switch to use dpkg triggers, not sure if you consider that as a risky change after feature freeze or not16:44
pittiseb128: triggers are well understood by now, so they don't scare me16:44
seb128pitti: that's a mapping between file content and mimetype, ie "java" on the first line is a java source, etc16:45
seb128pitti: editor /usr/share/mime/packages/freedesktop.org.xml16:45
pittiah16:45
pittiseb128: well, independently of FF we should review the diff for sanity, other than that it sounds okay16:46
pittii. e. to not point to programs we don't install/have/don't want to support, etc.16:46
seb128pitti: http://paste.ubuntu.com/122452/16:47
seb128pitti: there is no program mapping, that just define the mimetypes, then the mapping in .desktop for each applications which list the mimetypes they can handle16:47
seb128pitti: the diff is the revelant part, ie the database, translations etc should not be an issue16:47
Keybukpitti: do you know much about HAL and keymaps?16:48
pittiseb128: looks fine to me16:48
pittiKeybuk: enough in order to be able to fix stuff and commit fdi updates upstream16:48
Keybukpitti: basically I'm trying to work out how the X keyboard map is decided/set16:48
Keybukit's not in /etc/X11/xorg.conf as I would expect16:48
seb128pitti: thanks16:49
dholbachseb128, mvo: do you use ~ubuntu-desktop or ~ubuntu-core-dev?16:49
Keybukbut after that, I'm not sure I know16:49
pittiKeybuk: that's actually the xorg -evdev driver, which translates the kernel key symbols (linux/input.h) to XF86... key names16:49
seb128dholbach: whatever is in the control16:50
Keybukpitti: how does it know that I want the "gb" keyboard map?16:50
dholbachseb128: very good point :)16:50
dholbachseb128, mvo: filed a merge proposal16:50
seb128dholbach: thanks16:51
pittiKeybuk: I don't think X.org uses its own layout configuration any more; it reads it from hal nowadays, IIRC (tjaalton should know better)16:51
Keybukpitti: right, but how/where/etc.16:51
pittiKeybuk: /usr/share/hal/fdi/policy/10osvendor/10-x11-keymap.fdi16:51
Keybukthat's exactly what I'm trying to trace16:51
pittiKeybuk: (sorry, we are in meeting, I'm lagging)16:51
Keybukah, and how does that differ to 10-keymap.fdi ?16:52
pittiKeybuk: there I'm leaving familiar terrain (bryce/tjaalton), but I *think* 10-keymap.fdi adds the hal-setup-keymap callout to input devices (which means to call setkeycodes to assing scan codes to the linux key codes, defined in hal-info)16:53
pittiKeybuk: and 10-x11-keymap pokes the keyboard layout into X1116:53
=== zaafouri is now known as zaafouri`
Keybukok...16:54
pittiKeybuk: i. e. it reads it from console-setup and writes it into input.xkb.{model,layout,variant,options}16:54
Keybukso what in all this calls xkbcomp to actually compile the keymap?16:54
pittiwhich is where X is reading it from if you select "evdev keyboard" in GNOME16:54
pittiyou can also set another layout in GNOME, though16:54
pittiKeybuk: I don't know, I'm afraid16:54
mvo_dholbach: if you give me the url I merge now16:54
Keybuktjaalton: don't suppose you know?16:55
Keybukit looks like it's something in the X server that does that to me16:56
tjaaltonKeybuk: hal picks it up from /etc/default/console-setup16:57
dholbachmvo: lp:~dholbach/gnome-terminal/fix-memory-corruption16:57
Keybuktjaalton: right; itùs the bit qfter thqt Iù, trying to trqck dozn16:57
Keybukwhoah, that was an interesting one ;)16:57
soren*chuckle*16:57
Keybuksomething somewhere must call xkbcomp to get a compiled xkb map to load into the X server16:58
Keybukand I'm wondering where that thing is16:58
Keybukand what it does with the output16:58
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Keybukhmm, the X server itself apparently16:59
Keybuk 5626 25049  5626  5626 tty7      5626 S+       0   0:00 sh -c "/usr/bin/xkbcomp" -w 1 "-R/usr/share/X11/xkb" -xkm "-" -em1 "The XKEYBOARD keymap compiler (xkbcomp) reports:" -emp "> " -eml "Errors from xkbcomp are not fatal to the X server" "/var/lib/xkb/server-0.xkm"16:59
Keybukbut that named file doesn't exist at the end17:00
tjaaltonKeybuk: ok, i've not dug that far17:01
Keybuktjaalton: any luck with your kpartx problem btw?17:02
tjaaltonthere's a recent patch to use cached files after the initial run, so it should speed things up17:02
Keybuktjaalton: that's the very patch that breaks the world for me ;)17:02
tjaaltonKeybuk:hah :)17:03
Keybuktjaalton: do you have a reference to the patch so I can check it's the same one I'm looking at17:03
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tjaaltonKeybuk: it was sent to xorg-devel@ on feb 19th17:05
seb128pitti: poppler 0.10.3 to 0.10.4 -> http://paste.ubuntu.com/122462 if you have a minute to review17:05
tjaaltonby dan nicholson17:05
pittiseb128: just bug fixes, go ahead17:06
gaspaMacSlow: did your git been moved from f.d.o ?17:06
seb128pitti: thanks17:06
MacSlowgaspa, I hope not17:06
gaspaMacSlow:  http://cgit.freedesktop.org/users/macslow/cairo-clock/ tell me "no repo found"17:07
MacSlowgaspa, I've not touched it since the ssh-incident17:07
calchow do you get a backtrace when the program having the problem catches its own error?17:07
Keybuktjaalton: hmm, this is quite different from the one I have17:07
Keybukahh, this just avoids reworking if you change the keymap from "gb" to "gb"17:07
Keybukhttp://people.ubuntu.com/~scott/xkbcomp.patch17:08
tjaaltonKeybuk: about kpartx; I'll continue debugging it tomorrow17:08
pitticalc: ideally, fix the program to re-throw the signal afterwards17:08
Keybukis the one I'm playing with17:08
pitticalc: or gdb it and set a breakpoint in the error handler, perhaps?17:08
calcpitti: ok, the program in this case is dselect :)17:08
tjaaltoni'm currently on my e71, so putty can't open links :)17:08
calcgdb just gives me a "Program exited with code 02.17:08
pitti*blows the dust off*, oh, dselect17:08
tjaaltonKeybuk: ^17:09
calci'm seeing bug 25200117:09
ubottuLaunchpad bug 252001 in dpkg "dselect: failed to create baselist pad" [Undecided,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/25200117:09
calcactually i could probably just grep the source to find out why that is happening, heh17:09
gaspaMacSlow: ah! it works with: http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~macslow17:11
calcah i found what appears to be causing it17:11
calcthe ddebs repo17:11
MacSlowgaspa, ok17:12
=== fader is now known as fader|lunch
=== RainCT_ is now known as RainCT
=== slangasek changed the topic of #ubuntu-devel to: Archive: feature-frozen | main frozen for alpha-5 | Ubuntu 8.10 released! | Development of Ubuntu (not support, not app development on Ubuntu) | #ubuntu for support and general discussion for dapper-intrepid | #ubuntu-motu for getting involved in development | http://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDevelopment | See #ubuntu-bugs for http://wiki.ubuntu.com/HelpingWithBugs | LP believed fixed - please report any further timeouts to #launchpad
Turlhi19:14
slangasekhello19:14
Turlhow can I get a list of the packages installed by default on a normal ubuntu system? I'm building popcon2, so it would be great to have it, so we can filter the 'default packages' and let the other packages show :)19:15
slangasekhmm, not sure of a trivial way to get that information.  By "normal" ubuntu system, do you mean a desktop system, or any install (including Kubuntu, Ubuntu server, etc)?19:17
Turlwell, any system that can have popcon enabled, but mainly K/X/Ubuntu19:22
=== fader|lunch is now known as fader
slangasekzul: was there an upstream bug number for 330626? (no upstream bug task linked)19:37
slangasekzul: wondering if it happens to be fixed in the 3.3.1 release19:37
zulyeah gimme a sec19:37
zulslangasek: https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=612619:38
ubottubugzilla.samba.org bug 6126 in Printing "Segfault when loading printers." [Major,New]19:38
* slangasek links it19:38
LaserJockso is it now not possible to logout/reboot from the menu?19:39
slangasekLaserJock: correct; if you have FUSA, FUSA is the single place to logout/reboot19:39
slangasekinstead of having menu redundancy19:39
pittiLaserJock: ctrl+alt+del stil works, too19:39
slangasekand ctrl-alt-prtscr-k19:39
slangasekwait, no, that's something different19:40
LaserJockslangasek: that one doesn't work for me, baad things happen19:40
pittiwell, closing the door vs. blasting it out :)19:40
LaserJockso what if I don't have FUSA?19:40
pittiLaserJock: you'll get the menu entreis19:40
pittientries, too19:40
LaserJockoh, nifty19:40
pittieven dynamically19:41
LaserJockI don't use the FUSA applet, but I usually leave it around just 'cause it's default19:41
LaserJockthat's pretty cool that the menu changes instantly19:43
allquixoticapw: I've been following discussion on the kernel-team list about pulseaudio glitch-free vs. kernel configs. I tried your lp276476 PPA kernels (running Jaunty on top of it) and my glitch-free problems are not resolved. Failing that, do you think it's reasonable to resurrect the lowlatency kernel flavor which evidently died in Feisty?19:50
=== rickspencer3 is now known as rickspencer3-afk
apwallquixotic, is not the issue that glitch-free is simply not glitch-free in meaning, it means trust we have no glitches and take longer before trying to fill the buffer19:52
apwso to get glitch-free sound you turn off glitch-free mode19:52
slangasekglitch-free means the glitches have been set free, obviously ;)19:54
allquixoticapw: Yeah, it's interesting that glitch-free does the opposite :) Are we planning to turn off glitch-free by default then? With compositing enabled by default on my Intel GM965, whenever a big GEM request goes through (such as minimizing a window causing that slide animation), glitch-free glitches :)19:54
apwyeah as i understand glitch-free it means we wait until the buffer is nearly empty before refilling instead of the more normal fill any time there is any space, so it reduces cpu usage19:55
slangasekallquixotic: see dtchen's mail to ubuntu-devel on 19 Feb about this19:55
allquixoticIt just seems like 9.04 should ship with some method of addressing the problem of "I have a driver that makes kernel latency bad" [Intel GEM, Nvidia, others...?] leading immediately to "sound clicks and pops".19:55
allquixoticso we can either make the kernel more responsive or turn off glitch-free as you said19:55
allquixoticeither way resolves my problem19:55
apwthe latter seems less scarey19:55
allquixoticapw: Yeah, as a kernel release manager I would also be somewhat scared of shipping CONFIG_HZ=1000 and a preemptible kernel as the default from an Ubuntu Desktop install. Of course, you could resurrect lowlatency and make it an advanced option in the installer.... but.... too late for 9.04, probably :)19:57
allquixotic(I am not, of course, a kernel release manager, but in your shoes, I can see the concern)19:57
slangasekwell, there is an -rt kernel in the archive20:00
macoallquixotic: dtchen said there's a secondary problem with glitch-free related to a pointer (I'm trying to remember the conversation) and it affects all drivers20:00
slangasek... whose meta packages need updating :P20:00
macoor...no hang on. now im not sure if that was about glitc-free or auto-spawn20:00
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allquixoticslangasek: I noticed the bug with the meta-package today; I installed `linux-rt` and balked at the version, then aptitude search made me even more confused :)20:01
macohe said ideally glitch-free & auto-spawn are both working and shipped, but he wants them on in development so theres at least a way to find the bugs to start fixing them even if they dont ship20:01
macobecause it exposes bugs in the underlying drivers20:01
macoand he'd like to get the drivers fixed20:02
allquixoticLennart has a pretty solid effort going on between him, the ALSA core devs, and the community with his test scripts... he's trying to track down hardware-dependent bugs that cause weirdness in glitch-free. That's a different subject than latency; some hardware can't properly use glitch-free even with excellent latency20:02
allquixoticif we wanted to get the benefit of that work, we would have to pull in ALSA from 1.0.19 + git patches that will probably result from the findings about five different ALSA drivers that report bad timing information20:03
allquixoticthat's still in the works though20:04
macoPA 0.9.15 also fixes a bunch of what's wrong in 0.9.14, but of course it introduced another boatload of new bugs20:04
macoand 0.9.15 would require doing what you just said with alsa 1.0.1920:05
macowell really, itd probably require just plain going to 1.0.19 overall20:05
allquixoticmaco: Heh, 0.9.15 has a major bug currently in git, at least with our libtool (not sure if Lennart caught it with Fedora's libtool). It mysteriously can't find the module-alsa-card.so module, which is crucial20:05
maco.... i have 0.9.15 installed20:06
allquixoticmaco: 0.9.15 isn't released yet :)20:07
macowell TheMuso's PPA of it20:07
allquixotichis PPA probably hasn't pulled in the bug from git :)20:08
macowas just about to say "maybe he hasn't built recently"20:08
allquixoticI'm trying to track down the root cause of the bug to get it fixed just in case we decide to update PA or ALSA before 9.0420:09
macook20:09
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ebroderQuestion about bug #216761. Intrepid currently has 3.3.0-1ubuntu7. I got 3.3.0-1ubuntu8 uploaded into Jaunty. Do I need to construct a 3.3.0-1ubuntu7.1 for an Intrepid SRU, or can 3.3.0-1ubuntu8 be used?21:24
ubottuLaunchpad bug 216761 in xen-3.3 "errors in xendomains init script" [Undecided,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/21676121:24
ScottK7.121:24
=== maco_ is now known as maco
ebroderAnybody willing to upload http://launchpadlibrarian.net/23083056/xen-3.3_3.3.0-1ubuntu7.1.debdiff to intrepid-proposed? :)21:30
ebroderOh crap - don't upload that one, actually21:31
ebroderOk - let's try this again with a patch going in the right direction. Anyone willing to upload http://launchpadlibrarian.net/23083113/xen-3.3_3.3.0-1ubuntu7.1.debdiff to intrepid-proposed?21:35
pittibryce: would you mind if I upload the fix for freedesktop bug 19304, or do you prefer to wait until upstream commits the patch?21:35
ubottuFreedesktop bug 19304 in Driver/intel "[i945 FBC] spontaneous black screen (major pipe-A underrun)" [Normal,Reopened] http://bugzilla.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1930421:35
pittibryce: I had several people test it successfully (also for intrepid, in my ppa)21:35
brycepitti: looking21:36
brycepitti: sure go ahead.21:37
brycepitti: if upstream ends up committing something substantially different, we'll need to make sure to update21:37
bryceI'm not certain that we will be pulling -intel 2.7 for jaunty.  Intel releases are sometimes not so stable21:38
macoby "spontaneous black screen" does that mean goes black and stays black, or does it mean a black flicker when it redraws?21:40
=== rickspencer3-afk is now known as rickspencer3
macooh ok nevermind...was looking for the launchpad bug :P21:45
slangasekzul: as a data point, I've just found that I can't reproduce bug #330626 on Debian sid with 2:3.3.0-3; I don't think it's a difference in anything being patched in the source, so maybe a difference in build options or compiler settings21:47
ubottuLaunchpad bug 330626 in samba "9.04 Jaunty Samba 2:3.3.0-3ubuntu2 fails to start on update " [Unknown,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/33062621:47
slangasekor a difference in the existing environment for each of the servers - will try to narrow this down21:48
LaserJockslangasek: well, I've got a merged moodle package that works as well as the current Jaunty one does21:49
slangasekLaserJock: that sounds like an endorsement to me ;)21:49
LaserJockslangasek: but considering that the current one doesn't install/remove that's not saying much ;-)21:49
slangasekheh21:49
LaserJockapparently it works fine on Debian21:49
LaserJockbut something's going wrong in the DB creation in Ubuntu21:50
LaserJockI don't think I'm going to get all that figured out by Thursday21:50
LaserJockso should I bump the milestone or upload the merge now and fix the DB issues after?21:51
slangasekif it's not installable, is it also not upgradeable?21:51
LaserJockit might be upgradable if you have an existing working install21:52
LaserJockthe problem it's having is in the initial DB creation21:52
LaserJockif you already have a DB it might work just fine21:52
LaserJockbut I haven't tested it as I don't have a working DB21:52
slangasekis the intrepid package also broken this way?21:53
LaserJocksimilarly21:53
slangasekoh, intrepid's at the same version21:53
LaserJockI'm not sure how far it's broken in Intrepid but I have severall "can't install/upgrade" bugs for Intrepid21:53
slangasekhow far back does one have to go to find a version of moodle that's actually installable? :P21:53
LaserJockHardy I guess21:54
ajmitchLaserJock: got a package somewhere to look at? I'll be needing to get familiar with moodle soon21:54
LaserJockIntrepid's seemed to work if you choose the right options21:54
LaserJockbut the default DB of postgresql doesn't work21:54
slangasekLaserJock: but intrepid and jaunty are at the same version, so "choose the right options" should also work in jaunty?21:54
slangasekin which case, I would say it's worth having the security updates in now and the maintainer script fixes in later21:55
LaserJockassuming that it's just moodle that's the problem21:55
LaserJockI think it's a moodle+DB issue so it's possible that Intrepid's moodle+mysql works but Jaunty's moodle+mysql doesn't21:56
LaserJockfor instance, I haven't had time to go through all the permutations21:56
LaserJockajmitch: Debian has a git repo21:56
LaserJockright now the package I have should be functionally as good as current Jaunty's but with security and other bug fixes21:57
ajmitchand everything you've merged is there?21:57
LaserJockand an internal lib removed21:57
LaserJockajmitch: yep, master branch is what I'm working on21:57
LaserJockI just have a heavy load this week so I need to know if what I've got is OK for Alpha5 or not21:58
LaserJockthe Debian maintainer said he'd help me look into the DB creation issues, but I doubt it'll be resolved before Alpha 5 is out21:58
LaserJockbut we are merged21:59
slangasekzul: just reproduced the problem with 3.3.0-3 by building with -PIE22:47
slangasek(the Debian package calls ./configure --disable-pie)22:47
=== murdok is now known as pablog

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