/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2009/06/16/#ubuntu-devel.txt

directhexmeebey's got a 5 meg reduction sat in SVN. we'll roll it out before alpha 300:00
dcushmanHow can a *NIX n00b developer with 20+ years of professional software development get up to speed and make a useful contribution?00:01
directhexdcushman, start by moving to #ubuntu-motu, which is the more beginner-oriented place to be00:02
BUGabundo!daily | directhex:00:02
ubottudirecthex:: Daily builds of the CD images of the current development version of Ubuntu are available at http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily/current/ and http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/00:02
directhexBUGabundo, i'm not rushing for the sake of dailies, not this early in the cycle00:02
BUGabundodirecthex: won't those changes be there?00:02
BUGabundoah ok00:02
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slangaseksuperm1: mythbuntu-desktop Recommends: dvb-utils, which is NBS; I guess it should now Recommend: dvb-apps instead?00:24
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superm1slangasek, i'll take a look and see00:51
superm1yeah that looks right. i'll make the changes00:54
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mib_hjyq55hrheeeeeeeey02:47
mib_hjyq55hrcan anybody help me ?02:47
nellery!ask02:49
ubottuPlease don't ask to ask a question, simply ask the question (all on ONE line, so others can read and follow it easily). If anyone knows the answer they will most likely reply. :-)02:49
nellerymib_hjyq55hr: ^^02:49
mib_hjyq55hri cant see mikrotik os router Login page on firefox although it appear in vista02:50
mib_hjyq55hrri cant see mikrotik os router Login page on firefox in ubuntu  although it appear in vista02:50
borrellplease ask in #ubuntu, thats the general support channel ;)03:00
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dholbachgood morning!06:49
pittiGood morning07:01
ttxGood morning :)07:02
pittislangasek: /usr/share/doc/udev-extras/README.keymap.txt has debugging instructions and also shows how to use /lib/udev/keymap input/eventX to print the current map07:02
oespiritCan somebody help me out with this issue: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/devmapper/+bug/358654 ? I did an upgrade and my system wont boot anymore. I know this isnt the right channel, but noone in #ubuntu has a clue. Kees helped out many users in that thread on the lp link, but for me that option doesnt work, because cpio doesnt 'recognise' anything in /bin/*07:03
ubottuLaunchpad bug 358654 in watershed "udevadm trigger is not permitted while udev is unconfigured" [Medium,Fix released]07:03
TheMusoMorning pitti.07:12
slangasekpitti: aaaah, thanks; that should go in Hotkeys/Troubleshooting, for sure07:16
pittislangasek: yes, updating the wiki is on my TODO list07:23
slangasek\o/07:23
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jp_auto-identify07:49
jp_hello all07:51
pittiTheMuso: next time, can you please use "build1" for fake syncs, so that it'll autosync automatically on the next upstream version?08:18
ttxdoko: about bug 384739, let me know if it makes sense and I'll prepare an update08:35
ubottuLaunchpad bug 384739 in java-access-bridge "libaccess-bridge-java makes -jre-headless install a full -jre" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38473908:35
dokottx: no, updated the bug report08:38
ttxdoko: works for me, thanks08:39
mneptokslangasek: if you just got the sensation that someone walked across your grave in the future ... i have landed in PDX.09:00
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ppawelhey folks09:29
ppawelwhen was upstart dbus service added to ubuntu/upstart ?09:29
ppawelin latest ubuntu I only have upstart 0.3.909:30
ppaweldoes it have dbus api exposed?09:30
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cjwatsonjames_w: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DistributedDevelopment/ImproveDebianImportSpecification says "The Debian Vcs-* headers are not present for every package, and even when they are not there they may be incorrect" - shouldn't that be "even when they are there"?09:35
cjwatsonjames_w: we should totally have a standard "Non-assumptions" section in specs ;-)09:36
james_wcjwatson: good catch09:47
seb128hum09:47
seb128why did I got 11 emails about lp:ubuntu/karmic/cairo etc on cairo bugs which are closed?09:48
seb128ie bug #21179109:48
ubottuLaunchpad bug 211791 in cairo "Please sponsor cairo 1.5.18-0ubuntu1" [Undecided,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/21179109:48
cjwatsonbecause somebody decided to push the branch to the ubuntu/karmic/ namespace09:49
seb128james_w, ^ is that due to some work of yours?09:49
james_wseb128: it is09:49
seb128hum09:49
seb128that seems buggy to me09:49
james_wwe're looking in to it09:49
seb128which should it spam me about sponsoring request bugs closed for years?09:49
seb128thanks09:50
cjwatsonit's because it has bug links and LP tells you about new ones :-/09:50
seb128define "new"?09:50
cjwatsonin the "link between this bug and this branch was not previously in the database" sense09:50
seb128right now it's updating everybody bug listed in the changelog since warty?09:51
seb128everybody -> every09:51
james_wjust sending them on bugs which still have a task open would be a good start09:51
seb128right09:51
seb128do you have a lp bug open about that that I can track?09:51
james_wnot every bug, but quite a lot of them09:51
james_wno, I need to write one09:51
seb128ok, let me know if you open a bug, thanks09:52
dholbachpitti: do you know if there's any plans to get libchamplain* into ubuntu (maybe even main) this cycle?09:56
pittidholbach: no idea what this is; if someone files an MIR, we'll review it09:57
james_wbug 38773109:57
ubottuLaunchpad bug 387731 in launchpad "Too many mails on new bug-branch links for Ubuntu branches" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38773109:57
james_woh09:57
james_wdholbach: I thought it was already in universe09:57
dholbachjames_w: you're right09:58
dholbachexcusez-moi09:58
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dholbachpitti_: http://projects.gnome.org/libchamplain/ - AFAIK eog and empathy can already be built with it (http://blog.pierlux.com/2009/06/15/geolocation-in-empathy-now-real/en/ for example)09:59
pitti_oh, geolocation? sweet10:00
cjwatsonI don't see geolocation there, it's just map display?10:01
geserhow often are MIRs looked at/processed?10:02
pitti_geser: irregularly, it helps to ping team members if something is urgent10:04
pitti_(please not me, I already did some 3 hours of MIR review in the last week)10:04
geserit's not urgent, so I'll wait10:05
liwdoes karmic have a known problem automatically mounting usb sticks?10:07
borrellyep10:07
borrellone sec10:08
borrellLP 37678610:08
ubottuLaunchpad bug 376786 in hal "hal-storage-mount Segfaults" [Undecided,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/37678610:08
liwthanks10:09
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maxbhuh, I have a different problem, it thinks my usb-sticks are internal drives, but otherwise works fine10:34
mdzmvo: lately, it seems like whenever I run apt-get dist-upgrade, I find myself going back and doing ionice -c3 on the dpkg and apt-get processes so that it doesn't bog my system down10:37
mdzmvo: I wonder if it would be useful to have a config option for that?10:37
mvomdz: I can add a option for that10:37
mdzmvo: do you have the same experience?  I find that with modern kernels, interactive processes are severely affected by dpkg10:38
mdzI'm not sure it was always this way10:38
pitti_my system becomes very sluggish when there's even just a moderate amount of I/O, too10:39
mvomdz: I have a similar experience - I don't ionice, I switch to my other computer and wait for it to finish :) I like the idea, I add it right away (should be easy)10:40
mdzmvo: no hurry :-)10:41
ograpitti_, mdz, did you guys watch your RAM usage in case of sluggish I/O ? i noticed that my swap is often fully used (even though there is only xchat and a terminal open) if such a massive slowdown occurs ... i'm still trying to find out why though10:46
pitti_ogra: it became much better when I plugged in a second GB10:47
pitti_my HD is painfully slow, thus more ram helps a lot10:47
ograwell, i have 3GB RAM ... and 4G swap10:47
mdzogra: no, I haven't noticed excessive swap usage at those times10:47
mdzI did see a lot of swap being used on my laptop this morning, which is new, but nothing to do with apt10:47
ograafter some days without reboot i notice my swap is fully used while the system only uses 100M of ram10:47
pitti_seb128 mentioned a major memleak on his intel 96510:48
mdzthe system I'm on right now has only 1.5G of RAM and has only used tiny amounts of swap10:48
lifelessmine on my desktop leaks gigs10:48
mdzpitti_: that would explain it, my laptop is 86510:48
mdzer, 96510:48
ogramdz, no, i'm not blamig apt here, the apt and I/O slowness just seems to be a sideeffect10:48
pitti_doesn't seem to happen on 94510:48
ograah, 965 here too10:48
pitti_lifeless: 965, too?10:49
lifelesspitti_: EFAILINGMEMORY10:49
lifelessmy desktop is nvidida. And leaks gigs.10:49
ogralspci ;)10:49
lifelessogra: nah, just late enough I shouldn't be on IRC.10:49
ograheh, go to bed then :)10:49
wgrant-intel seems to leak terribly at the moment - but it leaks GEM objects, so the used memory only manifests itself as other stuff eating into swap.10:53
ograwell, the fun stuff is that even if i kill everything the swap wont be freed10:54
wgrantogra: You should be able to fix it by killing X, but you might have to swapoff to actually get the stuff out of swap.10:55
RAOFWhy does my laptop have a monotonically increasing swap usage?  And... oh.  Backscroll.11:42
RAOFGah.  Intel.11:42
* soren is trying the desktop installer for the first time in years.11:44
sorenLooks nice.11:44
RAOFYes, it does.  Faster than the alternate CD, too.11:45
* soren wouldn't know11:46
sorenIt's *lots* slower than the server install :)11:46
RAOFReally?11:46
* soren can do 18 server installs in 25 minutes.11:46
RAOFLately I've been doing nothing but netinst, myself.  None of this outdated cdimage crap :)11:47
sorenYeah, that's what I usually do.11:47
sorenUnfortunately, the only way to get this box on the network was using the desktop cd apparantly.11:47
RAOFThat's... odd.11:49
RAOFYou don't have a 50" cat5 cable handy? :)11:49
sorenEthernet didn't work.11:52
sorenWifi did.11:52
sorenGo figure.11:52
sorenThe box is 12cm (~5 inches) from my local mirror, actually :)11:53
sorenNo need for 50" cables (which by the way are a bad idea).11:53
sorenEr..11:53
sorenNo, they're not. I'm an idiot.11:54
RAOFDifference between 50m and 50ft?11:55
lifeless50m should be fine, if of the right type for your switch11:55
sorenRAOF: No, really. I'm an idiot :)11:59
sorenRAOF: I was waaaay off.11:59
sorenRAOF: Ethernet cables shouldn't be longer than 92m, IIRC.11:59
RAOFI knew there was some maximum length, but I've never had a cable remotely long enough to trigger it.12:00
* soren has a ~50m cable running from his office to a shed in his garden (i.e. "the server room")12:01
sorenThat's the longest I have (and have had).12:02
wgrantIsn't the limit actually 100m, with 92m suggested to allow for patch cables at both ends?12:02
sorenwgrant: I'm not sure. I've never done the math.12:03
sorenwgrant: Somehow 100m strikes me as odd. Why would it be such a neat, round number?12:04
RAOFBecause people like engineering to neat, round numbers?12:05
* wgrant leaves it for the hardware people.12:09
pittiwhy do I suddenly get tons of "branch linked" mails? is that due to james_w's imports?12:09
pitti** Branch linked: lp:ubuntu/karmic/consolekit12:09
pittilooks like it, anyway12:09
wgrantpitti: Yep. Bug #38773112:09
ubottuLaunchpad bug 387731 in launchpad "Too many mails on new bug-branch links for Ubuntu branches" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38773112:09
* ogra noticed that too12:09
pittithanks12:10
macvrhi all... i did an inplace upgrade of the ext3 drive to ext4... but i'v noticed considerable drop in system performance... so inorder to refresh the ext3 files as ext4 would a reinstall of the packages do the trick or has anyone tried e4defrag? i do understand this isnt the help channel but was hoping to find someone with knowledge about this...12:11
gesersoren: 100m is correct, see http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/download/802.3-2005_section2.pdf the table on page 28012:17
sorengeser: I'm not really in the mood to read the legalese required to download that pdf.. Is the table that just lists the maximum lengths for different types of cable or does it explain how those numbers came about?12:19
gesersoren: it mentions that the max length is limited by the signal transmission characteristics for the specific cable. I guess there is a section describing this characteristics12:26
sorenAh, so they designed the cable specs to hit 100m? I guess that almost makes sense.12:26
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lamontso... firefox starts to render a page, I shift focus off to another window, and then firefox finally finishes rendering the page and hijacks focus from where I'm now doing stuff (having finished with the page)...  is that just config, or do I fire a bug at firefox?13:08
StevenKlamont: Tasty!13:09
lamontStevenK: no, not so much.  dear gnome QUIT THINKING YOU KNOW WHERE I WANT FOCUS, DAMMIT13:09
lamontand worse, it's the app, not metacity13:10
sorenlamont: I used to see that a lot, but I don't remember seeing it for a while. Is this Jaunty?13:10
lamonter, um, hardy on the machine in question (iz server that happens to have desktop love too)13:10
lamontthough I'm near certain I've seen it on the jaunty box too13:11
Pik0rI just developed my own small binary application (I don't want to provide the source code yet). is checkinstall the way to go when creating cross-linux installation files I can offer for download? or does checkinstall include the source code?13:11
StevenKPik0r: checkinstall is never, ever the way13:11
Pik0rStevenK: why not?13:11
StevenKPik0r: Because checkinstall is effectively crack cut with arsenic and washing powder.13:12
Pik0rStevenK: do you have a more technical, understandable answer why I shouldn't use checkinstall?13:13
RainCTpitti, seb128: Any chance to get bug #386035 fixed in Jaunty?13:14
ubottuLaunchpad bug 386035 in pygtk "crash in gtk.RecentInfo.get_application_info()" [Medium,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38603513:14
seb128RainCT: we could if it's considered important for users but we didn't get such indications so far about it13:15
StevenKPik0r: It does not do dependancy resolution correctly, does not support upgrades, and it's generally better to provide a .deb for users of Debian/Ubuntu13:15
Pik0rStevenK: so the best thing would be to write my own little scripts which generate .deb and .rpm files separately and run them each time I want to create a new package?13:16
StevenKPik0r: I'd suggest a .spec file for rpm packaging and a debian/ directory for .deb packaging.13:17
Pik0ralright thank you, StevenK.13:17
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cjwatsonKeybuk: regarding the foundations-karmic-swapfile spec, I was wondering if you'd put any thought into appropriate defaults for the swap file size; the spec handwaves over this a bit, I think :-)13:19
cjwatsonKeybuk: there seems to be a tension between allocating excessive amounts of swap for people with plenty of RAM who never hibernate, and offering enough space for hibernation for those who want it13:20
cjwatsonKeybuk: should we just allocate size-of-RAM and punt to a System -> Administration tool for fine control?13:20
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RainCT(sorry, lost the wlan connection, if you said something I didn't get it :/)13:26
jpdsRainCT: < seb256> RainCT: we could if it's considered important for users but we didn't get such indications so far about it13:28
RainCT>> (I don't know of it causing a problem with any program available in the repos, but we want to use this in Zeitgeist and the workaround is quite ugly so I wanted to try if we can get the fix pushed everywhere :P)13:29
pittiRainCT: doesn't look like a major bug to me?13:29
RainCT(anyway, I have a PPA with the fix so we can live without it)13:30
seb128RainCT: jaunty users will not run zeitgeist or if they do they will get it from a ppa which can get the fixed pygobject too13:30
RainCTpitti: The affected function is unusable13:30
RainCTOkay. Just wanted to ask :)13:31
Keybukcjwatson: I don't think there's any sane default except the current default for swap partitions14:01
KeybukI'm not convinced by the "I have hoojabytes of RAM, I don't need swap" argument14:01
Keybukespecially since I've got evidence Linux really doesn't cope in that situation :p14:01
Keybukput hoojabytes of RAM in your PC14:01
Keybukfill the page cache (untar some kernel images)14:02
cjwatsonKeybuk: unfortunately we don't actually really have a current default :)14:02
Keybukthen start firefox14:02
cjwatsonKeybuk: we have a set of heuristics14:02
Keybukand watch your system performance go away for a while14:02
cjwatsonwhich are vague and dependent on disk and RAM14:02
cjwatsonin particular, the default size for swap is computed while setting automatic partition sizes14:03
cjwatsonI'm not quite sure how that would work when swap creation is moved out of automatic partition computation14:03
Keybukthose heuristics should be still fine, no?14:03
joaopintowhat's wrong with the old 2xRAM rule :) ?14:03
cjwatsonour partitioner has never implemented a 2xRAM rule14:04
cjwatsonI've changed partman-auto to support size declarations like "2500+100%" (= 2500MB + 100% of RAM)14:05
cjwatsonbut those are always balanced against other partition sizes in the recipe14:05
cjwatsoni.e. you don't give partman-auto a size, you give it minimum and maximum sizes and a weighting14:06
ivoks2xram was ok until ram went over 1024MB14:06
Keybukivoks: why?14:06
Keybukdisk space when over 1TB at roughly the same time ;)14:06
joaopintoivoks, why is it not ok on that condition ?14:07
ivoksbut it's just wasting space :)14:07
Keybukivoks: no it's not14:07
cjwatsonso this sort of debate is exactly why partman-auto weights things, so that if disk *is* short for some reason then it can adjust sizes as need be14:08
cjwatson(frex you might have lots of RAM but be installing Ubuntu in a relatively small part of your disk that also has Windows on it14:08
cjwatson)14:08
Keybukcjwatson: exactly, which is why I think we should just retain whatever algorithm or heuristic we have today14:08
cjwatsonas I say that doesn't work terribly well once swap is no longer a partition14:08
Keybukthat's an implementation issue with your code ;)14:09
cjwatsonI can't think how to retain it easily, although I'm willing to keep trying14:09
cjwatsonI acknowledge that it is an implementation issue14:09
cjwatsonthat doesn't make it go away, sadly :)14:09
Keybukwell, at some point you must have <size of space available to Ubuntu>14:09
Keybukand divide that into <size of space for disk> and <size of space for swap>14:09
Keybuk?14:09
cjwatsonaccording to a partitioning recipe that might well be considerably more complicated than that (and often is for people customising Ubuntu)14:10
Keybukright14:10
Keybukso instead of making a partition with the number, you just make a file14:10
cjwatsonwhat, you're suggesting having a file declared in the recipe?14:11
Keybuksure14:11
Keybukit's a file that ends up in /etc/fstab after all14:11
cjwatsonI suppose that might work but is probably no less effort :-)14:11
Keybukand I suspect you write fstab from that bit of code as well14:11
cjwatsonI'd been hoping to avoid that14:11
cjwatsonsort of14:11
Keybukof course, implementing file partitioning would allow you to do all sorts of things in the future14:11
cjwatsonbasically the recipe format is not very flexible right now and in particular has problems with the concept of nested devices14:11
Keybuklike encrypted files mounted somewhere and suchlike14:11
cjwatsonwell, we have a hacky approach to loop-mounts for wubi14:12
cjwatsonbut it isn't embedded in the same recipe format :(14:12
cjwatsonit all needs to be reworked ...14:12
cjwatsonI suppose we could do something like14:13
cjwatson96 512 300% linux-swap method{ swap } format{ } file_name{ /swapfile } on_mountpoint{ / } .14:14
cjwatsonand when creating partitions we add together the sizes for everything with matching on_mountpoint14:15
TheMusopitti: The original tarballs are different, due to ubuntu moving to the new upstream version before Debian, and upstream using bz2 tarballs. Once Debian has a newer orig tarball, things will be synced.14:16
pittiTheMuso: right, I understand; just suggesting to call them build1, so that they'll get autosynced14:17
pittiTheMuso: just a nitpick, don't worry14:17
TheMusopitti: Fair enough, point taken.14:18
pittiTheMuso: BTW, isn't it in the middle of the night for you?14:18
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RobertFHello14:38
RobertFWhere can I ask a question about Ubuntu 9.10 (alpha2)?.14:40
PiciRobertF: #ubuntu+114:40
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robbiewwhois pere15:22
robbiewwhoops :P15:22
mdzJun 16 10:35:47 mizar kernel: [1292114.416048] end_request: I/O error, dev fd0, sector 015:24
mdzI wonder which process triggered that...15:24
Pik0rdo you include MIT-licensed software in your repositories, too?15:28
Pik0ror only GPL'd?15:28
pochuMIT is fine15:28
directhexPik0r, any license meeting the ubuntu free software guidelines, which are like the debian free software guidelines with with a less hard-line approach15:30
hyperairdirecthex: less hard-line approach how?15:31
directhexhyperair, afaik non-used non-free stuff in source tarballs can be gotten away with. but is frowned upon due to lack of synability15:32
hyperairdirecthex: i see. synability?15:33
directhexsyncability15:34
Pik0rdirecthex: any place where I can read up on the  ubuntu free software guidelines? I searched google and the only thing I can find are the debian ones.15:36
hyperairah15:36
cjwatsonthe main (possibly even only) difference between the DFSG and our guidelines is that we're more lax about non-code material15:36
cjwatsonPik0r: http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing15:36
cjwatsonPik0r: it's also in the Ubuntu Policy Manual: http://people.ubuntu.com/~cjwatson/ubuntu-policy/policy.html/15:37
Pik0rthank you. flying over it, it looks like even closed source software is fine, as long as it can be freely distributed. is this assumption correct?15:38
Pik0r(would be placed in restricted then)15:38
directhexPik0r, restricted or multiverse, yes15:39
hyperairi think you can ship stuff like that in debian under non-free15:39
Laneyreally?15:39
hyperairis it not?15:40
Pik0rany how is decided whether to include a closed/open source program or not? clearly you cannot include all software there is.15:40
Pik0ris this based on popularity?15:40
LaneyI guess binary drivers15:40
hyperairPik0r: popularity, and if you can package it.15:41
LaneyPik0r: Someone willing to maintain it15:41
LaneyThus, although non-free works are not a part of Debian, we support their use and provide infrastructure for non-free packages (such as our bug tracking system and mailing lists).15:42
cjwatsonPik0r: restricted is only for non-free drivers15:44
cjwatsonPik0r: Mark has given us very clear guidance that non-free applications are not to be supported by Ubuntu15:44
cjwatsoni.e. not in restricted and certainly not in main15:44
seb128cjwatson: do you know what 003_gdk.pc_privates does exactly in gtk?15:47
seb128cjwatson: I think you had installer issue when it was not used correctly previous cycle15:47
seb128I'm wondering if that's still required15:47
mdzaha15:55
mdzroot      6987  0.0  0.0   3544  1024 ?        S    10:34   0:00 hald-addon-storage: no polling on /dev/fd0 because it is explicitly disabled15:55
mdzroot     29159  0.0  0.0   5724   760 ?        S    15:42   0:00 devkit-disks-daemon: polling /dev/sr0 /dev/sr1 /dev/fd015:55
pittimdz: bug 384469 ?16:06
ubottuLaunchpad bug 384469 in devicekit "constantly polls floppy drive" [Unknown,In progress] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38446916:06
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mdzpitti: indeed, thanks16:07
al-maisanhmm .. building zsh on lpia fails due to the non-availability of libcap2-dev (http://launchpadlibrarian.net/27991987/buildlog_ubuntu-karmic-lpia.zsh_4.3.10-2ubuntu1_MANUALDEPWAIT.txt.gz)16:15
al-maisanhow is something like this resolved?16:15
dholbachal-maisan: seems like the last upload of libcap2 failed on lpia: https://edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/karmic/+source/libcap2/1:2.16-516:18
dholbachhttp://launchpadlibrarian.net/27714759/buildlog_ubuntu-karmic-lpia.libcap2_1%3A2.16-5_FAILEDTOBUILD.txt.gz16:18
superm1slangasek, can you re-enable mythbuntu dailies?16:18
al-maisandholbach: thanks for the info.16:19
dholbachal-maisan: TBH no idea why it breaks16:25
directhexcongrats stgraber16:25
al-maisanyeah .. I had a brief look as well .. it looks like the /usr/include/asm/sigcontext.h file is broken ..16:26
persiaal-maisan, Don't fuss about lpia failures.  Once the spec gets written up, lpia will get lots less well supported.16:26
al-maisanpersia: good to know, thanks :)16:27
cjwatsonseb128: the breakage was that the gtk directfb udeb was linked against cairo-xlib16:29
cjwatsonwhich is incorrect16:29
cjwatsonseb128: oh, or it may have been that other things built against gtk/gdk directfb linked against cairo-xlib - actually I think that's what it was16:30
cjwatsonseb128: so build gtk, build cdebconf against new gtk, see what the linkage of stuff in cdebconf-gtk-udeb is16:30
seb128ok thanks16:30
seb128I think it's fixed in the new version16:30
seb128they build against cairo-$backend now16:31
seb128ie gtk-directfb depends on cairo-directfb16:31
cjwatsonthat wouldn't surprise me, I seem to remember that getting upstream activity16:31
cjwatsonworth checking the output .pc files by hand though16:31
seb128yeah I will do that16:31
cjwatsoncheers16:31
seb128+Requires: gdk-pixbuf-2.0 pango pangocairo gio-2.0 fontconfig cairo-directfb16:31
seb128is the new version gdk-directfb-2.0.pc16:31
stgraberdirecthex: thanks16:31
seb128which seems correct to me16:32
seb128lool: ^ if you want to double check after your meeting16:32
cjwatsonseb128: *looks* ok16:35
ograstgraber, hmm, looking at bug 357429, how do you make sure the dirs get deleted properly ?16:41
ubottuLaunchpad bug 357429 in ltsp "Using ldm, the user is unable to lock its Xauthority file making some applications to freeze/fail" [High,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/35742916:41
slangaseksuperm1: done16:45
superm1thanks16:45
mterrykees: When you get a sec, can you talk to me a bit about the details of bug 255635?  I don't quite get the changelog entry.  I'm working on rsyslog and want to make sure it's not affected16:53
ubottuLaunchpad bug 255635 in sysklogd "Kernel messages not logged to /var/log/kern.log" [High,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/25563516:53
keesmterry: sure!  basically, glibc and sysklogd fought with eachother over the definition of syslog()16:56
keesmterry: when compiling under Ubuntu, -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 is defined, which causes glibc to add additional protective macros.16:56
keesmterry: one of those is for syslog(), so when klog.c compiled, it ended up getting its syslog calls redirected to glibc16:57
keesmterry: but it had it's own version of syslog() that allowed for kernel messages to be inserted.  the glibc one doesn't allow that.16:57
keesmterry: so, kernel messages went silent.16:57
mterrykees: I see...  So as long as rsyslog doesn't define its own syslog(), there shouldn't be that specific conflict16:57
keesmterry: right.  I would just carefully examine how kernel messages are handled, or at least verify they're still being reported at and after boot time.16:58
mterrykees: Right.  OK.  I'll play with it, but basically, at the end of the day, as long as kern.log is filling up, I'm happy, eh?16:59
keesmterry: yup16:59
mterrykees: Cool, thx16:59
keesmterry: though note that there might be a difference between "catch up"(flushing the ring-buffer from before syslog started) and "live" kernel log reporting.  testing both should be sufficient.17:00
mterrykees: OK17:01
loolseb128: I think the issue is with pango .pcs IIRC17:08
seb128lool: the patch I'm talking about is the gtk one though, do you think it's still required?17:10
loolI would patch the gtk+ configure script heavily to workaround the very specific namings of cairo .pcs in Debian in the past17:10
cjwatsonmterry: I looked at the rsyslog source briefly during the UDS session, and it appeared that it might well have the same problem17:11
loolseb128: Hmm the part I'm talking about was dropped completely from the Gtk+ package (see 2.10.3-1), so that's probably something else17:11
cjwatsonmterry: but I didn't actually try it, so I left that link in the spec as a warning17:11
mterrycjwatson: I'm thinking it may not have the same problem, but I'm not done investigating17:12
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Pik0rcjwatson: " Mark has given us very clear guidance that non-free applications are not to be supported by Ubuntu" ... just not supported, or even not to be offered?17:56
Pik0rcjwatson: and do you mean by 'free' 'open source'?17:57
pittiPik0r: making them available in multiverse is okay (as long as we are allowed to ship them), but not restricted (which is the supported subset of non-free sw)17:58
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slangasekpitti: anacron postinst> doesn't this miss the case of reinstalling the package when it's in "config files" state, since then only the preinst is told the previous version number, not the postinst?18:04
pittislangasek: oh, really? I didn't know that18:04
mterrycjwatson: Would the rsyslog change be affected by the FeatureDefinitionFreeze?  It needs an MIR still, so it seems like it fits the "updates to be landed in main" clause18:05
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pittislangasek: so most-recently-configured-version is empty if you reinstall a previously removed package?18:07
slangasekpitti: I believe so, yes18:07
pittihm, so that stuff needs to move to preinst then, I figure (which is a bit ugly, but *shrug*)18:09
cjwatsonPik0r: not supported as in "not to be in the main or restricted components". And "free" is essentially synonymous with "open source" here, yes.18:11
cjwatsonmterry: that means that the feature must be on the list, not that the package must be in main18:11
cjwatsonI think I've mentioned rsyslog in a release meeting and nobody had a heartattack18:12
mterrycjwatson: OK, heartattacks may not be the best threshold, but I get ya.  ;)18:14
tgpraveen1why does jaunty ppa still have banshee 1.4.318:16
tgpraveen1why isn't it upto 1.5 series18:16
directhextgpraveen1, even numbered are stable releases, odd for unstable releases18:24
directhextgpraveen1, i.e. banshee-unstable-ppa for 1.5 series18:24
tgpraveen1directhex: yeah I just found the unstable ppa18:24
tgpraveen1thanks18:24
thebloggu Some time ago my ubuntu installation somewhere on boot jumps to verbose mode, as well as it is taking much longer to boot now than before. It doesnt seem there are any errors18:45
cjwatsonthebloggu: usplash has a timeout - if something takes too long then it'll cancel the splash screen on the grounds that something is clearly weird and you might like to be able to see what18:48
thebloggucjwatson, it seems (from my search on google) it has something to do with the size of swap partition18:50
theblogguhttp://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=90125418:50
theblogguit goes verbose exactly on "reading files needed to boot"18:50
cjwatsonI don't think that's a sound inference18:50
cjwatsonsure, it's worth checking, but that's not enough data to say that it's swap18:51
cjwatsonand that forums post is about the swap partition's UUID, not its size18:51
thebloggui upgraded xp to vista in the meantime, but didnt touch the ubuntu or the swap partition18:51
cjwatsontype 'swapon -s' in a terminal18:52
cjwatson(incidentally why is this on #ubuntu-devel?)18:52
cjwatsonif you see a line starting with /dev, then that forums post is unlikely to be your problem18:52
theblogguFilenameTypeSizeUsedPriority18:52
theblogguthought of asking here since the main ubuntu channel is too noisy and normally they help better with smaller/easier to solve problems18:54
Chipzzthebloggu: wrong reasoning; this channel is not an overflow channel for #ubuntu18:56
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theblogguChipzz, i know, i'm sorry for that18:57
theblogguthe truth is here i could get someone to listen to me and help18:57
theblogguand asked 4 times there18:57
theblogguwith no response whatsoever18:57
stgraberogra: the exact same way we used to remove the ldm-xauth file18:58
thebloggucjwatson, http://pastebin.com/mf6f9d6a should i edit the resume file to the swap uuid on top?19:03
cjwatsonthebloggu: I'll help if you promise to use #ubuntu+1 in future ;-)19:04
cjwatsonor #ubuntu, or some non-IRC forum19:05
thebloggucjwatson, sorry but no :P i'm on jaunty not karmic19:05
thebloggubut yes19:05
thebloggui'll do it19:05
cjwatsonok. yes, you need to change /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume, and you probably also need to change /etc/fstab.19:05
thebloggucjwatson, once again, i'm sorry for the trouble, i know this channel is for development19:06
thebloggucjwatson, thanks, i'll reboot to see if it works, i'll come back in a minute to tell you if it worked19:07
cody-somervillejcastro, ping19:10
thebloggucjwatson, it worked19:11
theblogguthank you very much19:11
cjwatsonok, good19:12
cjwatsonit's a bug that swap resize changes the UUID19:12
jcastrocody-somerville: yo19:12
LaneyIs there a wiki page on editing grub2 configurations? I need to add a devicemap to my windows line19:12
thebloggucjwatson, that's one of the reasone i came here too, but after seeing that post thought it wasn't a bug19:13
cody-somervillejcastro, Is there any way Xubuntu could get in on your upstream bug reporting stuff?19:13
thebloggucjwatson, should i submit a bug somewhere?19:13
thebloggureasons*19:13
jcastrocody-somerville: yeah right now it's by open bug, so the buggier it is the better. People have been telling me they want it broken down by team level19:13
jcastrocody-somerville: which I think makes sense, depends on getting lp manhours on it19:14
cody-somervillejcastro, Would we just be able to add the xfce related packages to the report for now?19:14
jcastrocody-somerville: a motivated person could grab the links to the numbers (which are just lp queries) and make a page that is similar, which is what I would recommend19:14
jcastrocody-somerville: yeah just take an existing query (after you click on it) and replace it with the package you want19:15
jcastrocody-somerville: a seperate page with the same queries would probably be easier to do, the lp team are kind of booked for a while. :-/19:15
cody-somervillejcastro, I can make the necessary code changes if need be.19:16
cody-somervillejcastro, but you're saying I can make my own https://edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+upstreamreport ?19:16
jcastrocody-somerville: I am saying you can just make a people.u.c page or something if you want to whip it up.19:17
jcastrocody-somerville: but if you want to branch and fix +upstreamreport I won't complain!19:17
jcastrocody-somerville: gmb would be the person to talk to about that19:18
jcastroif there were a way to make it so we can have team-specifc ones (server, desktop, xubuntu, etc.) that would be much more useful19:18
cody-somervillejcastro, Where can I find the code if I wanted to setup a people.u.c page for Xubuntu packages?19:19
jcastrogmb would know19:19
jcastroI don't really know anything about lp or it's internals, I just tell gmb what we want and then he goes off and implements it.19:20
jcastrocody-somerville: mail him and CC me and I will help you with this19:20
cjwatsonthebloggu: yeah, probably, on the parted package in Ubuntu19:25
cjwatsonLaney: could just wait for the next update :)19:25
AnAntwill tomboy & fspot still be installed in Ubuntu desktop by default ? or will they be replaced with non-Mono alternatives ?19:27
Laneycjwatson: that's going to fix it? i.e. set the drivemap correctly or make the configuration easier to edit?19:28
cjwatsonLaney: it'll set it correctly by default19:29
Laneyah fair enough19:29
cjwatsonAnAnt: I don't know of any plan to remove them19:29
LaneyI just edited it by now19:29
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ebroderSo anybody with main bits who could look at bug #362691?21:34
ubottuLaunchpad bug 362691 in xen-3.3 "XEN depends on Python 2.5" [Medium,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/36269121:34
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cr3how can I set the proxy for apt to access packages under https? it seems that Acquire::https::Proxy either doesn't exist or doesn't work21:55
robbiewKeybuk: did we ever get the benchmark results for the i586 rebuild for foundations-karmic-i586-support?22:04
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`26glGetInfoLogARB omits line numbers and file name from error messages, am I doing something wrong? [platform: ubuntu 9.04 + Intel graphics card]22:28
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`26Okay, xserver-xorg-driver-intel does NOT report GLSL compilation line numbers and file names, which makes debugging quite virtually impossible.23:12
`26I tested with a nearby computer who has a nVidia card, and at least their driver, although closed-source, reports line numbers.23:13
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TheMusopitti: I was just heading to bed at the time, and jumped on to check something. :)23:33
Sarvatt`26: i believe you mean mesa :D23:33
`26Sarvatt: yes, I just ran a search for string "Syntax error" and it's really in package libgl1-mesa-dri.23:34
Sarvattyou might want to try updating your mesa - https://launchpad.net/~xorg-edgers/+archive/ppa23:35
`26This is a pretty bad problem, since the GLSL specification document says that Implementation *must* provide line numbers and filenames in log.23:35
`26sure23:35
Sarvattlooks like it was fixed in mesa 7.4.323:38
`26Sarvatt: good trying ppa right now23:38
`26Packages installing, /me is saying his prayer.23:40
`26be right back23:41
cr3if I run apt-get update on a sources.list containing https repositories on karmic, I get:  server certificate verification failed. when I try on jaunty, it works just fine. any ideas what might be wrong?23:46
`26Sarvatt: I installed all packages in the PPA you gave me. X wouldn't start anymore, so I downgraded xserver-xorg-* and left everything else the same. Problem was not fixed, still no line numbers in GLSL log output.23:51
cr3nevermind, the problem was that the clock on the client was offset by too long... I really need to run ntpdate23:53
Sarvattdo you have a 965 or newer?23:54
`26lsmod says i915, otherwise IDK23:55
Sarvattwhat does glxinfo | grep Intel say?23:56
`26OpenGL renderer string: Software Rasterizer23:57
`26err that can't be right23:57
`26Should I downgrade everything to what it was?23:57

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