/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2009/06/30/#ubuntu-devel.txt

cjwatsonor modify the .iso and remove the 'gfxboot' line from isolinux.cfg00:00
kirklandcjwatson: shift didn't get it, will try to sed 'gfxboot' out00:00
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cjwatsonkirkland: qemu-kvm is no help; kvm still exhibits the same symptoms. qemu does work though.00:07
kirklandcjwatson: okay, thanks, i'll dig into it;  could you open a bug?00:08
kirklandcjwatson: 3min left for iso download00:08
cjwatsonok, will do once I downgrade so I can use ubuntu-bug00:08
cjwatsonno rush, bed soon00:08
kirklandcjwatson: sure thing, thanks.00:08
kirklandcjwatson: thanks for trying the daily00:08
kirklandcjwatson: i'm hoping those become useful00:09
kirklandcjwatson: installing both [jaunty & karmic]-server-i386 now00:14
YokoZar1did Gnometris disappear off the default games?00:15
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directhexYokoZar, patents!!!00:16
YokoZarwhat00:16
directhexResults of Search in US Patent Collection db for:00:20
directhextetris: 63 patents.00:20
directhexor, being less useless, it seems there's no binary for it in gnome-games in karmic00:20
directhexthe manpage is there00:20
directhex  * debian/rules:00:21
directhex    - Disabled gnometris as it requires clutter to build00:21
directhexthere you go.00:21
RAOFThat might be enabled again later; IIUC clutter is aiming for promotion to main for Empathy + geoloc?00:22
TheMusodtchen: I think you said the otehr day you have been working on rtkit. Do you have anything up anywhere that I could use as a starting point to get pulse 0.9.16 into my PPA for karmic?00:34
kirklandcjwatson: okay, i have successfully installed and booted karmic-server-i386 and jaunty-server-i386, both of which I expect are PAE kernels00:37
kirklandcjwatson: my host is an x86_64 jaunty system (running karmic's virt packages)00:38
Caesarslangasek: so it sounds like in both cases it's a manual process to notice changes?00:39
slangasekCaesar: prior to DebianImportFreeze, changes to the /package/ are automatically imported.00:39
slangasekchanges to /bugs/ aren't going to be noticed automatically00:39
Caesarslangasek: I mean for the lifetime of the release that contains that package, particularly LTS releases00:39
slangasekthat's certainly true, yes00:40
CaesarSo it seems to me that there's some free work to be capitalised on if it could be automatically noticed00:40
Caesarand free improvements00:40
CaesarAgain, using this libxcb thing as an example00:41
slangasekSRUs are entirely driven by user demand (where "user" may be "uploader"); I don't think we should automatically take bugs that are marked as RC in Debian and nominate them as SRU candidates00:41
slangasekthe libxcb one seems to be an example of us not even keeping up with the demand for SRUs for bugs that users *have* said they care about, let alone auto-importing from debian00:42
CaesarPerhaps not automatically nominate them, but auto-import them as applicable?00:43
ajmitchauto-import the bugs or the package?00:43
slangasekI think that's broadly inconsistent with how we do bug management for released versions of Ubuntu today00:43
CaesarThe bugs against the package00:43
Caesarslangasek: of course it is00:43
CaesarI wouldn't be having this conversation with you if it wasn't00:43
ajmitchthere have been tools to track RC bugs filed against debian that could be fixed in ubuntu, which ought to be fixed to work better for multiple ubuntu releases00:44
cjwatsonkirkland: I guess it must be i386-host-specific00:44
ajmitchbut it's not an easy thing, there are many false positives00:44
slangasekCaesar: I mean that there are lots of other bugs that are in LP that we do know about already, and know they're applicable to released versions, but we don't mark them as applying to those releases unless we intend to SRU them00:44
slangasekso I don't think Debian bugs should be treated differently00:44
CaesarNot even fixed bugs?00:45
slangasekbut perhaps this is a discussion better had on ubuntu-devel to get wider perspectives, yeah00:45
CaesarI will write something up and email ubuntu-devel00:45
slangasekCaesar: opening tasks for bugs that are already fixed in the old release, just to close them?  sounds like busywork to me00:46
CaesarHuh?00:47
CaesarIt's still applicable to that release00:47
CaesarSo you're not going to close it00:47
slangasekCaesar: fwiw, I /personally/ strongly prefer the debbugs 'version tracking' workflow, but that's not the workflow Ubuntu uses in LP00:48
CaesarI realise that00:48
CaesarSo your best option is to target to a specific release00:48
slangasekand not for lack of considering the debbugs model00:48
slangasekCaesar: ok, you meant bugs that are fixed in the latest release but still apply to previous releases - yep, tasks only get opened against the other releases if there's an expectation that they're SRU candidates00:48
CaesarSo I guess I'm proposing that if Debian fixes a bug in a version of a package that ended up in an Ubuntu release, that bug gets imported into LP (possibly along with the fix) for consideration00:48
slangasekotherwise, it's implicitly "wontfix", so why open it00:49
Caesarslangasek: yes, I'm not talking about the current development release00:49
slangasekright, I just misunderstood what you meant by "fixed bugs"00:49
Caesarslangasek: you should know by now that I'm usually talking about released LTSes :-)00:49
ajmitchCaesar: as a rough start on something we've used for this for universe, see http://qa.ubuntuwire.com/bugs/rcbugs/00:50
ajmitchthough it only shows info for the development release rather than fixes post-release00:51
Caesarajmitch: that looks cool00:51
CaesarLooks like a good starting point00:51
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TheMusoYay. Either there is policykit or consolekit breakage that stops audio from working, permissions wise.01:48
james_wslangasek: we are in DebianImportFreeze aren't we?01:49
maxbDon't forget devicekit breakage too :-)01:50
slangasekjames_w: ahhh, the things that sprint travel does to one's hold on reality01:51
slangasekjames_w: yes, we're meant to be, but apparently I gave everybody an extension by running another round of autosyncs today ;)01:51
james_wscore!01:52
ebroder"They're more of just guidelines anyway"01:52
slangaseksiretart: why have you subscribed ubuntu-archive to bug #223212?  I don't see anything there that's a request for action01:53
ubottuLaunchpad bug 223212 in linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24 "Non-free files distributed without license/copyright info" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/22321201:53
slangaseksiretart: (unsubscribing01:53
slangasek)01:53
=== slangasek changed the topic of #ubuntu-devel to: Archive: open | DebianImportFreeze in effect | karmic alpha-2 released | Development of Ubuntu (not support, not app development on Ubuntu) | #ubuntu for support and general discussion for dapper-jaunty | #ubuntu-motu for getting involved in development | http://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDevelopment | See #ubuntu-bugs for http://wiki.ubuntu.com/HelpingWithBugs
slangaseksuperm1: you seem to have subscribed ubuntu-archive instead of ubuntu-mir for bug #390973; adjusted01:56
ubottuLaunchpad bug 390973 in libftdi "MIR for libftdi" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/39097301:56
superm1slangasek, thanks, sorry my mistake02:36
superm1pitti, sure02:36
billybigriggerwhy does apt-cache policy nvidia-glx-180 show....nvidia-glx-180:02:36
billybigrigger  Installed: 185.18.14-0ubuntu102:36
billybigriggerwhile nvidia-x-server settings shows 180.6002:36
cody-somervillebillybigrigger, because they're different?02:38
cody-somervillebillybigrigger, see #ubuntu for support please02:38
superm1nvidia-glx-180 has a -185 series driver though?02:39
superm1that doesn't seem right.02:39
ajmitchsuperm1: that's somewhat intended though02:39
superm1ajmitch, how so?02:39
ajmitchat least bryce had a reason for doing so when I asked about the package in his PPA02:40
billybigriggerwell im just confused, as hardware drivers show's the 180 series installed02:40
billybigriggerso which driver am i using? 180 or 185?02:40
superm1billybigrigger, that's the 185 series driver, just the package is named 180 series02:41
billybigriggerseems a bit confusing to me02:42
billybigriggerwouldn't it make sense to label a 185 driver as 185, not 180?02:42
superm1billybigrigger, that's what i was saying too.02:43
superm1bryce, what's the reasoning for that?02:43
ionThe Gtk 2.17.2 package is called libgtk2.0-0 for the same reason. It’s ABI-compatible, so other packages don’t need to constantly keep changing their dependencies for no reason.02:44
StevenKScottK: Sorry for the delay, I'll be uploading livecd-rootfs presently03:10
ScottKStevenK: Thanks.03:47
brycesuperm1, if the package gets renamed every time there is just a version number change, it makes bug management a PITA04:00
brycehonestly, I'd sort of rather the source package be named either xserver-xorg-video-nvidia, or nvidia-installer, for consistency with other drivers04:01
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superm1bryce, ah04:23
brycesuperm1, probably we should discuss the naming more04:24
tedgIf ubiquity is core dumping (bug filed) is there still an easy way to install with the desktop CD?04:25
* tedg doesn't want to download another CD.04:25
bryceit'd be nice to have a "stable" name.  the -177 to -180 transition was awkward as far as bugs go04:25
superm1bryce, ah so maybe the stable name is always the same and if there needs to be a legacy drivers then add more source packages04:26
brycethat seems like a better scheme04:26
persiabryce, Any suggestions?  We dropped -legacy and -new because it confused people.  Having 4 nvidia-foo packages is somehow useful, and I suspect we'll only get more.04:26
RAOF_Heh.  nvidia-glx, nvidia-glx-legacy, nvidia-glx-legacy-legacy, nvidia-glx-really-get-another-gfx-card-damnit-legacy? :)04:27
bryceactually there's just 3 packages.  -177 went away once -180 was moved to04:27
persiaI see -71, -96, -173, and -180 on i386.  What shouldn't be there?04:27
bryceoh yeah -7104:28
billybigriggerhttp://pastebin.ca/147909704:28
brycebut I think that may not be updated to the jaunty kernel04:28
billybigriggerso im not the only one complaining about the naming of 180 or 18504:28
billybigrigger:P04:28
persiaI was looking at karmic, but hrm.04:28
billybigriggeris this a normal error?04:28
RAOF_persia: I'd guess it's in the archive but actually unusable.04:28
Kage_JittaiCan I talk to someone about package development, my project is having a issue04:29
persia-71 was last uploaded to jaunty 29 January.  If it's not useful, I think it ought be removed from the archive.04:30
persiaKage_Jittai, What specific question do you have?04:30
DoYouKnowit took me a while to find out that bcmwl-kernel-sources was the right package to install for broadcom sta wireless driver04:30
RAOF_It'd be useful if it works; there are some gpus only supported by -71.  I'm just checking whether or not it actually builds.04:31
DoYouKnowfinally got it though04:31
Kage_Jittaipersia: I work on a project called The Mana World04:31
Kage_Jittaipersia: its a MMORPG04:31
DoYouKnowsomeone told me but I was in kind of a jumpy mood so I was confused04:31
Kage_Jittaipersia: Our issue is with LTS distros04:31
DoYouKnowfinally figured it out after a good search on installing ubuntu on the dell mini 904:31
Kage_Jittaipersia: as a MMO, we are always coming out with new features04:31
DoYouKnow(in karmic)04:31
Kage_Jittaipersia: many of these features are unsupported04:32
Kage_Jittaipersia: since people connect to a server, and to play with others04:32
superm1DoYouKnow, jockey now supports offering that as of today or so04:32
Kage_Jittaipersia: unsupported versions being used cause issues04:32
DoYouKnowok04:32
DoYouKnowthat must be the taskbar on the lower right04:32
Kage_Jittaipersia: http://pastebin.com/d608d588904:33
DoYouKnowerr04:33
DoYouKnowor not04:33
DoYouKnowI'll look it up04:33
Kage_Jittaipersia: that is a pastebin of yesterday's version information04:33
Kage_Jittaipersia: as you see .24.1 is being used quite a bit04:33
persiaKage_Jittai, Hrm.  I think you have an issue with the philosophy of how we support releases.04:34
Kage_Jittaipersia: how ever, we dropped support for .24.1 almost a year ago04:34
persiaMy recommendation would be to do one of the following:04:34
Kage_Jittaipersia: well, as being the only real GPL MMORPG with a central server, our needs are special04:34
persiaHrm,04:35
persiaWith a central server, one of my options is out :(04:35
ionHow about a backport to foo-backports?04:35
RAOF_persia, bryce: Yeah, in what shouldn't be a terrible surprise, nvidia-71 fails to build against 2.6.30-10-generic.  I guess someone should ask nvidia if they plan to support it, and remove the packages if not.04:36
persiaYeah, backports is probably the least bad option.04:36
Kage_Jittaiwe do offer backports, even package them our self04:36
Kage_Jittaibut they never seems to get accepted into LTS distros04:36
ebroderKage_Jittai: If you need everybody to be running the latest software, it seems like you really want to be running your own repository so you can control that04:36
ionAnd have the server tell people to enable -backports if they seem to be connecting with the old Ubuntu client04:36
Kage_Jittaiebroder: we don't need the latest software04:36
persiaKage_Jittai, We don't change packages on backporting, just recompile against backports.  Are you familar with the Ubuntu Backporting team?04:36
Kage_Jittaiebroder: we support .26 .27 .28 .28.1 .29 .29.104:37
Kage_Jittaipersia: no, that is most likely part of the issue04:37
DoYouKnowoh, jockey == restricted driver manager04:37
persia!backports04:37
ubottuIf new updated Ubuntu packages are built for an application, then they may go into Ubuntu Backports. See https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuBackports - See also !packaging04:37
persiaKage_Jittai, basically, you file a bug, get a few people to test following a specific procedure, and wait a week or two (usually).04:37
persiaThen you can just tell your users to use backports (which gets distro authenticated and everything), to use a newer version.04:38
Kage_Jittaipersia: can we somehow tell the backport team about our special needs?04:39
brycewouldn't a PPA be better suited for this?04:39
Kage_Jittaiwe have .28.1 on ppa04:39
Kage_Jittaiwe even link to it04:39
Kage_Jittaibut most people seem to still use the repo04:40
persiaKage_Jittai, I'm not sure I understand how your needs are special in the context of backports.  backports is often just the newest software, recompiled against the older stack.04:40
persiabryce, Also PPAs have architecture limitations, etc.04:40
Kage_JittaiI think part of the problem with our backports is we use guichan04:41
Kage_Jittaiguichan seems poorly supported in older distros04:41
brycepersia, "architecture limitations"?  You mean, like no PPC?04:41
persiabryce, Yes.04:41
Kage_Jittaipersia: well thanks for trying04:57
persiaKage_Jittai, Hrm?  Did something not work, or is there some special concern?04:58
Kage_Jittaipersia: we have requested backports04:58
Kage_Jittaiwhich go unanswered04:58
persiahave you organised some testers?04:58
Kage_Jittai^_-04:58
Kage_Jittaino, not really04:58
persiaMy memory is that there need to be several positive test reports for a backport to be approved.\04:58
persiaAnd I seem to remember the backports team several times claiming that the lack of testers was the primary obstacle to getting backports done.05:00
persiaSo, I'd advise organising some testers, and having them report on the backports bugs.05:00
Kage_Jittaipersia: we need more ubuntu geeks05:01
Kage_Jittaion our team05:01
Kage_Jittaiany voluteers?05:01
Kage_Jittai:P05:01
persiaMost people here are busy developing the next release.  You might try asking in #ubuntu, and sometimes in #ubuntu+1 (people testing the new release)05:02
persia#ubuntu-backports is theoretically the right place, but I almost never see anyone there when I join.05:02
geofftYou could always get some of your users to test it, no?05:02
geofftPut a note on your PPA page saying "please test our backport so you don't have to use the PPA any more"05:03
Kage_Jittaiwe use a public ppa05:03
Kage_Jittai!backports05:06
ubottuIf new updated Ubuntu packages are built for an application, then they may go into Ubuntu Backports. See https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuBackports - See also !packaging05:06
Kage_JittaiHardy really needs to be updated05:07
Kage_Jittaipersia: ok I registered for launchpad05:40
Kage_Jittaihow would I request the backport05:40
persiaKage_Jittai, I've only done it once, and years ago, so I'm probably not the best person to ask.  Does that wiki page not explain the process?  I think it's just filing a bug.05:41
Kage_Jittaiit says to file the report, but doesn't say what type of details to give05:41
persiaOh, the package name, the version (in karmic) to backport, and the rationale for the backport should do it.05:43
persiaThat's where you'd explain that TMW is a MMORPG, and that you don't support .24 anymore, so need the backport so users can upgrade.05:44
ScottKWhat testing has been done is also important.  The testing standard for a backport is that it builds, installs, and runs.05:44
persiaScottK, Does that go in the initial request, or in tester comments (or both)?05:45
ScottKpersia: It can all be done at once if the initial requestor is also the tester.05:45
persiaScottK, That makes sense, and probably makes for a better report.05:46
Kage_Jittaipersia: this will work https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/tmw/+bug/393724 ?05:49
ubottuUbuntu bug 393724 in tmw "Please Sync tmw 0.0.24.1-1 in Hardy with tmw 0.0.29.1-1 in karmic" [Undecided,New]05:49
persiaYou want "Please Backport"05:51
Kage_Jittaiupdated05:52
persiaKage_Jittai, Other than that, you just need the test reports, I think.05:53
Kage_Jittai*sigh*05:54
Kage_Jittainow the hardpart05:55
persiaheh.05:55
Kage_Jittaipersia: wanna volunteer?05:56
persiaKage_Jittai, Um, no.  I have a big stack of stuff I've already promised to do.05:56
Kage_JittaiI am infact on hardy, even though I use git version, how could I post test data?05:58
ScottKYou need to backport the actual version and packaging that's in Karmic, and build and test that.06:00
persiaKage_Jittai, Well, take the karmic version, follow the instructions for backporting to produce a hady backport, and test that version.06:00
Kage_Jittaipersia: these instructions are where?06:05
persiaKage_Jittai, On the backports wiki page, I thought.06:05
persiaKage_Jittai, Under "Backport Process", most of the way down the page.06:07
* Kage_Jittai gives puppy dog eyes to persia06:09
StevenKKage_Jittai: They don't work on him, which is a pity.06:10
persiaAbout what?06:10
Kage_Jittaipersia: doing the backport ^l^06:11
persiaI can't do it: I'm not a member of the backports team.  And for testing, I honestly believe that if I put it in my queue, it would get done by others before I got to it.06:12
Kage_Jittaianyone that is part of the backport team?06:12
persiaKage_Jittai, You don't want a backport team person to look at the bug until it's tested.06:14
persiaYou need to get the testers first.  Once the testing is complete, then you want the backpoters.06:15
ScottKBecause such a person would just mark it incomplete and then tell you to get it tested.06:15
* ScottK really goes to bed this time.06:15
ScottKGood night.06:15
Kage_JittaiGrrr!06:16
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pittiGood morning07:02
ajmitchmorning pitti07:02
siretartslangasek: it seems to me that the package is in clear violation with http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing and I thought the archive administrators might want to have a look and comment on that issue.07:14
siretartslangasek: in other words: this is clearly non-free software in 'main'. Doesn't really anyone care?07:16
dholbachgood morning07:20
persiasiretart, is it clearly non-free?  I read it as completely undocumented, leaving significant uncertainty as to the freeness.07:20
siretartpersia: it comes without source, without any copyright notice and is in main. According to my reading of http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing this is in violation of what we require for packages in 'main'07:22
siretartor at least I don't know how to understand the first point here in any other way: "Must include source code. The main component has a strict and non-negotiable requirement that application software included in it must come with full source code."07:23
persiaOK.  That makes sense.  I seem to remember there being some debate about linux-firmware in the past (leading it to be a separate package).07:24
persiaWhile I don't remember anything about missing licenses for specific items, I do believe that it was granted a special exception to be in main because otherwise the entire stack broke.07:25
StevenKSo this firmware thing keeps coming up in Debian? Can we just not repeat here? Please?07:25
persiaThat said, if there exists some part of it that's not only without source, but actually non-free, it doesn't belong there.07:25
siretartpersia: well, without any copyright statement, we have no basis to believe that we are allowed to redistribute it07:26
siretartand moreover, "special exception to be in main because otherwise the entire stack broke" is in clear contrast to "non-negotiable requirement that application software included in it must come with full source code."07:26
persiasiretart, I'd argue we also have no basis to believe we cannot ship it, but yes.  Still, the solution is to investigate, rather than remove.  The cost is high.07:26
persiaHrm.  That's also true.   Either my memory or that wiki page is in error.07:27
siretartI'm sorry, how can we possibly believe to retain any credibility here if we simply look away here?07:27
persiaUm, I think you perceive my input as something other than it is.07:27
siretartpossibly07:28
persiaIf you want to file a removal bug, go ahead.  I don't read that as a removal bug.07:28
siretartthere is already a bug, and I subscribed the archive admins to comment on it07:28
siretartslangasek just unsubscribed from there07:28
persiaYou're talking about bug #223212?07:28
ubottuLaunchpad bug 223212 in linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24 "Non-free files distributed without license/copyright info" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/22321207:28
siretartI really hope there is some misunderstanding here07:28
siretartyes07:29
persiaRight.  I don't see a request to remove the package in the log of that bug.07:29
siretartbecause that's pointless, we do have a place for that in ubuntu. it's called 'restricted'07:29
StevenKsiretart: Right, so you subscribe ubuntu-archive without even commenting in the bug that you'd like ubuntu-archive to comment on the package in question, and you're suprised when slangasek just unsubscribes ubuntu-archive?07:30
persiaI think you need to make clear what action should be taken.07:30
StevenKJust because we're memebers of ubuntu-archive doesn't mean we can read minds.07:30
persiaPutting it in restricted breaks ogre-model, but it quite likely possible with some wrangling.07:30
siretartStevenK: well, yes, I'm indeed a bit surprised here. when I did that, a fellow DD pointed me to the issue, but I was at work and a bit in a hurry07:31
siretartStevenK: in the end, you suggest me to comment on the bug and then re-subscribe ubuntu-archive?07:31
StevenKNo, just saying.07:31
StevenKI hate how this issue keeps coming up over and over and over and over in Debian, and I don't want the same thing to happen here.07:32
persiasiretart, I'd recommend you make a clear statement of what action should be taken prior to subscribing ubuntu-archive.  Moving it to restricted probably first requires some fiddling with the kernel dependencies, which would involve working with the kernel team.07:32
siretartStevenK: so do I. and I thought that we had settled that in ubuntu by other means than putting heads in the sand07:33
* persia has had little success with soliciting ubuntu-archive comment when it comes to policy in the past07:33
pittiwhat would be bad with moving it to restricted?07:33
persiapitti, Dependencies, mostly.  Probably just needs some sorting.07:33
pittipersia: indeed, tech board is more authoritative in that regard07:33
pittiubuntu-archive executes policy, we don't actually define it in that scope07:34
StevenKpitti: linux-image-generic Depends on linux-firmware07:34
persiapitti, Well, perhaps, although I find that generall a developer statement is sufficient for most things, if they don't break anything.07:34
StevenKpitti: linux-generic is in restricted, and linux-image-generic is in main07:34
pittithis should be solved by TB and checked for feasibility with kernel team IMHO07:34
siretartI'm surprised that we have a different understanding of policy here. up to now I thought http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing was pretty clear07:35
persiasiretart, I don't think anyone is arguing about policy.  It's just the mechanics involved.07:35
pittiindeed, so then we could theoretically shuffle the metapackages07:35
StevenKsiretart: So, we should just purge it from the archive and break the world?07:35
siretartbut half of the archive team thinks this should go via TB, well, then so be it07:35
pittie. g. linux-generic could pull in the firmware, and linux-image* stop depending on it07:35
persiaUm, no it's that the TB makes policy.07:35
pittisiretart: TB -> change of policy07:35
persiaThis doesn't need a policy statement: there is clear policy.07:36
siretartI think policy is just fine here. the implementation isn't.07:36
pittiif we just have a bug (wrong component), and you don't want to change the policy, TB isn't actually needed07:36
StevenKpitti: I recall rtg had a reason why he didn't do that, but I don't recall what it is.07:36
persiaIt's just that the mess of linux and linux-meta and linux-firmware needs to be sorted to not break the world.07:36
siretartStevenK: well, at some point this has been accepted into main. I think this was an error.07:36
pittiStevenK: you can install Ubuntu with "free software only", but well, then you have to keep both pieces if it breaks for you07:36
pittisiretart: *nod*07:36
pittithe "linux" metapackage is in restricted for a similar reason07:37
persiasiretart, I remember when it was accepted into main.  It was done because it introduced no new components.  The questionable bits came from upstream at some point nobody can identify in prehistory.07:37
pittiso, AFAICS, if we move linux-firmware dependency from linux-image-generic to linux-image, and move linux-image and l-firmware to restricted, it should be all good07:38
siretartpersia: you are aware that your last statement can be read in a pretty malicious way, are you?07:38
persiaCan we not just clean up the confusing set of metapackages?07:38
persiasiretart, Erm, no.  Sorry.  It wasn't intended that way.07:38
pittipersia: you have another proposal?07:38
persiapitti, Well, we have linux, linux-generic, linux-image-generic, linux-image, etc.07:39
persiaDo we really need that many?07:39
siretartpersia: I know that you didn't mean it. I'm just saying that this argument will be perceived outside ubuntu completely different than you mean it here07:39
pittipersia: not on i386/amd64 right now, I think07:39
persiasiretart, Ah.  I understand.  Right.07:40
persiapitti, Do you know why not?  I remember this being discussed for the past 3-4 cycles, and it's always too late in the cycle to fix it, or there's some other reason.07:40
persiaBut just moving the dependency should be sensible, and allow migration to restricted.07:41
slangaseksiretart: I unsubscribed the archive admins because all you did was subscribe us, without saying what you wanted.  And if you want it /removed/, then that would appear to be an inter-developer dispute, which I don't intend to mediate with my archive admin hat, to be sure07:41
siretartthat sounds quite right to me07:41
pittipersia: well, re-thinking about it, we still have several flavours (-i386, -generic, -server, -rt, etc.), so we probably still need them all07:41
slangasekfor my part, I'm not convinced moving it to restricted is the correct course of action07:41
siretartslangasek: okay, sorry for that, I was under the wrong impression that the bug was already clear. now I see that it is not07:42
persiapitti, I guess the one I don't understand the most is the distinction between "linux" and "linux-image".  They seem to differ by a single transposed word.07:42
siretartslangasek: can you please elaborate? How can we keep it in main without violating http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing?07:42
persiaslangasek, Or were you saying that removal may be the more appropriate action?07:43
superm1persia, before karmic, having linux and linux-image made sense because linux pulled in LRM as well as linux-image07:43
superm1now for karmic since there is no more LRM, the linux meta package itself makes less sense07:43
slangaseksiretart: note that this page says "application software", which firmware are not07:43
persiasuperm1, No, l-r-m was always pulled by linux-image-flavour, because l-r-m can be flavour-specific.07:44
persia(or maybe it was linux-flavour)07:44
pittipersia: AFAIUI, "linux-image" -> the actual kernel, like bzimage and modules; "linux" -> everything around it, such as restricted-modules, firmware, etc.07:44
slangasekwe do allow non-applications in main that don't permit free modification; e.g., RFCs07:44
superm1persia, i'm looking at apt-cache depends linux on jaunty right now. the only two depends are linux-image and linux-restricted-modules07:44
superm1where linux-restricted-modules is another metapackage07:45
persiasuperm1, Hrm.  Maybe I'm confused.  I filed a bug about this a long time ago, was told it couldn't be fixed easily, and forgot some of the detals.07:45
superm1persia, well now it really should be much more easily fixable with LRM gone, so i would recommend reviving said bug07:46
slangasekpitti: the split between linux-image and linux is "depends on restricted" and "doesn't depend on restricted"07:46
slangaseklinux-image at various points in its history depends on linux-ubuntu-modules, too07:46
siretartmaybe I'm too much from the embedded world, but for me "application software" does not necessarily imply to be software on the same processor the linux kernel runs on. anyway. the next point is that we require permission to redistribute and modify it. are you positive that we have that permission? the bug is about these missing copyright statements07:47
persiasuperm1, Perhaps.  Someone needs to sit down and untangle the mess.  It might be me, and it might be someone else.07:47
YokoZarhey guys, apt-get install branding-ubuntu and then open solitaire, tell me what you think07:47
slangaseksiretart: no, I'm not positive; I agree that it's a bug, I just don't see that it's a bug that the archive admins can resolve, since our only available option is "pull it and make it uninstallable"07:47
persiasiretart, There are two issues being conflated.  1) Should linux-firmware be in main and 2) does the current licensing of linux-firmware meet the requirements (even for firmware as documented at http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing)07:48
siretartpersia: perhaps you're right and these two issues should be discussed seperately07:48
persiasiretart, There's a separate section for firmware further down on the page.  I'm not sure that the bug raised doesn't even break that guideline, although it needs investigation.07:49
pittiright, so 1) is the easy part here; (2), figuring out their licenses, is the real work here07:49
persiaWell, 1) is really making a call as to whether we consider the contents of the package "firmware" or "application software".  In the first case, main is fine (as I read the page).  In the second case, it belongs in restricted.  Probably easier to put it in restricted to avoid the argument, but needs confirmation from the kernel team.07:50
persiaIn terms of undocumented licenses, I think we ought follow the practices we've followed in the past: when we encounter something where licensing is unclear (take a look at the copyright files for a bunch of stuff in Priority:required sometime), we try to fix them or work around any discovered issues.07:51
slangasekmoving linux-firmware to restricted also breaks the ogre model in that it builds two udebs that are embedded in the d-i initramfs07:53
slangasek(nic-firmware, scsi-firmware)07:53
persiaAha.  That's the part that breaks.  Thanks for the clarification.07:53
pittisuperm1: I answered to the jockey-text merge request, BTW07:54
siretartah, okay, this makes things more clear. but I need to leave now, will be back later. cu07:55
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cjwatsonsiretart: that page is absolutely explicit about whether firmware is application software; it says that it is not.09:26
cjwatson"Ubuntu contains licensed and copyrighted works that are not application software. For example, the default Ubuntu installation includes documentation, images, sounds, video clips and firmware."09:27
cjwatson(I've followed up to the bug separately)09:27
cjwatsonpgraner: bug 223212 needs attention from your team, I think09:28
ubottuLaunchpad bug 223212 in linux-restricted-modules-2.6.24 "Non-free files distributed without license/copyright info" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/22321209:28
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dholbachseb128: can you please change the Maintainer from pidgin to ubuntu-devel-discuss instead of ubuntu-devel with one of the next uploads?10:02
dholbachtkamppeter: ^ same goes for some of the printer related packages10:03
dholbachupdate-maintainer of the ubuntu-dev-tools package will take care of it for you10:03
dholbach(mails get into the ubuntu-devel@ moderation queue because of it)10:03
seb128dholbach, why?10:05
seb128which mails?10:05
dholbacharchive@ubuntu.com mails10:05
seb128an upload should not spam any mailing list10:05
viseif my software-0.0.2 is open source till date, can i now make it closed source at software-0.0.3 version?10:06
viseit has lgpl currently...10:06
dholbachseb128: they do get into the moderation queue though10:08
seb128dholbach, I'm a bit concerned that an upload spam a mailing list, would that mean that emails would land on ubuntu-devel-discuss when I upload pidgin?10:08
cjwatsonthey manifestly don't ...10:08
dholbachseb128: I'm not moderator of that list, so I don't know - maybe archive@ubuntu.com is explicitly blocked there10:09
seb128well, if they go in the moderation queue that's because they try to go there, if I change the email for an open list one what would block the email?10:09
cjwatsonvise: I don't think you should really be expecting free software developers to give you advice on taking your program away from us10:09
cjwatsonto be perfectly honest :)10:09
seb128dholbach, what do those emails say?10:09
dholbachseb128: it's the usual archive@ubuntu.com emails you get on every upload, plus the "rejected"ones10:10
dholbachseb128: I just noticed pidgin and a few printing related packages10:10
visecjwatson: I dont want to either.. But please.. :)10:10
dholbachalso I'd like to get the merge proposal mails for ~ubuntu-core-dev from that list10:10
dholbachbut I don't know what to do there10:10
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Hobbseedholbach: er, what?10:11
cjwatsonvise: it's my understanding that you can't withdraw the licence already given for software-0.0.2, so people can continue to modify and distribute that; furthermore, if you've incorporated code from anyone else under the LGPL then you don't have the right to make that closed-source. For anything else, I suggest asking your lawwyer10:11
cjwatsonlawyer10:11
dholbachHobbsee: what what? :)10:12
seb128dholbach, I'm not sure to understand what is going on but I will change the email address anyway, still seems weird that the lists are mailed on upload10:12
Hobbseeseb128: they really aren't.10:12
dholbachHobbsee: aren't what?10:12
visecjwatson: tyvm10:12
cjwatsondholbach: I suspect we probably ought to add an ubuntu-reviews mailing list10:12
Hobbseedholbach: the lists (u-d, u-d-d) aren't mailed on upload10:13
dholbachcjwatson: that sounds sensible, we could route the sponsoring there too10:13
Hobbseedholbach: did you want the merge proposals on u-d, or not?  I'm unclear with what you're saying thee10:13
dholbachHobbsee: let me do a pidgin upload that is going to be rejected - just a sec10:13
dholbachHobbsee: I'd prefer not having them10:13
dholbachon ubuntu-devel@10:13
Hobbseeright10:14
cjwatsonthey were only ever temporarily on ubuntu-devel@, until they got past the point when they were manageable there10:14
dholbachok pidgin right now has Maintainer: Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com> - what the ubuntu-devel@ moderation queue in a few minutes10:15
dholbachnow10:15
Hobbseecjwatson: so we'e dopping the erge requests?  so far, iv'e just been skippign them10:15
Hobbseeah, that did dop in the moderation queue10:16
pittidholbach: (not sure whether it matters, but theh usual maintainer is u-devel-discuss@)10:16
Hobbseeas fo how changing the addess to u-d-d will help mattes at all, i don't know10:16
cjwatsonHobbsee: they're generally supposed to be let through for now, AIUI, but we probably ought to move them to a separate list soon10:16
dholbachpitti: yes, that's what I'm saying - a few packages have ubuntu-devel@ (which is a mistake)10:16
* cjwatson screws Hobbsee's 'r' key back on10:16
StevenKHehe10:17
Hobbseecjwatson: right.  and thanks - but you'll need to do that fo a few othe keys too10:17
Laneywhy don't we see mails for all packages that get uploaded? or are they always rejected by u-d-d?10:17
cjwatsonI *assume* that the u-d-d list configuration bins them10:17
Hobbsee(bing on my netbook!)10:17
dholbachI guess that in the configuration of u-d-d there's either a handler that drops them or the email address blocked completely somewhere else10:17
cjwatsonwould probably be easy enough to do that in the u-d configuration too, but in this case it's fortuitously letting us know of a mistake in Maintainer ;-)10:18
dholbachevand would be able to tell10:18
dholbachcjwatson: I'm happy to pester people :-)10:18
* Hobbsee nicks StevenK's USB keyboard, and can type again. woot!10:18
tkamppeterdholbach, which printing-related packages spam ubuntu-devel@? I did not find any?10:33
dholbachtkamppeter: I'll let you know with the next ones I encounter, nevermind for now :)10:34
dholbachtkamppeter: I take it back10:58
dholbachhere's the list of packages that still have ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com:10:59
dholbach alcovebook-sgml10:59
dholbach ant10:59
dholbach automake1.9-nonfree10:59
dholbach intltool-debian10:59
dholbach kernel-wedge10:59
dholbach keymapper10:59
dholbach kmplayer10:59
dholbach libgnucrypto-java10:59
dholbach libio-string-perl10:59
dholbach libnet-ip-perl10:59
dholbach libparse-debianchangelog-perl10:59
dholbach libtext-format-perl10:59
dholbach libxfontcache10:59
dholbach libxml-namespacesupport-perl10:59
dholbach libxvmc10:59
dholbach pan10:59
dholbach pidgin10:59
dholbach pwlib10:59
pittipastebin FTW!10:59
dholbach pythondialog10:59
dholbach python-unit10:59
dholbach sockstat10:59
dholbach ttf-bitstream-vera10:59
dholbach ttf-bpg-georgian-fonts10:59
dholbach witalian10:59
dholbach x11proto-print10:59
dholbach xcursor-themes10:59
ograoh my10:59
pittidholbach: i. e. pretty much the ones that nobody touched in years, and thus shouldn't cause mail spam11:00
pittiwell, them, and pidgin11:00
tseliotcjwatson: I installed my script for hardware detection to /lib/debian-installer-startup.d/ (from a udeb which depends on dmidecode-udeb) and bootstrap.log shows that dmidecode was installed. Is there some other log I should read to investigate the failure of my script?11:35
tseliotcjwatson: my script: https://pastebin.canonical.com/19132/11:35
cjwatsonbootstrap.log is entirely irrelevant - look at the installer syslog11:36
cjwatsonif you've completed installation, it's in /var/log/installer/syslog11:36
cjwatsonfor something that short, though, maybe just run it by hand in the installer environment and see if it works :)11:37
cjwatsontseliot: oh, you'll need to actively halt or something rather than just exiting 1. debian-installer-startup ignores exit codes11:38
tseliotcjwatson: oh, how do I halt the installer then?11:38
* ogra would also check for $RET != 0 and drop two lines :)11:38
tseliotogra: yes, that would help debugging11:39
cjwatsontseliot: 'halt'11:42
tseliotcjwatson: there's no trace of dmidecode in /var/log/installer/syslog: https://pastebin.canonical.com/19133/11:42
cjwatsontseliot: then it probably didn't go wrong11:42
tseliotshouldn't it be pulled automatically as a dependency?11:42
cjwatsonsure, but why would that be in the runtime log?11:42
cjwatsonare you rebuilding d-i to include this?11:43
cjwatsondebian-installer-startup.d is run before any runtime component installation happens11:43
tseliotwe set up  a new project to do it11:43
cjwatsonso you need to rebuild d-i to include any scripts there11:43
cjwatsonif you want to investigate whether dependencies are pulled in, you should check the *build* log11:44
cjwatsonalso, you could do this in a much more lightweight way without dmidecode - just look in /sys/class/dmi/id/product_name11:44
tseliotok, let me check11:44
tseliotcjwatson: yes, dmidecode was installed11:47
tseliotand thanks for the tip about /sys/class/dmi/id/product_name11:47
A|iis this the channel for ubuntu debian package maintainers?12:15
ogra_A|i, the /topic should say it all12:16
A|iogra_, which channel is for package maintainers?12:16
ogra_i wuld go to -motu for a start12:16
ogra_*would12:17
A|ii dont want to pack, i want to report a problem12:17
ogra_for a specific package ?12:17
cjwatsonyou should file a bug, then12:17
A|iyes12:17
ogra_ubuntu-bug -p <packagename>12:17
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A|ii know, but i was wondering if the package maintainers are around12:18
ogra_they are usually subscribed to all bugmail12:18
A|iok thanks12:19
pgranercjwatson: that bug is on my radar as part of the license clean up with legal.13:07
cjwatsonthanks13:07
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PistosHello, is anyone around who is even remotely connected with Ruby on Ubuntu?  I think I have found a bug in the Ubuntu build of Ruby 1.9, because it doesn't appear on Debian or Gentoo, or when Ruby 1.9 is built from source on Ubuntu.14:28
cjwatsonha!14:30
* cjwatson nails bug 18587814:30
ubottuLaunchpad bug 185878 in grub "GRUB installation fails if installing to non-ext3 partition" [High,Triaged] https://launchpad.net/bugs/18587814:30
* ogra applauds14:30
cjwatsonpain, suffering, and more pain14:30
StevenKDuh, it involves GRUB14:31
StevenKOh, even better, it looks to be a race condition.14:31
cjwatsonI'm not actually 100% sure it's racy; it's a cache coherency bug14:32
StevenKDisk cache coherency?14:32
cjwatsonwriting to a partition device when you still have the disk device open does not guarantee that you will get new data back when you read from the disk device14:32
cjwatsonioctl(BLKFLSBUF) fixes14:33
DoYouKnowis that something that appeared today?14:36
directhexwhich file lists packages in main (with hopefully justification)?14:37
StevenKdirecthex: Packages in main have to be held there by being seeded or a build-dependancy or so14:39
DoYouKnowI thought I installed to ext4, although I'm not sure about the boot partition14:39
DoYouKnowand grub works fine14:39
cjwatsonDoYouKnow: the bug description overstates the case a bit14:42
cjwatsonDoYouKnow: see my last comment for a more accurate description of what's affected14:42
directhexStevenK, i'm trying to work out why mono-tools is in main. i suspect monodoc-browser is to blame14:42
StevenKdirecthex: The germinate output should tell you that.14:43
* StevenK tries to remember where it lives.14:43
cjwatsonhttp://people.ubuntu.com/~ubuntu-archive/germinate-output/14:45
StevenKHmmm. unr.karmic isn't in that list.14:47
cjwatsonfeel free to edit ~ubuntu-archive/bin/update-germinate on rookery to add it14:47
StevenKcjwatson: I was going to ask for a hint, thanks. I'll fix it tomorrow.14:47
directhexhm14:49
directhexas far as i understand it... supported-development.seed lists monodoc-webkit-manual14:50
directhexmeaning the documentation browser gets pulled in, meaning i need to merge mono-tools to disable the asp.net documentation browser14:50
tseliotcjwatson: what's your opinion on bug 172830?14:54
ubottuLaunchpad bug 172830 in partman-auto "Too much of hard disk space (5% blocks) is reserved for big partitions (e.g. /home)" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/17283014:54
cjwatsontseliot: it's a bikeshed bug and not easily fixed in a way that will satisfy everyone; if you have a problem with the current value I suggest using preseeding facilities to change it14:55
cjwatson"reserved_for_root{ 1% }" or whatever in a recipe14:56
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mattn__installing the package diff-ext on 9.04 leads to nautilus crashes when right clicking a file14:57
mattn__uninstalling it again solved the issue14:57
cjwatsontseliot: right now partman does not have a way to dynamically scale the percentage depending on the size of the disk, and I think there are still plenty of situations where you might be creating a relatively small filesystem14:58
Chipzzcjwatson: not wanting to start a flamewar, but what arguments would there be in favor of it for large partitions? or is it purely a technical issue like you said?15:00
cjwatsonread the bug.15:00
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cjwatsonthe arguments in favour of larger percentages are for *small* partitions, not large partitions.15:00
cjwatsonhence a need for some kind of inverse scaling.15:01
ChipzzI did, but you said it was a bikeshed bug (implying that there are arguments both in favor and against of it)15:01
tseliotcjwatson: ok, I see your point15:01
cjwatsonChipzz: whatever15:01
Chipzzcjwatson: idd whatever, was just curious anyway :)15:01
cjwatsonChipzz: if implemented crudely (i.e. just changing the percentage), it's a bikeshed bug because I'd just get a different bug asking to put it back up again.15:01
cjwatsonChipzz: avoiding the bikeshed requires more sophisticated code15:01
cjwatsonI'm sorry I didn't spell that out in detail, I was rushing to get ready for a meeting15:02
Chipzzget ready for your meeting :)15:03
Chipzzno need to get late to satisfy my curiousity ;)15:03
cjwatson(and sorry, I didn't mean to be terse)15:05
cjwatsongrub has put me in a foul mood15:05
Chipzzcjwatson: no offense taken - now go get ready! :)15:05
Chipzztseliot: I wonder in what context you were asking about this bug; wouldn't that bug only affect alternate and server installs?15:07
Chipzzor does it affect ubiquity too?15:07
tseliotChipzz: OEM stuff15:07
tseliotand yes, alternate installs15:07
tseliotwell, what we use for OEM15:07
Chipzztseliot: I'ld say that OEMs should have enough clue to preseed an appropriate value?15:08
tseliotChipzz: yep15:08
Chipzz(appropriate for the model on which it's installed)15:08
Chipzzso largely irrelevant IMO?15:08
Chipzz(well for your use case anyway)15:08
cjwatsonfor the record ubiquity uses partman-auto in more or less the same way that d-i does15:09
cjwatsoncertainly recipes are applied identically15:09
tseliotChipzz: communication is always useful ;)15:10
Chipzztseliot: anyway just my 2 cents :)15:12
PistosOkay, FWIW, I filed a full report: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ruby1.9/+bug/39388815:20
ubottuUbuntu bug 393888 in ruby1.9 "Ruby 1.9.0 curses Alt-key handling broken" [Undecided,New]15:20
andrew_sayersHi evand, I just replied to your message about the migration assistant.  We can talk in here if you prefer.15:46
evandandrew_sayers: email is probably best at the moment as it will give me a chance to mull over what you've sent.  I'll take a look at it shortly, just have a few things I need to sort first.15:49
andrew_sayersevand: sure.15:49
pittiTheMuso, dtchen: do you plan to package pulse 0.9.16test1? (https://tango.0pointer.de/pipermail/pulseaudio-discuss/2009-June/004256.html)15:52
pitti(lots of fixes, and de-hal-ification)15:54
seb128pitti, speaking about pulseaudio do you have sound on your laptop and karmic?15:55
pittiseb128: last tested yesterday, lemme check again15:56
pittiseb128: hm, indeed it's just silent15:57
seb128same here15:57
pittithat worked yesterday15:58
pittiand it's not just the mixer (which tends to be silent by default nowadays)15:58
seb128lucky you I don't have sound on my laptop for several days15:58
seb128I've tried to tweak all the mixer settings with no luck15:58
pittikillall pulse doesn't work either, though, so it seems to be an alsa issue15:59
pittioh, hang on15:59
pitti-EPERM?15:59
pittigetfacl /dev/snd/pcmC0D0c -> FAIL15:59
pittiseb128: investigating, thanks for poking16:01
seb128where?16:01
seb128not here16:01
seb128but I didn't upgrade my laptop today16:01
seb128I was trying to stay away from the libudev issue16:01
pittiseb128: nothing to do with gudev16:01
pittiseb128: are you not in the "audio" group?16:01
seb128thanks for looking ;-)16:01
pittikillall pulseaudio; sudo aplay /usr/share/sounds/card_shuffle.wav16:01
pitti^ please verify that this works16:02
mdzcjwatson: Keybuk: which of you chaired the last TB?16:02
mdzthe other of you should chair the next one :-)16:02
pittiseb128: and that aplay /usr/share/sounds/card_shuffle.wav doesn't16:02
seb128pitti, I'm in the audio group (the gudev breakage is why I didn't dist-upgrade my laptop today)16:02
seb128pitti, why do I need to killall pulseaudio before trying?16:02
ogramdz, colin did last16:02
Keybukmdz: I think it's my turn next16:02
seb128pitti, aplay and paplay doesn't play any sound16:02
pittiseb128: eliminating potential breakage, and avoid running pulse as root16:02
seb128using sudo or not16:02
pittiseb128: sudo aplay doesn't work either? it works here16:03
cjwatsonmdz: yes, I did16:03
seb128pitti, no but my sound is broken for a while not only since today so we probably have different isues16:03
seb128issues16:03
pittiseb128: getfacl /dev/snd/controlC0 for you?16:06
seb128yes16:06
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* directhex fluffles Keybuk, apologises for him needing to waste his time on position statements16:10
ogradirecthex, dont be apologetic ...16:11
ograits not your fault16:11
seb128_pitti, no error16:12
=== seb128_ is now known as seb128
pittiseb128: ah, then you still have udev-extras16:20
pittiseb128: I just figured out what broke it16:20
seb128pitti, no I don't16:20
seb128that has been uninstalled yesterday16:20
pittiah, then you don't get ACLs either16:21
seb128what do you mean?16:21
seb128acl doesn't return an error16:21
seb128group is audio and has rw-16:21
pittiright, but "seb128" certainly doesn't have an ACL16:21
seb128no, but the audio group should be enough no?16:22
pittinot for me16:22
pittiI'm not in audio16:22
seb128I'm in audio16:22
pittiah, then this isn't what it breaks for you16:22
seb128no, as said I've no sound for a while there, not until since yesterday16:23
dholbachCan I interest somebody in giving a Packaging Training session at 02nd July, 06:00 UTC? https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Packaging/Training has lots of ideas for sessions16:26
PiciIs anyone aware what the plans for Firefox 3.5 in Jaunty are? I'd like to have an answer to give to the many people that are asking in the other support channels.16:36
seb128what plans?16:37
seb128it's in jaunty universe16:37
Picioh, sorry, I thought it was in main. I misread.16:37
* Pici pops over to -motu16:38
seb128you can ask your questions there but that is not a clear question, do you want to get a bug fixed there or something?16:39
Piciseb128: It appears that FF3.5 was released today, we're getting a lot of 'when is this update coming?' questions.  I know its a separate package, but its still the beta version in Jaunty.16:40
seb128asac, ^ is there any ppa or something with an updated firefox-3.5 for jaunty?16:42
asacseb128: yes. ~ubuntu-mozilla-daily has the RC (its not daily atm)16:44
asacseb128: once 3.5 final gets out we will update jaunty one16:44
asacPici: ^16:44
seb128asac, somebody is claiming that 3.5 has been flagged stable today16:44
asacso yeah. release is today.16:44
asacseb128: yes. wasnt sure they woke up yet ;)16:45
Piciasac: Thanks, thats all I needed to know :)16:45
asacPici: will take a day or two because we need to do some basic QA. if users asks tell them to enable ~ubuntu-mozilla-security16:45
seb128users are crack addicts, they ask for updates the second it's announced16:45
asacthats where this build will end up first16:45
asacPici: and we always love to have more security staging testers ;)16:45
Piciseb128: believe me, I know. If I asked them whats so great about $newversion, most of the time they aren't able to answer.16:46
seb128"it's new!" ;-)16:46
asacPici: so the crack addicts should use -daily ppa anyway ... the others should go for -security. thanks!16:46
Piciasac: sorry, just need a little clarification: Will the 3.5 packages be updated in Universe or will they only be in the PPA.16:57
asacPici:  ~ubuntu-mozilla-security is the staging area for real archive ... it will first go there and then to universe16:57
Piciasac: Okay, thanks.16:58
brettalton1With SJR announcing that mono/C# is here to stay in the Ubuntu desktop, does this mean there will be discussion on Rhythmbox vs Banshee for Karmic? Or is that probably a LTS+1 thing? (aka 10.10)16:59
dholbachbryce, pitti: you know about the hal/xserver-xorg overwrite problem?17:01
dholbach/usr/lib/hal/debian-setup-keyboard17:01
seb128brettalton1, rhythmbox and banshee have already been discussed at uds17:01
seb128brettalton1, https://blueprints.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/desktop-karmic-default-media-player-choice17:01
brettalton1seb128: exactly what I was looking for, thank you.17:02
pittidholbach: I don't17:02
seb128dholbach, ask tjaalton since the did the upload maybe?17:03
dholbachhttp://paste.ubuntu.com/2003817:03
dholbachhttp://paste.ubuntu.com/20703817:03
dholbachsorry17:03
pittitjaalton, bryce, dholbach: ah, I remember that Debian ships that file in xorg, while we ship it in hal17:04
pittiI don't mind removing it from hal, but we need the conflicts/replaces on xorg anyway17:04
dholbachsounds like a merge oversight?17:04
tjaaltonoh yeah17:05
tjaaltonpitti: will you drop it from hal? I'll add the C/R to xserver-xorg..17:10
pittitjaalton: it's a little weird to have the .fdi in hal (which calls it) and the script in xorg17:10
pittitjaalton: shouldn't the fdi be moved as well?17:10
tjaaltonpitti: let me see where that is17:11
pitti/usr/share/hal/fdi/policy/10osvendor/10-x11-keymap.fdi I mean17:11
tjaaltonit might be shipped by evdev in debian17:11
tjaaltonno, it's in xorg17:12
tjaaltonit's called debian-x11-keymap.fdi from now on :)17:13
pittitjaalton: so I should drop that as well, to avoid having two17:13
slytherincjwatson: Can you please point me to the powerpc chroot you had copied from buildd? I lost the link.17:14
tjaaltonpitti: yes17:14
cjwatsonslytherin: http://people.ubuntu.com/~cjwatson/tmp/karmic-powerpc.tar.bz217:14
tjaaltonpitti: sorry for the short notice, I had forgot about this completely17:15
EvanCarrollPici: Dev's are crack addicts too, I want my firefox to not consume my whole PC, though I actually don't believe 3.5 will make a damn difference17:15
slytherincjwatson: ahh, my mistake I overlooked it while checking files in tmp.17:15
EvanCarroll3.5 seems like groundless chrome counter-hype17:16
superm1pitti, yeah I saw thanks.  i'll let you know as soon as I get a chance to make the recommended changes17:16
EvanCarroll3.0 was supposed to be significantly faster than 2.5, and I didn't see a noticeable difference in that either.17:16
EvanCarrolland wtf is the firefox launchpage covered with dolphins?17:17
EvanCarrollmysql invasion?!?! surely it will be fastar!17:17
pittitjaalton: ok, will be dropped from hal_0.5.12+git20090626-0ubuntu2_source.changes; testing and uploading17:20
tjaaltonpitti: so I'll add C/R hal (<= 0.5.12+git20090626-0ubuntu1) to xserver-xorg17:21
pittitjaalton: *nod*17:21
tjaaltonoh man, mesa build makes my laptop boil17:22
bryceheya tjaalton and pitti; got the hal stuff sorted?17:24
tjaaltonbryce: yeah, pushing right now17:24
tjaaltonnext to fix the mesa ftbfs17:24
c_kornwhy does the package text say that it is scilab-5.1-0ubuntu2 but it is scilab-5.1.1-6 (see the files at the right)? http://packages.ubuntu.com/karmic/scilab17:30
pittitjaalton: uploaded17:31
tjaaltonpitti: likewise :)17:33
infinityc_korn: Because the binaries are the old version, the source is the new version (it failed to build on all arches except sparc...)17:33
infinityc_korn: https://edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/karmic/+source/scilab/5.1.1-6 might be a friendlier view of that situation.17:33
cjwatsonor https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/scilab for another level up; launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/SOURCEPACKAGENAME is generally a good place to start in LP17:34
infinitycjwatson: Well, yes, but I was trying to point on the build failures. :)17:34
c_kornkeytool error: java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException: SHA384withECDSA Signature not available17:35
c_korn  error adding mozilla/COMODO_ECC_Certification_Authority.crt17:35
cjwatsonright17:35
c_kornthis is the error17:35
c_kornthis is not an issue related to scilab17:36
cjwatsonthere's a sync request for that, which I'll process now17:37
cjwatson(bug 393830; bug 392104)17:37
ubottuLaunchpad bug 393830 in ca-certificates-java "sync request (unstable -> main)" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/39383017:37
ubottuLaunchpad bug 392104 in ca-certificates-java "[Karmic] Update to ca-certificates 20090624 prevents ca-certificates-java from installing" [High,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/39210417:37
cjwatsonhmm, already processed17:37
cjwatsonI'll retry scilab then17:38
c_korncjwatson: ok, thanks17:41
cjwatsonI'm not retrying ports architectures since openjdk seems to be uninstallable there17:41
=== dpm is now known as dpm-afk
pittiKeybuk: heh -- sed -i 's/srcdir/builddir/g' gtk-doc.make fixes it. completely. \o/17:44
Keybukpitti: if we could get that upstream, that'd be awesome17:45
Keybuk(gtk-doc upstream, that is)17:45
pittiKeybuk: right, I'll file it to them17:45
pittiKeybuk: http://bazaar.launchpad.net/%7Eubuntu-core-dev/udev/ubuntu/revision/248017:47
pittiKeybuk: so, it's "debcheckout", "debian/rules prep", and then dpkg-buildpackage just works17:48
pgranerbryce: ping17:48
bryceyep17:49
cjwatsonkirkland: dunno if you noticed, by the way, but I fixed w3mman to handle formatting characters correctly. Is it easy to upgrade ubuntu-manpage-repository to karmic's w3mman, or would it be easier to work around it by setting the same environment variable in your code that calls w3mman?17:49
pgranerbryce: do you have any docs on setting up KMS with nouveau?17:49
brycepgraner, not as such, but there's a ppa17:50
brycehttps://edge.launchpad.net/~xorg-edgers/+archive/nouveau17:50
brycesome docs on that page17:50
pgranerbrianchidester: yea I saw that, anything special after install ?17:51
pgranerbryce: ^^^^^^^^^^^17:51
pittiKeybuk: which stuff did you deliberately not install? I see the gudev gtk-doc (should go to libgudev-dev), ConsoleKit helper (absence breaks everything), udev.pc (should be in libudev-dev), README.keymap.txt (should be in udev)17:51
brycepgraner, I've not actually been able to get it to successfully do kms on -nouveau, so don't know what more needs done, but something does17:51
brycehowever I've not tried with raof's latest stuff17:52
pgranerbryce: ok, I'll try the ppa and see what I can get going. My desktop is a Nvidia and would like to see if I can get it working17:52
brycepgraner, one thing I've noticed is that support varies widely from chip family to chip family17:53
Keybukpitti: it may have gone now17:53
bryceG70 cards *should* work the best; earlier families maybe not so much17:53
pittiKeybuk: udev.pc by and large just has udevdir=/lib/udev and the version; do you think we should have that in udev itself? or ignore?17:54
pgranerbryce: I have a: nVidia Corporation GeForce 8600 GT17:54
Keybukpitti: we should include it I guess17:55
Keybukor maybe in libudev-dev17:55
brycepgraner, yeah G80 cards like that should be really well supported (I've one as well)17:57
pgranerKeybuk: any idea of what this means when doing an upgrade in Karmic: E: /var/cache/apt/archives/xserver-xorg_1%3a7.4+3ubuntu1_amd64.deb: trying to overwrite `/usr/lib/hal/debian-setup-keyboard', which is also in package hal17:58
cjwatsonmeans that somebody forgot the mandatory Replaces field when moving a file between packages17:58
pgranercjwatson: what package should the bug go against?17:58
seb128it has been fixed but the update is not published yet17:59
seb128nowhere, it's fixed already17:59
cjwatsonxserver-xorg but it was already discussed above17:59
pgranerseb128: ok, then I'll just wait17:59
brycepgraner, in fact we just put in a fix for that hal/xorg conflict18:01
pgranerbryce: thanks...18:01
pittiKeybuk: ok, I think udev package is back in working order now, and building from tree is back to sanity18:11
Keybukpitti: cool, please upload ;)18:15
pittidone18:15
pittiI want my sound and DRI acceleration back :)18:15
Keybuk:)18:16
Keybukthere's some bugs about that18:16
djsiegel1Keybuk: do you know the name of the package that lets me edit the wiki in my own out-of-browser editor?18:26
cjwatsoneditmoin18:27
cjwatson(I haven't used it in a while, don't know if it works at the moment)18:27
elmoit's all text (firefox extension) is also useful for that, FWIW18:28
* cjwatson gives up on trying to make bughelper work (I assume it's been broken by some LP UI change again) and writes a 15-line launchpadlib script instead18:28
cjwatsonis anyone working on a launchpadlib-ified version of bughelper?18:28
Ampelbeincjwatson: sort of. i rewrote bugnumbers to use lplib.18:33
Ampelbeincjwatson: i thought of rewriting bughelper, too.18:34
cjwatsonas it happens I generally only use it for quick searches and it looks as if lplib is easy enough to use for that that I personally don't really need a fully-fledged tool, but others might18:36
Ampelbeincjwatson: I will see what I can do.18:38
cjwatsonAmpelbein: cool :)18:39
pittiKeybuk: indeed, I closed bug 39359118:42
ubottuLaunchpad bug 393591 in udev "Regression: Sound stops working after udev upgrade from 142 to 143 in Karmic" [Undecided,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/39359118:42
=== asac____ is now known as asac
cody-somervilleIs it safe to upgrade X now? Someone said earlier that it completely busts karmic up.20:08
* ogra_ didnt have probs with yesterdays upgrade20:09
* cody-somerville takes a deep breath and upgrades.20:11
cody-somervilleodd20:11
cody-somervilleupdate-manager refuses20:11
cody-somervilleI click install updates and a popup window says reading state information while the main window greys out before disappearing and the main window ungreying.20:12
ogra_weird20:12
cody-somervilleI'll assume its a sign not to upgrade20:12
shayais there a reason that firefox-3.5 (yes, I know its rc2, not today's released) doesn't have HTML5 video support?20:21
kirklandhmm, /dev/null permed 600 in karmic makes many things very unhappy20:25
slangaseka /dev/null permed 600 anywhere makes things very unhappy20:25
sorenkirkland: Is it at least still a device node?20:28
Chipzz/dev/null being a file instead of a device node makes things very unhappy :P20:29
sorenkirkland: I once saw it replaced with a (very, very big) file, because someone accidentally removed it, and kept piping things to it as root.20:29
Chipzzsoren: I had that happen once20:29
Chipzzsoren: nfs server didn't come up after a reboot (the box was the file server for our web sites, and had been up for ages)20:30
Chipzzno idea what caused that20:30
c_kornhm ,http://pastebin.com/d78ca1ca920:30
kirklandsoren: was definitely a device file, might have been fixed in this last update20:37
kirklandslangasek: okay, i got my /dev/null back20:41
kirklandintel video is still hosed though20:41
* kirkland reminds himself to never update while away from home20:41
tormodjust as a word of warning, the last xorg (?) update might cause broken X20:48
tormodgdm 2.20.10-0ubuntu4 will fix X again21:05
pitticjwatson: nice, upstream merged your unionfs-fuse patch21:13
cjwatsongood21:15
pitticjwatson: I'm currently sponsoring a new version into Debian which should fix the hardlink bug 386728, so we should sync this21:15
ubottuLaunchpad bug 386728 in unionfs-fuse "package tzdata 2009h-1 failed to install/upgrade: error creating hard link `./usr/share/zoneinfo/posix/Europe/Nicosia': No such file or directory" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/38672821:15
cjwatsonsounds fair to me21:15
pittiwhat's wrong with the buildds?21:28
pittithey are all "private build" and disabled21:28
pittiinfinity: ^21:28
pittiasking because the current gdm upload is super-urgent21:28
maxbIs anyone using a non-US keyboard, and so in a position to confirm that the xkb callout seems to have broken (once you've fixed the gdm conffiles)21:36
seb128_maxb, what gdm conffiles?21:37
maxbthe ones referencing /usr/X11R6, which are fixed in above-mentioned super-urgent upload21:37
seb128_maxb, ah, that's not a conffile issue, that's a configuration issue21:39
=== seb128_ is now known as seb128
=== seb128 is now known as seb128_
maxbconffile/configuration whatever21:40
maxbAnyway, my point is that the callout seems broken to me, once I've fought past the already-reported breakage21:40
infinitypitti: They really are building private builds.21:40
infinitypitti: (security builds)21:40
infinitypitti: So, it's a bit of a "sucks to be you" for now. :/21:40
pittiok, thanks21:40
pittiwell, *shrug*, it's karmic :)21:40
seb128_infinity, suck to be users running karmic rather ;-)21:40
maxbUsers running karmic should be entirely capable of self-deducing the proper fix :-)21:41
=== seb128_ is now known as seb128
maxbpitti: Once the gdm stuff is out of the way, I think we have a re-regression of the "callout not being added" bug you debugged for me earlier in karmic21:44
* maxb reads irc logs of that time21:44
pittimaxb: callout?21:45
pittiugh, and the ppa buildds are asac'ed21:46
seb128pitti, great the gdm update doesn't build21:46
pitti*sigh*, no builds for me21:46
seb128Can't start Hardware abstraction layer - sysfs not mounted on /sys21:46
seb128Setting up xserver-xorg (1:7.4+3ubuntu2) ...21:46
seb128invoke-rc.d: initscript hal, action "restart" failed.21:46
pittihal??21:47
pittinothing should b-dep on hal21:47
seb128gdm build-depends on xorg-server which depends on hal21:47
pittieww21:47
pittitjaalton: can we please stop xorg-server from depending on hal?21:47
maxbLP 37561821:47
ubottuLaunchpad bug 375618 in hal "does not pass xkb* settings to xorg server" [High,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/37561821:47
pitti-evdev should/could, but nothing else surely?21:47
pittimaxb: I thought I re-fixed that some days ago21:47
seb128pitti, is that required for the fdi which moved there?21:48
maxbIt seems to have re-broken just now in today's xorg/hal update21:48
pittiseb128: not really21:48
pittixorg just needs to ship these two files21:48
pittinothing else21:49
seb128right, the fdi will be used if hal is there and do nothing otherwise21:49
seb128tjaalton, ^ that blocks the fixed gdm build21:49
seb128brb21:49
pittiseb128, tjaalton: want me to upload a new xorg?21:50
pittihm, hang on, xserver-xorg has always depended on hal21:51
pittiat least in jaunty21:51
pittiso it's just because it's now a build dep?21:52
pittianyway, moving to recommends should be fine21:52
cjwatsonxserver-xorg is a bit of an exotic build-dep isn't it?21:53
cjwatsonwhy is that needed?21:53
pittiseb128:21:53
pittipitti| hm, hang on, xserver-xorg has always depended on hal21:53
pittipitti| at least in jaunty21:53
cjwatsonI can understand xvfb or something ...21:53
pittipitti| so it's just because it's now a build dep?21:53
pittiseb128: can we not b-dep on xserver-xorg and just hardcode the new X path?21:54
cjwatsonrecommends> doesn't hal give xserver-xorg its ability to accept input?21:54
pittixserver-xorg pulls in the entire xorg stack, which is weird21:54
cjwatsonthat seems like a bit more than recommends to me21:54
pitticjwatson: it should just be -evdev, but let's not turn all of them upside down right now indeed21:55
pittiso, dropping the xserver-xorg b-dep from gdm seems least intrusive to me21:55
seb128yeah, I just copied what debian did to fix this issue21:55
seb128seemed to be the quicker way21:56
seb128I will have a look to change the configure logic rather now21:56
maxbConcerning the keyboard setup callout, it seems that the current xorg seems to have copied an old fdi file from before LP 375618 was fixed21:56
ubottuLaunchpad bug 375618 in hal "does not pass xkb* settings to xorg server" [High,Fix released] https://launchpad.net/bugs/37561821:56
pittimaxb, tjaalton: so perhaps xorg should update the fdi and script to the versions from hal? (http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-core-dev/hal/ubuntu/revision/336)21:57
maxbI've just rebooted having taken the fdi that was shipped in yesterday's hal, and the bug is fixed again22:00
Sarvattsounds like thats what needs to be done22:01
pittiok, will upload then22:04
pittimaxb: ah, you already added an xorg task?22:05
tjaaltonpitti: I'll fix it.. maintained in git etc22:08
pittitjaalton: oh, ok22:08
pittithanks22:08
maxbxorg task added, now added explanatory comment22:09
pittitjaalton: reassigned to you22:09
tjaaltonok22:09
tjaaltonoh, it needed all that.. perhaps debian wants that too22:10
pittitjaalton: yes, it wouldn't hurt in debian either22:10
pittito make it independent from the other fdis22:10
tjaaltonright, I'll push it there too22:11
tjaaltonguess I've seen a similar bug there22:11
pittitjaalton: see http://bazaar.launchpad.net/%7Eubuntu-core-dev/hal/ubuntu/revision/326 for rationale (and the same bug)22:11
tjaaltonyeah saw the diff from there22:11
kirklandbryce: x on my karmic thinkpad looks to be hosed again?22:26
tjaaltonkirkland: just wait for the latest gdm to build22:26
kirklandtjaalton: awesome, thanks22:26
tjaaltonor change the patchs to X in gdm.conf22:26
tjaaltonpaths, even22:27
blistov1what has happened to ctrl+c in server 9.04 and up?22:37
blistov1along with ... most of the other ctrl commands?22:37
cjwatsonnothing?22:38
cjwatsonat least not for most people :)22:38
blistov1sorry, 9.1022:38
cjwatsonthere is a known problem with console-setup that means the keymap is a bit busted; if 'sudo setupcon' fixes your problem, then that's what you're running into22:38
infinitypitti: Are you willing to pretend to be a hal expert for a second?22:39
pittiinfinity: I was, two seconds ago :)22:39
pittiinfinity: what's up?22:39
blistov1cjwatson: sudo setupcon does not fix it.22:39
infinitypitti: It's failing to stop "hald-addon-acpi" and purge from chroots.22:39
blistov1ctrl+c, d, z... none of them work.22:40
blistov1Every 9.10 install I have.22:40
blistov1Just noticed :)22:40
infinitypitti: And, more curiously, running my scan-for-processes script (the same one the buildds use at the end of a build) works fine.22:40
pittiinfinity: it's a miracle that it started in the first place..22:40
infinitypitti: Does it auto-respawn or something insane when killed?22:40
pittiinfinity: nope22:40
pittiit just gets started on startup, no d-bus activation for hal22:40
seb128btw about this hal doesn't start breaks xorg-server install thing22:40
infinitypitti: Miracles notwithstanding, it's being started on the lpia buildds. :/22:40
pitti(just yet, it will come in the near future)22:40
seb128is there really a reason to break xserver-xorg configuration if hal doesn't start?22:41
cjwatsonblistov1: 'stty sane'?22:41
pittiinfinity: what package pulls that in? it shouldn't be a build dep in the first place22:41
blistov1cjwatson: root@ebackup:~# stty22:41
blistov1speed 38400 baud; line = 0;22:41
blistov1-brkint -imaxbel22:41
pittiinfinity: or is that just the 0ubuntu4 gdm?22:41
infinitypitti: I suspect it's a recommends somewhere.22:42
infinitypitti: xserver and gdm are both pulling it in as build-deps.22:42
cjwatsonblistov1: I know it works for me (9.10 desktop upgraded from $ancient, but should be no difference) because my baby daughter managed to type ctrl-z on a console earlier tonight ;-)22:42
blistov1cjwatson: sane does nothing.22:42
pittiinfinity: either way, I hope to mostly get rid of hal in karmic, so I guess we shouldn't waste too much work on little issues like that22:42
infinitypitti: (And the buildds still do recommends by default because... I haven't turned that off)22:42
pittiinfinity: gdm was fixed in 0ubuntu522:42
pittiinfinity: oh, does Debian do that? I thought b-deps were depens only22:43
infinitypitti: Right, well, I don't care much about the underlying bug, I care about it killing the buildds outright when it happens. :)22:43
cjwatsonblistov1: don't know, then, I'm afraid. File a bug and we'll look into it ...22:43
infinitypitti: build-deps are depends-only, but apt kinda grew the "recommends-by-default" thing, so I need to explicitely turn it off.22:43
blistov1cjwatson: grrr.22:43
pittiinfinity: if some other package b-deps on hal or xserver-xorg, I'd rather fix just that22:43
infinitypitti: And, more annoyingly, only for the suites that support the option.22:43
blistov1cjwatson: well, i'll install a test box using today's daily build. see what happens.22:44
blistov1i noticed though that the default TERM  is not "linux" instead of "xterm"22:44
blistov1cjwatson: oh, and its only through ssh.  Logging in on a physical terminal seems to work fine with "linux" term set22:45
tjaaltonseb128: are you suggesting the postinst fails if 'invoke-rc.d hal restart' fails?22:46
seb128tjaalton, yes22:47
seb128tjaalton, that what broke the gdm build22:47
superm1ls22:48
superm1oops :P22:48
tjaaltonseb128: hrm..22:48
cjwatsonblistov1: I'm not sure I understood your sentence about $TERM. Did you mean to type "now" rather than "not"?22:49
infinitypitti: Err, wait, you say there's a new gdm source that doesn't build-dep on xserver-xorg?22:49
cjwatsonCtrl-C works fine over ssh here22:49
pittiinfinity: yes, 0ubuntu5; only 0ubuntu4 did, and it was an error22:49
TheMusopitti: We need to package rtkit first.22:49
pittiTheMuso: OMG, another kit?22:49
tjaaltonseb128: ok, it should be fixed then22:49
seb128pitti, not really an error but right ;-)22:49
cjwatsonand TERM=screen, as it should be since I'm sshing from inside a screen session. TERM depends on what you're coming from not what you're going to22:49
pittiokay, s/error/bad move/ :)22:50
cjwatsonhaving a mis-set TERM would certainly explain terminal features not working properly22:50
seb128TheMuso, hey, what information would be useful for an "there is no sound being played on karmic" issue?22:50
TheMusopitti: Yes, and its a Lennart creation, and it needs kernel 2.6.31 or newer.22:51
cjwatsonblistov1: could be a buggy .bashrc or similar startup script?22:51
TheMusoseb128: Whether volume is turned up in gnome-volume-control applet or alsamixer, whether there are any card# directories in /proc/asound, and whether there are any /dev/snd device nodes.22:51
seb128TheMuso, yes for all of those22:52
TheMusoseb128: Did sound work before? and are you able to run alsamixer in a terminal as an ordinary user?22:52
pittiseb128: does aplay just play silently, or fail with an error?22:52
seb128TheMuso, things do play sound in the sense they don't display any error and act as sound was being played but the is no actual sound22:53
seb128pitti, ^22:53
pittiTheMuso: FYI, there was a bug in udev which caused auto-ACLs not to apply; that's not seb128's problem, but it hit me, and anyone else who isn't in audio group22:53
seb128TheMuso, it worked in jaunty, not since I updated to karmic I think22:53
seb128TheMuso, and yes, I can run alsamixer, the gnome mixer or the new pulse mixer, use aplay and paplay, no error22:54
TheMusopitti: Yeah that hit me as well.22:54
seb128they all act as they were doing their job22:54
TheMusoseb128: Ok, are either any of master, PCM, or front turned down or muted?22:54
seb128TheMuso, I've only master and pcm listed and they are not muted and have volume22:55
TheMusoHrm. Tried either killing pulse and playing sound, or restarting pulse?22:56
seb128yes22:57
seb128no luck22:57
* pitti suggests booting jaunty kernel22:57
seb128but pulseaudio might just get auto respawned22:57
pittichmod 0 usually helps :)22:57
TheMusoOr creat ~/.pulse/client.conf and put "autospawn = false" into it.22:58
pittigood night everyone22:59
TheMusoYoucould try clearing your .pulse* files and restarting pulse.22:59
seb128pitti, 'night22:59
seb128TheMuso, not a pulseaudio issue, still no sound with pulseaudio binary moved somewhere else and pulseaudio stopped, I will try what pitti suggested, booting a jaunty linux version23:04
TheMusoseb128: ok23:06
seb128TheMuso, ok, 2.6.28 has sound23:11
blistov1cjwatson: brand new install. haven't touched anything with .bashrc or anything else23:12
blistov1physical terminal works. ssh does not.23:13
cjwatsonblistov1: ssh *from what*?23:13
cjwatsonthat's likely to be really quite relevant23:14
blistov1from ... gnome-terminal of multiple versions, yakuake (multiple versions), xterm (multiple versions)23:14
blistov1cjwatson: also, "exit" doesn't actually end the session.  just prints logout, and hangs.23:15
blistov1something very odd with everything tty related.23:15
cjwatsonand you said TERM=linux on the server side?23:15
cjwatsonwhat does echo $TERM say if you run it in the same terminal before running ssh?23:16
blistov1cjwatson: if i log in on a physical console (or rather, vm console), i get TERM=linux by default.  If i login via ssh, i get xterm23:16
cjwatsonthat's as it should be, given an xterm-like client23:16
TheMusoseb128: ok sounds like a kernel regression.23:17
seb128TheMuso, right, what information would be useful in a bug out of the chipset reference?23:17
cjwatsonblistov1: it's after 11pm here and I'm not really awake enough to work this out. Could you please use 'ssh -vvv' to get a debug log and file a bug with it?23:18
blistov1Before I ssh to the server, I have xterm set.  When i've ssh'd in to the server, i still have xterm.  If I set TERM=linux before sshing to the server, the TERM stay's "linux", but the problem remains.23:18
blistov1cjwatson: will do.23:18
cjwatsonTERM is unlikely to be relevant; the values you are describing as being set are correct. Setting TERM to something different will only make things worse.23:18
TheMusoseb128: Running http://www.alsa-project.org/alsa-info.sh or using ubuntu-bug alsa-base would get what is needed.23:19
seb128TheMuso, ok thanks23:19
blistov1cjwatson: you are correct.  TERM seems irrelevant.23:19
blistov1brb23:19
TheMusoseb128: I assume the no sound was with 2.6.31?23:19
cjwatsonI doubt it's actually ssh's fault, since it hasn't changed in any relevant way, but it's as good a place as any to start since it appears to be the distinguishing factor at the moment23:20
seb128TheMuso, no, current karmic, 2.6.30-1023:20
TheMusoseb128: oh ok.23:20
dupondjeseb128: u have no sound ? errors ? Cause I had no sound some hours ago neither and got it fixed23:21
seb128dupondje, no, it's different from the udev permission issue23:21
seb128dupondje, I've no sound since 2.6.30 and it works using 2.6.2823:21
dupondjeoh ok :)23:22
TheMusoseb128: I wonder whether its worth trying with 2.6.31. Its in the archive, but not been pushed out yet as the next kernel to upgrade to.23:24
seb128TheMuso, I will do that before opening a bug, thanks23:24
seb128but for now time to sleep, I will see that tomorrow23:25
TheMusoOk good night.23:25
seb128TheMuso, thanks for helping me to figure what is wrong23:25
TheMusoseb128: np23:25
TheMusoc23:36
=== jono_ is now known as jono

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