Damn rain, nice meta-gnome2
After managing to get up more or less on time quite early, dressing up with
the cycling clothes, having copious breakfast and preparing my bike, I rushed
out the garage to join my teammates at the meeting point... to find out it was
raining quite heavily. Oh well.
20 minutes later, I do my daily checking of Internet stuff and what do I
I find?
- meta-gnome2 is going in after 3 days (hinted by cjwatson)
Hooray! Thanks Kamion, vorlon and aj!
09:38 |
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A few Debian updates
I did some Debian stuff this afternoon. In the ALSA front, I had a go at
updating
alsa-modules-i386
to use the 2.4.24 kernel (for those who wonder where the packages are, they are
stuck in the new/ queue). Sometimes, we ALSA Psychos seem to postpone some of
our ALSA duties until we're
struck with a RC bug.
Then it's quite likely that we react in like 2 hours.
ElectricElf has been working on
getting a list of packages that fail to build with alsa-lib 1.0.x, due to its
switch to the new API by default. The list is, luckily for us (and the
release guys) very short, and we should be uploading the missing bits of ALSA
1.0.1 in a few days, I hope, after we file bugs against these packages warning
about the API change and telling people what the (very simple) fix is. The
most wanted part of the ALSA 1.0.1 final release, alsa-driver, was uploaded
a few days ago and surprisingly we haven't got any new bugs about it yet.
Mozilla 1.6
landed
in unstable last night, making me feel quite uneasy. Yeah, I'm still under the
meta-gnome2 syndrome, as it still hasn't made it into testing (there were
problems trying to remove the old gnome-core 1.x package), but it should be
sorted soon. For more fun, the arm autobuilder surprised us with a
successful retry of galeon, which should make it quite easy to have it
in testing soon. I quickly warned Mark about not uploading galeon until it goes
in (which will happen in a few days due to libbonobo) and
he agreed, and
uploaded to a private repository instead. Thanks! Galeon 1.3.12 is another nice
step towards 2.0, it fixed many of the small bugs that annoyed me every day.
Meanwhile, I quickly uploaded Mozilla Euskaraz 1.6, while I wait until the
Catalan Mozilla team makes a final decision on translating or not this version
(the guy in charge has no time to do this currently, and said he'd prefer doing
1.7; but who knows if Sarge will have Mozilla 1.7...).
I'm even more sleepy today.
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More progress on GNOME Mud
In the last days, the facts have convinced me that
GNOME Mud is officially out of the
death spiral where it had got stuck in the last many months due to development
inactivity. Some days ago I
posted
about my surprise seeing new blood coming into GNOME-Mud. In the last few
months (where barely anything had happened with GNOME-Mud), Robin and I had
been getting subscription notifications to gnome-mud-list, but everything was
quiet, and we were considering posting a call for help to
FootNotes. Suddenly, Aravi and Uranus
started joining #gnome-mud regularly, and have posted a few interesting
patches. Lately, Aravi fixed PyGTK support and wrote his first script ready
for mass consumption, the typical health monitor for your character, which
nicely attaches to your taskbar. Finally, a usable GNOME Mud plugin! :)
Meanwhile, Robin should be finishing the first bits of the move to
libglade, while Uranus finishes MSP support, using GStreamer to play sounds.
I'm trying to identify the numerous places where the app needs HIG love.
I tried playing a bit with Sodipodi and Inkscape
to create a small shield to be used as notification area icon. Hmm, I suck at
those programs for now. :)
We finally sent in the
proposal
to reorganise Debian's Catalan team. There's not too much feedback yet, but at
least it's positive for now. Looks promising though, I believe we can find
plenty of contributors in the many Catalan LUGs around the territory. We'll
see. Committed a bunch of new GNOME translations from Xavi, while we try to
figure out what to do with the giant evolution translation.
Holliday tomorrow, which means getting up quite early for cycling...
23:39 |
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Reorganisation of the Debian Catalan translations
Guillem and I have finally
decided what coordination strategy we want to use for Debian's reborn Catalan
l10n team. The Dutch and French teams have a quite organised
method
that works through e-mail, as we wanted, and provides a way of nicely
tracking the status
of all the translations that Debian translators need to care about. We have a
proposal written which we'll mail to debian-l10n-catalan@l.d.o tomorrow, let's
see if people like it.
Uploaded GTranslator 1.1.4 to
Debian, after applying a patch to remove some GTK 2.3-only (I guess)
stuff.
Yesterday I went to bed at 1:30AM, probably managed to get asleep at around
4:30. Excellent...
20:26 |
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Biological clock in serious need of readjusting...
After going cycling on Saturday (when I discovered my cold is still alive
and well), I had a looong lunch at house of some of my father's friends. We
got back home at 18:30 or so, with a big headache, due to the critical need
of sleep that I have been accumulating... went to bed for a "short" nap, and
by accident I woke up at 23:30, quite confused... "Is it the morning? Why am
I so hungry?". Since then, I haven't been able to get asleep at decent hours,
and tbm is laughing at
me because I very recently said I never go to bed at 2AM these days... well,
3 days in a row now, and counting.
In one of these long evenings and nights, I decided to upgrade the first of
my servers to Sarge, and
the upgrade went quite ok; only PostgreSQL and PHP4 gave me headaches. In the
first case, the automatic upgrade of the databases failed (in fact, I think I
have never seen it work correctly across minor releases, but that's probably
due to some non-Debianish setup I have in my boxes). After that, the format
change in pg_hba.conf confused me a bit. Got it straight in the
end, thanks to the nice help I got from Isaac. PHP4 was tricky too. Apache
would segfault if the PHP gd module (which gallery needs) was loaded. Got
input from the two local experts. Fabbione said "blame PHP, remove it and it
won't segfault". Well, thanks Fabio ;P When I tried harder on him, he said
php4-gd sucks, and bingo, removing gd.so from php.ini made Apache
happy. Vorlon suggested using php4-gd2, which I didn't even know about. Woops,
unresolved symbols. Upgrading to the version of libgd2-xmp in unstable fixed
it luckily (for those who care, that version of libgd2 is entering testing
today), and all services are ok now. In all, the upgrade went well, having in
mind many bits are missing from Sarge still.
As we feared, testing really insisted in having galeon built for arm before
it would allow meta-gnome2 into testing. I have uploaded version 45 to
unstable and this should hopefully be the final version that makes it in.
Oh, very important, I'd like to use the nice window that the Planets
provide to state that weasel rules, and you should vote for him in the next
Debian elections, just as I will. He has wild ideas for Debian if he gets
elected. For example, he promises he'll get rid of the bureaucratic DPL
elections starting next year, so we can concentrate more on releasing
Sarge (and as a bonus, weasel will be DPL forever: as good as it can get).
I'm a proud member of his campaign coordination team. I hope this will
make him not remove my Debian account as he will do with tbm's.
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World Domination Plan delayed a bit
Today I was
prodded
publicly on debian-l10n-catalan@lists.debian.org about the lack of Catalan
translations for
Debian Installer...
looks like I had slacked for too long, although I had finally restarted my work
on this during the last few days. Finishing it isn't a big problem -it's not
that big-, what was slowing me down was my lack of experience to merge the big
full ca.po into the little modules' po files. I don't know why, but I hadn't
learned about msgmerge -C, which will do the trick (although it's still quite
time consuming, at least for the first commits which will need changes to
probably all the installer modules). Christian Perrier and Steve Langasek (the
very famous Catalan-American ;) have offered help to handle this. I'll probably
accept their kind offer tomorrow, when I finish putting my po more or less in
shape. All of this makes me wonder something else, though. What is the status
of the SGML installer and release notes docs for Sarge? Has work started on
this? If so, I should probably find some minion to handle the Catalan
translation if we want to have it ready in time.
In short, the Catalan World Domination Plan has been slightly delayed, but
just wait... in 10 months or so you'll find yourselves saying "Bon dia!" every
morning!
I need to find some time to do some GNOME commits I have pending, mostly
Catalan corrections from Jordi Mas to a zillion modules in the extra and
fifth-toe sections. I promise it'll be done by the weekend.
I also have to do my usual ration of studying, plus some cycling training,
plus I have to be in a party in about 2 hours. This weekend is going to be
short...
I tried to upload the new mailutils snapshot today, but found out it
requires the
new gnutls packages
which are stuck in the new/ queue. I downloaded the packages from Ivo's web,
but can't upload until the packages hit incoming. This started a discussion
which made us find out a few packages still use gnutls5. Time to change
that... On other fronts, StevenK fixed the remaining issues with alsa-driver
1.0.1, and it's ready for upload. Probably tomorrow. What we can't upload yet
is alsa-lib, that's going to get hairy thanks to an API change in 1.0.x...
Now, off to cook some Spanish omelet...
19:11 |
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Finally, all lined up
After days of annoying different people and mailing lists, meta-gnome2 is
finally ready to enter Debian testing during Saturday's testing run. Yesterday,
one of the two required browsers, epiphany-browser, finally made it into
testing, while planner, libgda2 and libgnomedb got their missing builds.
libxslt is ready to go in tonight, unblocking the way for abiword, too. The
only missing bit was sound-juicer, which I demoted to Suggests: for now in the
new version
I uploaded yesterday. Two days of wait and, hooray, testing will have all the
important bits of GNOME installed (for i386 and powerpc, at last). We'll have
to keep looking for a few
missing builds for a
handful of packages for 3 architectures. Kamion and I are tracking the status
daily at the DebianWiki. Many thanks to
aj and Kamion for the nice
help with most of this, specially with the big jack-audio-connection-kit
hinting, and the s390 and m68k guys for not getting too pissed at me
when I requested random builds. :) At last I'll be able to stop looking at
build logs every 6h looking for the happy "maybe-successful" tag... not
Kamion, who apparently has to nurse KDE in now, good luck. ;)
I also made a quick upload of mailutils, basically to link it against the
new libidn11. In the upstream trench, Maildir support landed in CVS on
Wednesday, adding to the already available support for mh, mbox and imap
mailboxes in GNU Mailutils. Some people have been waiting for Maildir support
for many months, and it's finally here. I hope this makes more people give
mailutils-imap4d a go, even if there's a severe lack of good documentation
right now. I'll upload a new snapshot to Debian unstable in a few days, just
in case a mail-eating bug has crawled into the new code.
Thanks to the two persons that mailed me privately about my personal fight
against IE's stupidity. It finally wasn't a transparent PNG issue, but IE not
grokking position statements on the global body block of CSS, or something
similar. Ross put me on the right
track, and I have it nearly fixed now.
My cold is nearly gone now. I have been training since Monday and except
that day when I couldn't breathe too much, the other sessions have been nice.
Of course, I'm sleep deprived again, but that's a minor side-effect. :)
Last, but not least,
tbm, I do not suck!
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Internet Explorer sucks; GNOME-Mud progress
"No shit, Sherlock!", you guys are probably thinking. Well, of course I
knew, but yesterday it was the first time I did a serious webpage with CSS and
stuff that is aimed at Windows users, and after my teammate and I finished it,
with some nice looking results, we discovered it's completely crap when viewed
on Internet Explorer. This time, the "they lose" strategy won't work, because
we don't expect duathletes visiting the site will be using
Firebird, so we better
fix it. It sucks that 90% of the browser market is dominated by this utter
crap. Come on, it's 2004... it's about time transparent PNGs were supported by
software that pretends to be serious... not to talk about the random behaviour
of their CSS parser. I need to ask some GNOME webmaster how they get their
header IE-happy. It probably boils down to avoiding transparent png's where
possible, and using jpeg's instead. *sigh*.
To make this entry a bit less ranty, I'll add that as days pass, Debian's
GNOME meta packages
are nearer and nearer of entering testing. Today, another dependency of the
five that remain is entering testing, and Abiword, one of the tough players, is
nearly ready. Again all thanks to Kamion and aj doing magic. Now, if we could
get epiphany-browser correctly built...
In the more GNOMEish front, it's been a nice week for
GNOME-Mud. It has gone from mostly
maintenance mode, due to lack of manpower, to, suddenly, having 2 or 3 new
persons poking at it and submitting patches, some very nice which close TODO
items that were years old. Big thanks to
Nuno Sousa, who is on hacking spree, and
has already coded connection status and activity for the mud tabs, removed some
old annoying behaviours of the tabs, created a nice tray icon that informs of
MUD stuff and is currently finishing some rocking
MUD Sound Protocol, which
will bring sound support for MUDs that support it. It won't be long before
0.10.5 is out. Nuno has more ideas, so stay tuned. :) (anyway, if you think
GNOME-Mud has the potential of becoming "The MUD Client" for GNOME and want to
help, please write to
gnome-mud-list,
as we still need help to get things going. For example, we have a plan to move
to libglade and do HIG cleanups, help would be very welcome in those areas.)
18:50 |
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Big day for meta-gnome2
A few nice things happened in the meta-gnome2 front: yesterday,
aj and Kamion kicked
jack-audio-connection-kit and alsa-lib into testing, clearing the way for a
number of packages like gst-plugins and the packages that depended on it
gnome-media, nautilus-media, rhythmbox, etc. Today, aj removed the remaining 7
days of wait for libbonobo, and this is unblocking a new set of packages; and
Kinnison did a quick
processing of libxslt, which was again stuck on the new/ queue in auric. This
will fix the builds of most of the remaining meta-gnome2 problems, so if
no new problems come up, it's should be mostly ready when a few of the affected
packages get retried. When/if the "must have" packages are in, I'll consider
doing a temporary upload removing the less important packages so meta-gnome2
can go in, making Sarge's testing a bit more realistic for people who are doing
desktop installs. You never know, given our record of bad luck until now...
20:18 |
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Stupid White Men
One of my Christmas presents was the British edition of
Michael Moore's
Stupid White Men.
I got it in English because I tend to enjoy movies or books more if I see/read
them first in their original version. My sister, on a totally unrelated xmas
present, got the Spanish version, just as a few friends did. They say it was
impossible to find a copy of this book in Valencia the weeks before and during
Christmas. Not surprising, as
Bowling For Columbine has
been one of the most seen (and discussed) films during 2003 in Spain, when all
the Iraq war stuff was going on.
Anyway, I didn't know if I should start reading this first, or go ahead with
Ferran Torrent's
"Espècies protegides". I took "Stupid White Men", as I have very recently read
the first part of Torrent's book, so it's probably time to switch a bit. While
I travelled to Uni in the subway, I couldn't stop laughing at every single page
of this book, and it was just the "introduction to British readers", where he
tells the story about the book being printed on September 10, 2001, and after
the 9/11 attacks, Harper Collins refusing to put it on the shelves if Mike
didn't "rewrite 50% of it". A nice little story of how a bunch of librarians
put so much pressure on the editor that they were forced to put the book out,
without any media covering or anything, and the book literally dissapeared from book stores the first day it was out. I'm going to enjoy this read.
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