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1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
2 <rss version='2.0' xmlns:lj='http://www.livejournal.org/rss/lj/1.0/'>
3 <channel>
4 <title>Petter Reinholdtsen - Entries tagged debian</title>
5 <description>Entries tagged debian</description>
6 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/</link>
7
8
9 <item>
10 <title>Modalias strings - a practical way to map &quot;stuff&quot; to hardware</title>
11 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Modalias_strings___a_practical_way_to_map__stuff__to_hardware.html</link>
12 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Modalias_strings___a_practical_way_to_map__stuff__to_hardware.html</guid>
13 <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jan 2013 11:20:00 +0100</pubDate>
14 <description>&lt;p&gt;While looking into how to look up Debian packages based on hardware
15 information, to find the packages that support a given piece of
16 hardware, I refreshed my memory regarding modalias values, and decided
17 to document the details. Here are my findings so far, also available
18 in
19 &lt;a href=&quot;http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/debian-edu/trunk/src/hw-support-handler/&quot;&gt;the
20 Debian Edu subversion repository&lt;/a&gt;:
21
22 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Modalias decoded&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
23
24 &lt;p&gt;This document try to explain what the different types of modalias
25 values stands for. It is in part based on information from
26 &amp;lt;URL: &lt;a href=&quot;https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Modalias&quot;&gt;https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Modalias&lt;/a&gt; &amp;gt;,
27 &amp;lt;URL: &lt;a href=&quot;http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/26132/how-to-assign-usb-driver-to-device&quot;&gt;http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/26132/how-to-assign-usb-driver-to-device&lt;/a&gt; &amp;gt;,
28 &amp;lt;URL: &lt;a href=&quot;http://code.metager.de/source/history/linux/stable/scripts/mod/file2alias.c&quot;&gt;http://code.metager.de/source/history/linux/stable/scripts/mod/file2alias.c&lt;/a&gt; &amp;gt; and
29 &amp;lt;URL: &lt;a href=&quot;http://cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/dmidecode/dmidecode.c?root=dmidecode&amp;view=markup&quot;&gt;http://cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/dmidecode/dmidecode.c?root=dmidecode&amp;view=markup&lt;/a&gt; &amp;gt;.
30
31 &lt;p&gt;The modalias entries for a given Linux machine can be found using
32 this shell script:&lt;/p&gt;
33
34 &lt;pre&gt;
35 cat $(find /sys -name modalias) | sort -u
36 &lt;/pre&gt;
37
38 &lt;p&gt;The supported modalias globs for a given kernel module can be found
39 using modinfo:&lt;/p&gt;
40
41 &lt;pre&gt;
42 % /sbin/modinfo psmouse | grep alias:
43 alias: serio:ty05pr*id*ex*
44 alias: serio:ty01pr*id*ex*
45 %
46 &lt;/pre&gt;
47
48 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;PCI subtype&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
49
50 &lt;p&gt;A typical PCI entry can look like this. This is an Intel Host
51 Bridge memory controller:&lt;/p&gt;
52
53 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
54 pci:v00008086d00002770sv00001028sd000001ADbc06sc00i00
55 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
56
57 &lt;p&gt;This represent these values:&lt;/p&gt;
58
59 &lt;pre&gt;
60 v 00008086 (vendor)
61 d 00002770 (device)
62 sv 00001028 (subvendor)
63 sd 000001AD (subdevice)
64 bc 06 (bus class)
65 sc 00 (bus subclass)
66 i 00 (interface)
67 &lt;/pre&gt;
68
69 &lt;p&gt;The vendor/device values are the same values outputted from &#39;lspci
70 -n&#39; as 8086:2770. The bus class/subclass is also shown by lspci as
71 0600. The 0600 class is a host bridge. Other useful bus values are
72 0300 (VGA compatible card) and 0200 (Ethernet controller).&lt;/p&gt;
73
74 &lt;p&gt;Not sure how to figure out the interface value, nor what it
75 means.&lt;/p&gt;
76
77 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;USB subtype&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
78
79 &lt;p&gt;Some typical USB entries can look like this. This is an internal
80 USB hub in a laptop:&lt;/p&gt;
81
82 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
83 usb:v1D6Bp0001d0206dc09dsc00dp00ic09isc00ip00
84 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
85
86 &lt;p&gt;Here is the values included in this alias:&lt;/p&gt;
87
88 &lt;pre&gt;
89 v 1D6B (device vendor)
90 p 0001 (device product)
91 d 0206 (bcddevice)
92 dc 09 (device class)
93 dsc 00 (device subclass)
94 dp 00 (device protocol)
95 ic 09 (interface class)
96 isc 00 (interface subclass)
97 ip 00 (interface protocol)
98 &lt;/pre&gt;
99
100 &lt;p&gt;The 0900 device class/subclass means hub. Some times the relevant
101 class is in the interface class section. For a simple USB web camera,
102 these alias entries show up:&lt;/p&gt;
103
104 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
105 usb:v0AC8p3420d5000dcEFdsc02dp01ic01isc01ip00
106 &lt;br&gt;usb:v0AC8p3420d5000dcEFdsc02dp01ic01isc02ip00
107 &lt;br&gt;usb:v0AC8p3420d5000dcEFdsc02dp01ic0Eisc01ip00
108 &lt;br&gt;usb:v0AC8p3420d5000dcEFdsc02dp01ic0Eisc02ip00
109 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
110
111 &lt;p&gt;Interface class 0E01 is video control, 0E02 is video streaming (aka
112 camera), 0101 is audio control device and 0102 is audio streaming (aka
113 microphone). Thus this is a camera with microphone included.&lt;/p&gt;
114
115 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;ACPI subtype&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
116
117 &lt;p&gt;The ACPI type is used for several non-PCI/USB stuff. This is an IR
118 receiver in a Thinkpad X40:&lt;/p&gt;
119
120 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
121 acpi:IBM0071:PNP0511:
122 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
123
124 &lt;p&gt;The values between the colons are IDs.&lt;/p&gt;
125
126 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;DMI subtype&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
127
128 &lt;p&gt;The DMI table contain lots of information about the computer case
129 and model. This is an entry for a IBM Thinkpad X40, fetched from
130 /sys/devices/virtual/dmi/id/modalias:&lt;/p&gt;
131
132 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
133 dmi:bvnIBM:bvr1UETB6WW(1.66):bd06/15/2005:svnIBM:pn2371H4G:pvrThinkPadX40:rvnIBM:rn2371H4G:rvrNotAvailable:cvnIBM:ct10:cvrNotAvailable:
134 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
135
136 &lt;p&gt;The values present are&lt;/p&gt;
137
138 &lt;pre&gt;
139 bvn IBM (BIOS vendor)
140 bvr 1UETB6WW(1.66) (BIOS version)
141 bd 06/15/2005 (BIOS date)
142 svn IBM (system vendor)
143 pn 2371H4G (product name)
144 pvr ThinkPadX40 (product version)
145 rvn IBM (board vendor)
146 rn 2371H4G (board name)
147 rvr NotAvailable (board version)
148 cvn IBM (chassis vendor)
149 ct 10 (chassis type)
150 cvr NotAvailable (chassis version)
151 &lt;/pre&gt;
152
153 &lt;p&gt;The chassis type 10 is Notebook. Other interesting values can be
154 found in the dmidecode source:&lt;/p&gt;
155
156 &lt;pre&gt;
157 3 Desktop
158 4 Low Profile Desktop
159 5 Pizza Box
160 6 Mini Tower
161 7 Tower
162 8 Portable
163 9 Laptop
164 10 Notebook
165 11 Hand Held
166 12 Docking Station
167 13 All In One
168 14 Sub Notebook
169 15 Space-saving
170 16 Lunch Box
171 17 Main Server Chassis
172 18 Expansion Chassis
173 19 Sub Chassis
174 20 Bus Expansion Chassis
175 21 Peripheral Chassis
176 22 RAID Chassis
177 23 Rack Mount Chassis
178 24 Sealed-case PC
179 25 Multi-system
180 26 CompactPCI
181 27 AdvancedTCA
182 28 Blade
183 29 Blade Enclosing
184 &lt;/pre&gt;
185
186 &lt;p&gt;The chassis type values are not always accurately set in the DMI
187 table. For example my home server is a tower, but the DMI modalias
188 claim it is a desktop.&lt;/p&gt;
189
190 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;SerIO subtype&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
191
192 &lt;p&gt;This type is used for PS/2 mouse plugs. One example is from my
193 test machine:&lt;/p&gt;
194
195 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
196 serio:ty01pr00id00ex00
197 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
198
199 &lt;p&gt;The values present are&lt;/p&gt;
200
201 &lt;pre&gt;
202 ty 01 (type)
203 pr 00 (prototype)
204 id 00 (id)
205 ex 00 (extra)
206 &lt;/pre&gt;
207
208 &lt;p&gt;This type is supported by the psmouse driver. I am not sure what
209 the valid values are.&lt;/p&gt;
210
211 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Other subtypes&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
212
213 &lt;p&gt;There are heaps of other modalias subtypes according to
214 file2alias.c. There is the rest of the list from that source: amba,
215 ap, bcma, ccw, css, eisa, hid, i2c, ieee1394, input, ipack, isapnp,
216 mdio, of, parisc, pcmcia, platform, scsi, sdio, spi, ssb, vio, virtio,
217 vmbus, x86cpu and zorro. I did not spend time documenting all of
218 these, as they do not seem relevant for my intended use with mapping
219 hardware to packages when new stuff is inserted during run time.&lt;/p&gt;
220
221 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Looking up kernel modules using modalias values&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
222
223 &lt;p&gt;To check which kernel modules provide support for a given modalias,
224 one can use the following shell script:&lt;/p&gt;
225
226 &lt;pre&gt;
227 for id in $(cat $(find /sys -name modalias)|sort -u); do \
228 echo &quot;$id&quot; ; \
229 /sbin/modprobe --show-depends &quot;$id&quot;|sed &#39;s/^/ /&#39; ; \
230 done
231 &lt;/pre&gt;
232
233 &lt;p&gt;The output can look like this (only the first few entries as the
234 list is very long on my test machine):&lt;/p&gt;
235
236 &lt;pre&gt;
237 acpi:ACPI0003:
238 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/drivers/acpi/ac.ko
239 acpi:device:
240 FATAL: Module acpi:device: not found.
241 acpi:IBM0068:
242 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/drivers/char/nvram.ko
243 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/drivers/leds/led-class.ko
244 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/net/rfkill/rfkill.ko
245 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/drivers/platform/x86/thinkpad_acpi.ko
246 acpi:IBM0071:PNP0511:
247 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/lib/crc-ccitt.ko
248 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/net/irda/irda.ko
249 insmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-5-686/kernel/drivers/net/irda/nsc-ircc.ko
250 [...]
251 &lt;/pre&gt;
252
253 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help implementing a system to let us propose what
254 packages to install when new hardware is plugged into a Debian
255 machine, please send me an email or talk to me on
256 &lt;a href=&quot;irc://irc.debian.org/%23debian-devel&quot;&gt;#debian-devel&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
257 </description>
258 </item>
259
260 <item>
261 <title>Moved the pymissile Debian packaging to collab-maint</title>
262 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Moved_the_pymissile_Debian_packaging_to_collab_maint.html</link>
263 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Moved_the_pymissile_Debian_packaging_to_collab_maint.html</guid>
264 <pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 2013 20:40:00 +0100</pubDate>
265 <description>&lt;p&gt;As part of my investigation on how to improve the support in Debian
266 for hardware dongles, I dug up my old Mark and Spencer USB Rocket
267 Launcher and updated the Debian package
268 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/pymissile&quot;&gt;pymissile&lt;/a&gt; to make
269 sure udev will fix the device permissions when it is plugged in. I
270 also added a &quot;Modaliases&quot; header to test it in the Debian archive and
271 hopefully make the package be proposed by jockey in Ubuntu when a user
272 plug in his rocket launcher. In the process I moved the source to a
273 git repository under collab-maint, to make it easier for any DD to
274 contribute. &lt;a href=&quot;http://code.google.com/p/pymissile/&quot;&gt;Upstream&lt;/a&gt;
275 is not very active, but the software still work for me even after five
276 years of relative silence. The new git repository is not listed in
277 the uploaded package yet, because I want to test the other changes a
278 bit more before I upload the new version. If you want to check out
279 the new version with a .desktop file included, visit the
280 &lt;a href=&quot;http://anonscm.debian.org/gitweb/?p=collab-maint/pymissile.git&quot;&gt;gitweb
281 view&lt;/a&gt; or use &quot;&lt;tt&gt;git clone
282 git://anonscm.debian.org/collab-maint/pymissile.git&lt;/tt&gt;&quot;.&lt;/p&gt;
283 </description>
284 </item>
285
286 <item>
287 <title>Lets make hardware dongles easier to use in Debian</title>
288 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lets_make_hardware_dongles_easier_to_use_in_Debian.html</link>
289 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lets_make_hardware_dongles_easier_to_use_in_Debian.html</guid>
290 <pubDate>Wed, 9 Jan 2013 15:40:00 +0100</pubDate>
291 <description>&lt;p&gt;One thing that annoys me with Debian and Linux distributions in
292 general, is that there is a great package management system with the
293 ability to automatically install software packages by downloading them
294 from the distribution mirrors, but no way to get it to automatically
295 install the packages I need to use the hardware I plug into my
296 machine. Even if the package to use it is easily available from the
297 Linux distribution. When I plug in a LEGO Mindstorms NXT, it could
298 suggest to automatically install the python-nxt, nbc and t2n packages
299 I need to talk to it. When I plug in a Yubikey, it could propose the
300 yubikey-personalization package. The information required to do this
301 is available, but no-one have pulled all the pieces together.&lt;/p&gt;
302
303 &lt;p&gt;Some years ago, I proposed to
304 &lt;a href=&quot;http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2010/05/msg01206.html&quot;&gt;use
305 the discover subsystem to implement this&lt;/a&gt;. The idea is fairly
306 simple:
307
308 &lt;ul&gt;
309
310 &lt;li&gt;Add a desktop entry in /usr/share/autostart/ pointing to a program
311 starting when a user log in.&lt;/li&gt;
312
313 &lt;li&gt;Set this program up to listen for kernel events emitted when new
314 hardware is inserted into the computer.&lt;/li&gt;
315
316 &lt;li&gt;When new hardware is inserted, look up the hardware ID in a
317 database mapping to packages, and take note of any non-installed
318 packages.&lt;/li&gt;
319
320 &lt;li&gt;Show a message to the user proposing to install the discovered
321 package, and make it easy to install it.&lt;/li&gt;
322
323 &lt;/ul&gt;
324
325 &lt;p&gt;I am not sure what the best way to implement this is, but my
326 initial idea was to use dbus events to discover new hardware, the
327 discover database to find packages and
328 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.packagekit.org/&quot;&gt;PackageKit&lt;/a&gt; to install
329 packages.&lt;/p&gt;
330
331 &lt;p&gt;Yesterday, I found time to try to implement this idea, and the
332 draft package is now checked into
333 &lt;a href=&quot;http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/debian-edu/trunk/src/hw-support-handler/&quot;&gt;the
334 Debian Edu subversion repository&lt;/a&gt;. In the process, I updated the
335 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/d/discover-data.html&quot;&gt;discover-data&lt;/a&gt;
336 package to map the USB ids of LEGO Mindstorms and Yubikey devices to
337 the relevant packages in Debian, and uploaded a new version
338 2.2013.01.09 to unstable. I also discovered that the current
339 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/d/discover.html&quot;&gt;discover&lt;/a&gt;
340 package in Debian no longer discovered any USB devices, because
341 /proc/bus/usb/devices is no longer present. I ported it to use
342 libusb as a fall back option to get it working. The fixed package
343 version 2.1.2-6 is now in experimental (didn&#39;t upload it to unstable
344 because of the freeze).&lt;/p&gt;
345
346 &lt;p&gt;With this prototype in place, I can insert my Yubikey, and get this
347 desktop notification to show up (only once, the first time it is
348 inserted):&lt;/p&gt;
349
350 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/images/2013-01-09-hw-autoinstall.png&quot;&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
351
352 &lt;p&gt;For this prototype to be really useful, some way to automatically
353 install the proposed packages by pressing the &quot;Please install
354 program(s)&quot; button should to be implemented.&lt;/p&gt;
355
356 &lt;p&gt;If this idea seem useful to you, and you want to help make it
357 happen, please help me update the discover-data database with mappings
358 from hardware to Debian packages. Check if &#39;discover-pkginstall -l&#39;
359 list the package you would like to have installed when a given
360 hardware device is inserted into your computer, and report bugs using
361 reportbug if it isn&#39;t. Or, if you know of a better way to provide
362 such mapping, please let me know.&lt;/p&gt;
363
364 &lt;p&gt;This prototype need more work, and there are several questions that
365 should be considered before it is ready for production use. Is dbus
366 the correct way to detect new hardware? At the moment I look for HAL
367 dbus events on the system bus, because that is the events I could see
368 on my Debian Squeeze KDE desktop. Are there better events to use?
369 How should the user be notified? Is the desktop notification
370 mechanism the best option, or should the background daemon raise a
371 popup instead? How should packages be installed? When should they
372 not be installed?&lt;/p&gt;
373
374 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help getting such feature implemented in Debian,
375 please send me an email. :)&lt;/p&gt;
376 </description>
377 </item>
378
379 <item>
380 <title>New IRC channel for LEGO designers using Debian</title>
381 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/New_IRC_channel_for_LEGO_designers_using_Debian.html</link>
382 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/New_IRC_channel_for_LEGO_designers_using_Debian.html</guid>
383 <pubDate>Wed, 2 Jan 2013 15:40:00 +0100</pubDate>
384 <description>&lt;p&gt;During Christmas, I have worked a bit on the Debian support for
385 &lt;a href=&quot;http://mindstorms.lego.com/en-us/Default.aspx&quot;&gt;LEGO Mindstorm
386 NXT&lt;/a&gt;. My son and I have played a bit with my NXT set, and I
387 discovered I had to build all the tools myself because none were
388 already in Debian Squeeze. If Debian support for LEGO is something
389 you care about, please join me on the IRC channel
390 &lt;a href=&quot;irc://irc.debian.org/%23debian-lego&quot;&gt;#debian-lego&lt;/a&gt; (server
391 irc.debian.org). There is a lot that could be done to improve the
392 Debian support for LEGO designers. For example both CAD software
393 and Mindstorm compilers are missing. :)&lt;/p&gt;
394
395 &lt;p&gt;Update 2012-01-03: A
396 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/LegoDesigners&quot;&gt;project page&lt;/a&gt;
397 including links to Lego related packages is now available.&lt;/p&gt;
398 </description>
399 </item>
400
401 <item>
402 <title>How to backport bitcoin-qt version 0.7.2-2 to Debian Squeeze</title>
403 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_to_backport_bitcoin_qt_version_0_7_2_2_to_Debian_Squeeze.html</link>
404 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_to_backport_bitcoin_qt_version_0_7_2_2_to_Debian_Squeeze.html</guid>
405 <pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 2012 20:50:00 +0100</pubDate>
406 <description>&lt;p&gt;Let me start by wishing you all marry Christmas and a happy new
407 year! I hope next year will prove to be a good year.&lt;/p&gt;
408
409 &lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoin.org/&quot;&gt;Bitcoin&lt;/a&gt;, the digital
410 decentralised &quot;currency&quot; that allow people to transfer bitcoins
411 between each other with minimal overhead, is a very interesting
412 experiment. And as I wrote a few days ago, the bitcoin situation in
413 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.debian.org/&quot;&gt;Debian&lt;/a&gt; is about to improve a bit.
414 The &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/bitcoin&quot;&gt;new debian source
415 package&lt;/a&gt; (version 0.7.2-2) was uploaded yesterday, and is waiting
416 in &lt;a href=&quot;http://ftp-master.debian.org/new.html&quot;&gt;the NEW queue&lt;/A&gt;
417 for one of the ftpmasters to approve the new bitcoin-qt package
418 name.&lt;/p&gt;
419
420 &lt;p&gt;And thanks to the great work of Jonas and the rest of the bitcoin
421 team in Debian, you can easily test the package in Debian Squeeze
422 using the following steps to get a set of working packages:&lt;/p&gt;
423
424 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
425 git clone git://git.debian.org/git/collab-maint/bitcoin
426 cd bitcoin
427 DEB_MAINTAINER_MODE=1 DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS=noupnp fakeroot debian/rules clean
428 DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS=noupnp git-buildpackage --git-ignore-new
429 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
430
431 &lt;p&gt;You might have to install some build dependencies as well. The
432 list of commands should give you two packages, bitcoind and
433 bitcoin-qt, ready for use in a Squeeze environment. Note that the
434 client will download the complete set of bitcoin &quot;blocks&quot;, which need
435 around 5.6 GiB of data on my machine at the moment. Make sure your
436 ~/.bitcoin/ directory have lots of spare room if you want to download
437 all the blocks. The client will warn if the disk is getting full, so
438 there is not really a problem if you got too little room, but you will
439 not be able to get all the features out of the client.&lt;/p&gt;
440
441 &lt;p&gt;As usual, if you use bitcoin and want to show your support of my
442 activities, please send Bitcoin donations to my address
443 &lt;b&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;bitcoin:15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&amp;label=PetterReinholdtsenBlog&quot;&gt;15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/b&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
444 </description>
445 </item>
446
447 <item>
448 <title>A word on bitcoin support in Debian</title>
449 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_word_on_bitcoin_support_in_Debian.html</link>
450 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_word_on_bitcoin_support_in_Debian.html</guid>
451 <pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2012 23:59:00 +0100</pubDate>
452 <description>&lt;p&gt;It has been a while since I wrote about
453 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoin.org/&quot;&gt;bitcoin&lt;/a&gt;, the decentralised
454 peer-to-peer based crypto-currency, and the reason is simply that I
455 have been busy elsewhere. But two days ago, I started looking at the
456 state of &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/bitcoin&quot;&gt;bitcoin in
457 Debian&lt;/a&gt; again to try to recover my old bitcoin wallet. The package
458 is now maintained by a
459 &lt;a href=&quot;https://alioth.debian.org/projects/pkg-bitcoin/&quot;&gt;team of
460 people&lt;/a&gt;, and the grunt work had already been done by this team. We
461 owe a huge thank you to all these team members. :)
462 But I was sad to discover that the bitcoin client is missing in
463 Wheezy. It is only available in Sid (and an outdated client from
464 backports). The client had several RC bugs registered in BTS blocking
465 it from entering testing. To try to help the team and improve the
466 situation, I spent some time providing patches and triaging the bug
467 reports. I also had a look at the bitcoin package available from Matt
468 Corallo in a
469 &lt;a href=&quot;https://launchpad.net/~bitcoin/+archive/bitcoin&quot;&gt;PPA for
470 Ubuntu&lt;/a&gt;, and moved the useful pieces from that version into the
471 Debian package.&lt;/p&gt;
472
473 &lt;p&gt;After checking with the main package maintainer Jonas Smedegaard on
474 IRC, I pushed several patches into the collab-maint git repository to
475 improve the package. It now contains fixes for the RC issues (not from
476 me, but fixed by Scott Howard), build rules for a Qt GUI client
477 package, konqueror support for the bitcoin: URI and bash completion
478 setup. As I work on Debian Squeeze, I also created
479 &lt;a href=&quot;http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/pkg-bitcoin-devel/Week-of-Mon-20121217/000041.html&quot;&gt;a
480 patch to backport&lt;/a&gt; the latest version. Jonas is going to look at
481 it and try to integrate it into the git repository before uploading a
482 new version to unstable.
483
484 &lt;p&gt;I would very much like bitcoin to succeed, to get rid of the
485 centralized control currently exercised in the monetary system. I
486 find it completely unacceptable that the USA government is collecting
487 transaction data for almost all international money transfers (most are done in USD and transaction logs shipped to the spooks), and
488 that the major credit card companies can block legal money
489 transactions to Wikileaks. But for bitcoin to succeed, more people
490 need to use bitcoins, and more people need to accept bitcoins when
491 they sell products and services. Improving the bitcoin support in
492 Debian is a small step in the right direction, but not enough.
493 Unfortunately the user experience when browsing the web and wanting to
494 pay with bitcoin is still not very good. The bitcoin: URI is a step
495 in the right direction, but need to work in most or every browser in
496 use. Also the bitcoin-qt client is too heavy to fire up to do a
497 quick transaction. I believe there are other clients available, but
498 have not tested them.&lt;/p&gt;
499
500 &lt;p&gt;My
501 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Now_accepting_bitcoins___anonymous_and_distributed_p2p_crypto_money.html&quot;&gt;experiment
502 with bitcoins&lt;/a&gt; showed that at least some of my readers use bitcoin.
503 I received 20.15 BTC so far on the address I provided in my blog two
504 years ago, as can be
505 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blockexplorer.com/address/15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&quot;&gt;seen
506 on the blockexplorer service&lt;/a&gt;. Thank you everyone for your
507 donation. The blockexplorer service demonstrates quite well that
508 bitcoin is not quite anonymous and untracked. :) I wonder if the
509 number of users have gone up since then. If you use bitcoin and want
510 to show your support of my activity, please send Bitcoin donations to
511 the same address as last time,
512 &lt;b&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;bitcoin:15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&amp;label=PetterReinholdtsenBlog&quot;&gt;15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/b&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
513 </description>
514 </item>
515
516 <item>
517 <title>Git repository for song book for Computer Scientists</title>
518 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Git_repository_for_song_book_for_Computer_Scientists.html</link>
519 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Git_repository_for_song_book_for_Computer_Scientists.html</guid>
520 <pubDate>Fri, 7 Sep 2012 13:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
521 <description>&lt;p&gt;As I
522 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Song_book_for_Computer_Scientists.html&quot;&gt;mentioned
523 this summer&lt;/a&gt;, I have created a Computer Science song book a few
524 years ago, and today I finally found time to create a public
525 &lt;a href=&quot;https://gitorious.org/pere-cs-songbook/pere-cs-songbook&quot;&gt;Gitorious
526 repository for the project&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
527
528 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help out, please clone the source and submit patches
529 to the HTML version. To generate the PDF and PostScript version,
530 please use prince XML, or let me know about a useful free software
531 processor capable of creating a good looking PDF from the HTML.&lt;/p&gt;
532
533 &lt;p&gt;Want to sing? You can still find the song book in HTML, PDF and
534 PostScript formats at
535 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.hungry.com/~pere/cs-songbook/&quot;&gt;Petter&#39;s Computer
536 Science Songbook&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
537 </description>
538 </item>
539
540 <item>
541 <title>Gratulerer med 19-årsdagen, Debian!</title>
542 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Gratulerer_med_19__rsdagen__Debian_.html</link>
543 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Gratulerer_med_19__rsdagen__Debian_.html</guid>
544 <pubDate>Thu, 16 Aug 2012 11:20:00 +0200</pubDate>
545 <description>&lt;p&gt;I dag fyller
546 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.debian.org/News/2012/20120813&quot;&gt;Debian-prosjektet 19
547 år&lt;/a&gt;. Jeg har fulgt det de siste 12 årene, og er veldig glad for å kunne
548 si gratulerer med dagen, Debian!&lt;/p&gt;
549 </description>
550 </item>
551
552 <item>
553 <title>Song book for Computer Scientists</title>
554 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Song_book_for_Computer_Scientists.html</link>
555 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Song_book_for_Computer_Scientists.html</guid>
556 <pubDate>Sun, 24 Jun 2012 13:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
557 <description>&lt;p&gt;Many years ago, while studying Computer Science at the
558 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.uit.no/&quot;&gt;University of Tromsø&lt;/a&gt;, I started
559 collecting computer related songs for use at parties. The original
560 version was written in LaTeX, but a few years ago I got help from
561 Håkon W. Lie, one of the inventors of W3C CSS, to convert it to HTML
562 while keeping the ability to create a nice book in PDF format. I have
563 not had time to maintain the book for a while now, and guess I should
564 put it up on some public version control repository where others can
565 help me extend and update the book. If anyone is volunteering to help
566 me with this, send me an email. Also let me know if there are songs
567 missing in my book.&lt;/p&gt;
568
569 &lt;p&gt;I have not mentioned the book on my blog so far, and it occured to
570 me today that I really should let all my readers share the joys of
571 singing out load about programming, computers and computer networks.
572 Especially now that &lt;a href=&quot;http://debconf12.debconf.org/&quot;&gt;Debconf
573 12&lt;/a&gt; is about to start (and I am not going). Want to sing? Check
574 out &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.hungry.com/~pere/cs-songbook/&quot;&gt;Petter&#39;s
575 Computer Science Songbook&lt;/a&gt;.
576 </description>
577 </item>
578
579 <item>
580 <title>Automatically upgrading server firmware on Dell PowerEdge</title>
581 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatically_upgrading_server_firmware_on_Dell_PowerEdge.html</link>
582 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatically_upgrading_server_firmware_on_Dell_PowerEdge.html</guid>
583 <pubDate>Mon, 21 Nov 2011 12:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
584 <description>&lt;p&gt;At work we have heaps of servers. I believe the total count is
585 around 1000 at the moment. To be able to get help from the vendors
586 when something go wrong, we want to keep the firmware on the servers
587 up to date. If the firmware isn&#39;t the latest and greatest, the
588 vendors typically refuse to start debugging any problems until the
589 firmware is upgraded. So before every reboot, we want to upgrade the
590 firmware, and we would really like everyone handling servers at the
591 university to do this themselves when they plan to reboot a machine.
592 For that to happen we at the unix server admin group need to provide
593 the tools to do so.&lt;/p&gt;
594
595 &lt;p&gt;To make firmware upgrading easier, I am working on a script to
596 fetch and install the latest firmware for the servers we got. Most of
597 our hardware are from Dell and HP, so I have focused on these servers
598 so far. This blog post is about the Dell part.&lt;/P&gt;
599
600 &lt;p&gt;On the Dell FTP site I was lucky enough to find
601 &lt;a href=&quot;ftp://ftp.us.dell.com/catalog/Catalog.xml.gz&quot;&gt;an XML file&lt;/a&gt;
602 with firmware information for all 11th generation servers, listing
603 which firmware should be used on a given model and where on the FTP
604 site I can find it. Using a simple perl XML parser I can then
605 download the shell scripts Dell provides to do firmware upgrades from
606 within Linux and reboot when all the firmware is primed and ready to
607 be activated on the first reboot.&lt;/p&gt;
608
609 &lt;p&gt;This is the Dell related fragment of the perl code I am working on.
610 Are there anyone working on similar tools for firmware upgrading all
611 servers at a site? Please get in touch and lets share resources.&lt;/p&gt;
612
613 &lt;p&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
614 #!/usr/bin/perl
615 use strict;
616 use warnings;
617 use File::Temp qw(tempdir);
618 BEGIN {
619 # Install needed RHEL packages if missing
620 my %rhelmodules = (
621 &#39;XML::Simple&#39; =&gt; &#39;perl-XML-Simple&#39;,
622 );
623 for my $module (keys %rhelmodules) {
624 eval &quot;use $module;&quot;;
625 if ($@) {
626 my $pkg = $rhelmodules{$module};
627 system(&quot;yum install -y $pkg&quot;);
628 eval &quot;use $module;&quot;;
629 }
630 }
631 }
632 my $errorsto = &#39;pere@hungry.com&#39;;
633
634 upgrade_dell();
635
636 exit 0;
637
638 sub run_firmware_script {
639 my ($opts, $script) = @_;
640 unless ($script) {
641 print STDERR &quot;fail: missing script name\n&quot;;
642 exit 1
643 }
644 print STDERR &quot;Running $script\n\n&quot;;
645
646 if (0 == system(&quot;sh $script $opts&quot;)) { # FIXME correct exit code handling
647 print STDERR &quot;success: firmware script ran succcessfully\n&quot;;
648 } else {
649 print STDERR &quot;fail: firmware script returned error\n&quot;;
650 }
651 }
652
653 sub run_firmware_scripts {
654 my ($opts, @dirs) = @_;
655 # Run firmware packages
656 for my $dir (@dirs) {
657 print STDERR &quot;info: Running scripts in $dir\n&quot;;
658 opendir(my $dh, $dir) or die &quot;Unable to open directory $dir: $!&quot;;
659 while (my $s = readdir $dh) {
660 next if $s =~ m/^\.\.?/;
661 run_firmware_script($opts, &quot;$dir/$s&quot;);
662 }
663 closedir $dh;
664 }
665 }
666
667 sub download {
668 my $url = shift;
669 print STDERR &quot;info: Downloading $url\n&quot;;
670 system(&quot;wget --quiet \&quot;$url\&quot;&quot;);
671 }
672
673 sub upgrade_dell {
674 my @dirs;
675 my $product = `dmidecode -s system-product-name`;
676 chomp $product;
677
678 if ($product =~ m/PowerEdge/) {
679
680 # on RHEL, these pacakges are needed by the firwmare upgrade scripts
681 system(&#39;yum install -y compat-libstdc++-33.i686 libstdc++.i686 libxml2.i686 procmail&#39;);
682
683 my $tmpdir = tempdir(
684 CLEANUP =&gt; 1
685 );
686 chdir($tmpdir);
687 fetch_dell_fw(&#39;catalog/Catalog.xml.gz&#39;);
688 system(&#39;gunzip Catalog.xml.gz&#39;);
689 my @paths = fetch_dell_fw_list(&#39;Catalog.xml&#39;);
690 # -q is quiet, disabling interactivity and reducing console output
691 my $fwopts = &quot;-q&quot;;
692 if (@paths) {
693 for my $url (@paths) {
694 fetch_dell_fw($url);
695 }
696 run_firmware_scripts($fwopts, $tmpdir);
697 } else {
698 print STDERR &quot;error: Unsupported Dell model &#39;$product&#39;.\n&quot;;
699 print STDERR &quot;error: Please report to $errorsto.\n&quot;;
700 }
701 chdir(&#39;/&#39;);
702 } else {
703 print STDERR &quot;error: Unsupported Dell model &#39;$product&#39;.\n&quot;;
704 print STDERR &quot;error: Please report to $errorsto.\n&quot;;
705 }
706 }
707
708 sub fetch_dell_fw {
709 my $path = shift;
710 my $url = &quot;ftp://ftp.us.dell.com/$path&quot;;
711 download($url);
712 }
713
714 # Using ftp://ftp.us.dell.com/catalog/Catalog.xml.gz, figure out which
715 # firmware packages to download from Dell. Only work for Linux
716 # machines and 11th generation Dell servers.
717 sub fetch_dell_fw_list {
718 my $filename = shift;
719
720 my $product = `dmidecode -s system-product-name`;
721 chomp $product;
722 my ($mybrand, $mymodel) = split(/\s+/, $product);
723
724 print STDERR &quot;Finding firmware bundles for $mybrand $mymodel\n&quot;;
725
726 my $xml = XMLin($filename);
727 my @paths;
728 for my $bundle (@{$xml-&gt;{SoftwareBundle}}) {
729 my $brand = $bundle-&gt;{TargetSystems}-&gt;{Brand}-&gt;{Display}-&gt;{content};
730 my $model = $bundle-&gt;{TargetSystems}-&gt;{Brand}-&gt;{Model}-&gt;{Display}-&gt;{content};
731 my $oscode;
732 if (&quot;ARRAY&quot; eq ref $bundle-&gt;{TargetOSes}-&gt;{OperatingSystem}) {
733 $oscode = $bundle-&gt;{TargetOSes}-&gt;{OperatingSystem}[0]-&gt;{osCode};
734 } else {
735 $oscode = $bundle-&gt;{TargetOSes}-&gt;{OperatingSystem}-&gt;{osCode};
736 }
737 if ($mybrand eq $brand &amp;&amp; $mymodel eq $model &amp;&amp; &quot;LIN&quot; eq $oscode)
738 {
739 @paths = map { $_-&gt;{path} } @{$bundle-&gt;{Contents}-&gt;{Package}};
740 }
741 }
742 for my $component (@{$xml-&gt;{SoftwareComponent}}) {
743 my $componenttype = $component-&gt;{ComponentType}-&gt;{value};
744
745 # Drop application packages, only firmware and BIOS
746 next if &#39;APAC&#39; eq $componenttype;
747
748 my $cpath = $component-&gt;{path};
749 for my $path (@paths) {
750 if ($cpath =~ m%/$path$%) {
751 push(@paths, $cpath);
752 }
753 }
754 }
755 return @paths;
756 }
757 &lt;/pre&gt;
758
759 &lt;p&gt;The code is only tested on RedHat Enterprise Linux, but I suspect
760 it could work on other platforms with some tweaking. Anyone know a
761 index like Catalog.xml is available from HP for HP servers? At the
762 moment I maintain a similar list manually and it is quickly getting
763 outdated.&lt;/p&gt;
764 </description>
765 </item>
766
767 <item>
768 <title>How is booting into runlevel 1 different from single user boots?</title>
769 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_is_booting_into_runlevel_1_different_from_single_user_boots_.html</link>
770 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_is_booting_into_runlevel_1_different_from_single_user_boots_.html</guid>
771 <pubDate>Thu, 4 Aug 2011 12:40:00 +0200</pubDate>
772 <description>&lt;p&gt;Wouter Verhelst have some
773 &lt;a href=&quot;http://grep.be/blog/en/retorts/pere_kubuntu_boot&quot;&gt;interesting
774 comments and opinions&lt;/a&gt; on my blog post on
775 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_should_start_from__etc_rcS_d__in_Debian____almost_nothing.html&quot;&gt;the
776 need to clean up /etc/rcS.d/ in Debian&lt;/a&gt; and my blog post about
777 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_is_missing_in_the_Debian_desktop__or_why_my_parents_use_Kubuntu.html&quot;&gt;the
778 default KDE desktop in Debian&lt;/a&gt;. I only have time to address one
779 small piece of his comment now, and though it best to address the
780 misunderstanding he bring forward:&lt;/p&gt;
781
782 &lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
783 Currently, a system admin has four options: [...] boot to a
784 single-user system (by adding &#39;single&#39; to the kernel command line;
785 this runs rcS and rc1 scripts)
786 &lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
787
788 &lt;p&gt;This make me believe Wouter believe booting into single user mode
789 and booting into runlevel 1 is the same. I am not surprised he
790 believe this, because it would make sense and is a quite sensible
791 thing to believe. But because the boot in Debian is slightly broken,
792 runlevel 1 do not work properly and it isn&#39;t the same as single user
793 mode. I&#39;ll try to explain what is actually happing, but it is a bit
794 hard to explain.&lt;/p&gt;
795
796 &lt;p&gt;Single user mode is defined like this in /etc/inittab:
797 &quot;&lt;tt&gt;~~:S:wait:/sbin/sulogin&lt;/tt&gt;&quot;. This means the only thing that is
798 executed in single user mode is sulogin. Single user mode is a boot
799 state &quot;between&quot; the runlevels, and when booting into single user mode,
800 only the scripts in /etc/rcS.d/ are executed before the init process
801 enters the single user state. When switching to runlevel 1, the state
802 is in fact not ending in runlevel 1, but it passes through runlevel 1
803 and end up in the single user mode (see /etc/rc1.d/S03single, which
804 runs &quot;init -t1 S&quot; to switch to single user mode at the end of runlevel
805 1. It is confusing that the &#39;S&#39; (single user) init mode is not the
806 mode enabled by /etc/rcS.d/ (which is more like the initial boot
807 mode).&lt;/p&gt;
808
809 &lt;p&gt;This summary might make it clearer. When booting for the first
810 time into single user mode, the following commands are executed:
811 &quot;&lt;tt&gt;/etc/init.d/rc S; /sbin/sulogin&lt;/tt&gt;&quot;. When booting into
812 runlevel 1, the following commands are executed: &quot;&lt;tt&gt;/etc/init.d/rc
813 S; /etc/init.d/rc 1; /sbin/sulogin&lt;/tt&gt;&quot;. A problem show up when
814 trying to continue after visiting single user mode. Not all services
815 are started again as they should, causing the machine to end up in an
816 unpredicatble state. This is why Debian admins recommend rebooting
817 after visiting single user mode.&lt;/p&gt;
818
819 &lt;p&gt;A similar problem with runlevel 1 is caused by the amount of
820 scripts executed from /etc/rcS.d/. When switching from say runlevel 2
821 to runlevel 1, the services started from /etc/rcS.d/ are not properly
822 stopped when passing through the scripts in /etc/rc1.d/, and not
823 started again when switching away from runlevel 1 to the runlevels
824 2-5. I believe the problem is best fixed by moving all the scripts
825 out of /etc/rcS.d/ that are not &lt;strong&gt;required&lt;/strong&gt; to get a
826 functioning single user mode during boot.&lt;/p&gt;
827
828 &lt;p&gt;I have spent several years investigating the Debian boot system,
829 and discovered this problem a few years ago. I suspect it originates
830 from when sysvinit was introduced into Debian, a long time ago.&lt;/p&gt;
831 </description>
832 </item>
833
834 <item>
835 <title>What should start from /etc/rcS.d/ in Debian? - almost nothing</title>
836 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_should_start_from__etc_rcS_d__in_Debian____almost_nothing.html</link>
837 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_should_start_from__etc_rcS_d__in_Debian____almost_nothing.html</guid>
838 <pubDate>Sat, 30 Jul 2011 14:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
839 <description>&lt;p&gt;In the Debian boot system, several packages include scripts that
840 are started from /etc/rcS.d/. In fact, there is a bite more of them
841 than make sense, and this causes a few problems. What kind of
842 problems, you might ask. There are at least two problems. The first
843 is that it is not possible to recover a machine after switching to
844 runlevel 1. One need to actually reboot to get the machine back to
845 the expected state. The other is that single user boot will sometimes
846 run into problems because some of the subsystems are activated before
847 the root login is presented, causing problems when trying to recover a
848 machine from a problem in that subsystem. A minor additional point is
849 that moving more scripts out of rcS.d/ and into the other rc#.d/
850 directories will increase the amount of scripts that can run in
851 parallel during boot, and thus decrease the boot time.&lt;/p&gt;
852
853 &lt;p&gt;So, which scripts should start from rcS.d/. In short, only the
854 scripts that _have_ to execute before the root login prompt is
855 presented during a single user boot should go there. Everything else
856 should go into the numeric runlevels. This means things like
857 lm-sensors, fuse and x11-common should not run from rcS.d, but from
858 the numeric runlevels. Today in Debian, there are around 115 init.d
859 scripts that are started from rcS.d/, and most of them should be moved
860 out. Do your package have one of them? Please help us make single
861 user and runlevel 1 better by moving it.&lt;/p&gt;
862
863 &lt;p&gt;Scripts setting up the screen, keyboard, system partitions
864 etc. should still be started from rcS.d/, but there is for example no
865 need to have the network enabled before the single user login prompt
866 is presented.&lt;/p&gt;
867
868 &lt;p&gt;As always, things are not so easy to fix as they sound. To keep
869 Debian systems working while scripts migrate and during upgrades, the
870 scripts need to be moved from rcS.d/ to rc2.d/ in reverse dependency
871 order, ie the scripts that nothing in rcS.d/ depend on can be moved,
872 and the next ones can only be moved when their dependencies have been
873 moved first. This migration must be done sequentially while we ensure
874 that the package system upgrade packages in the right order to keep
875 the system state correct. This will require some coordination when it
876 comes to network related packages, but most of the packages with
877 scripts that should migrate do not have anything in rcS.d/ depending
878 on them. Some packages have already been updated, like the sudo
879 package, while others are still left to do. I wish I had time to work
880 on this myself, but real live constrains make it unlikely that I will
881 find time to push this forward.&lt;/p&gt;
882 </description>
883 </item>
884
885 <item>
886 <title>What is missing in the Debian desktop, or why my parents use Kubuntu</title>
887 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_is_missing_in_the_Debian_desktop__or_why_my_parents_use_Kubuntu.html</link>
888 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_is_missing_in_the_Debian_desktop__or_why_my_parents_use_Kubuntu.html</guid>
889 <pubDate>Fri, 29 Jul 2011 08:10:00 +0200</pubDate>
890 <description>&lt;p&gt;While at Debconf11, I have several times during discussions
891 mentioned the issues I believe should be improved in Debian for its
892 desktop to be useful for more people. The use case for this is my
893 parents, which are currently running Kubuntu which solve the
894 issues.&lt;/p&gt;
895
896 &lt;p&gt;I suspect these four missing features are not very hard to
897 implement. After all, they are present in Ubuntu, so if we wanted to
898 do this in Debian we would have a source.&lt;/p&gt;
899
900 &lt;ol&gt;
901
902 &lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Simple GUI based upgrade of packages.&lt;/strong&gt; When there
903 are new packages available for upgrades, a icon in the KDE status bar
904 indicate this, and clicking on it will activate the simple upgrade
905 tool to handle it. I have no problem guiding both of my parents
906 through the process over the phone. If a kernel reboot is required,
907 this too is indicated by the status bars and the upgrade tool. Last
908 time I checked, nothing with the same features was working in KDE in
909 Debian.&lt;/li&gt;
910
911 &lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Simple handling of missing Firefox browser
912 plugins.&lt;/strong&gt; When the browser encounter a MIME type it do not
913 currently have a handler for, it will ask the user if the system
914 should search for a package that would add support for this MIME type,
915 and if the user say yes, the APT sources will be searched for packages
916 advertising the MIME type in their control file (visible in the
917 Packages file in the APT archive). If one or more packages are found,
918 it is a simple click of the mouse to add support for the missing mime
919 type. If the package require the user to accept some non-free
920 license, this is explained to the user. The entire process make it
921 more clear to the user why something do not work in the browser, and
922 make the chances higher for the user to blame the web page authors and
923 not the browser for any missing features.&lt;/li&gt;
924
925 &lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Simple handling of missing multimedia codec/format
926 handlers.&lt;/strong&gt; When the media players encounter a format or codec
927 it is not supporting, a dialog pop up asking the user if the system
928 should search for a package that would add support for it. This
929 happen with things like MP3, Windows Media or H.264. The selection
930 and installation procedure is very similar to the Firefox browser
931 plugin handling. This is as far as I know implemented using a
932 gstreamer hook. The end result is that the user easily get access to
933 the codecs that are present from the APT archives available, while
934 explaining more on why a given format is unsupported by Ubuntu.&lt;/li&gt;
935
936 &lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Better browser handling of some MIME types.&lt;/strong&gt; When
937 displaying a text/plain file in my Debian browser, it will propose to
938 start emacs to show it. If I remember correctly, when doing the same
939 in Kunbutu it show the file as a text file in the browser. At least I
940 know Opera will show text files within the browser. I much prefer the
941 latter behaviour.&lt;/li&gt;
942
943 &lt;/ol&gt;
944
945 &lt;p&gt;There are other nice features as well, like the simplified suite
946 upgrader, but given that I am the one mostly doing the dist-upgrade,
947 it do not matter much.&lt;/p&gt;
948
949 &lt;p&gt;I really hope we could get these features in place for the next
950 Debian release. It would require the coordinated effort of several
951 maintainers, but would make the end user experience a lot better.&lt;/p&gt;
952 </description>
953 </item>
954
955 <item>
956 <title>Perl modules used by FixMyStreet which are missing in Debian/Squeeze</title>
957 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Perl_modules_used_by_FixMyStreet_which_are_missing_in_Debian_Squeeze.html</link>
958 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Perl_modules_used_by_FixMyStreet_which_are_missing_in_Debian_Squeeze.html</guid>
959 <pubDate>Tue, 26 Jul 2011 12:25:00 +0200</pubDate>
960 <description>&lt;p&gt;The Norwegian &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.fiksgatami.no/&quot;&gt;FiksGataMi&lt;/A&gt;
961 site is build on Debian/Squeeze, and this platform was chosen because
962 I am most familiar with Debian (being a Debian Developer for around 10
963 years) because it is the latest stable Debian release which should get
964 security support for a few years.&lt;/p&gt;
965
966 &lt;p&gt;The web service is written in Perl, and depend on some perl modules
967 that are missing in Debian at the moment. It would be great if these
968 modules were added to the Debian archive, allowing anyone to set up
969 their own &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.fixmystreet.com&quot;&gt;FixMyStreet&lt;/a&gt; clone
970 in their own country using only Debian packages. The list of modules
971 missing in Debian/Squeeze isn&#39;t very long, and I hope the perl group
972 will find time to package the 12 modules Catalyst::Plugin::SmartURI,
973 Catalyst::Plugin::Unicode::Encoding, Catalyst::View::TT, Devel::Hide,
974 Sort::Key, Statistics::Distributions, Template::Plugin::Comma,
975 Template::Plugin::DateTime::Format, Term::Size::Any, Term::Size::Perl,
976 URI::SmartURI and Web::Scraper to make the maintenance of FixMyStreet
977 easier in the future.&lt;/p&gt;
978
979 &lt;p&gt;Thanks to the great tools in Debian, getting the missing modules
980 installed on my server was a simple call to &#39;cpan2deb Module::Name&#39;
981 and &#39;dpkg -i&#39; to install the resulting package. But this leave me
982 with the responsibility of tracking security problems, which I really
983 do not have time for.&lt;/p&gt;
984 </description>
985 </item>
986
987 <item>
988 <title>A Norwegian FixMyStreet have kept me busy the last few weeks</title>
989 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_Norwegian_FixMyStreet_have_kept_me_busy_the_last_few_weeks.html</link>
990 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_Norwegian_FixMyStreet_have_kept_me_busy_the_last_few_weeks.html</guid>
991 <pubDate>Sun, 3 Apr 2011 22:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
992 <description>&lt;p&gt;Here is a small update for my English readers. Most of my blog
993 posts have been in Norwegian the last few weeks, so here is a short
994 update in English.&lt;/p&gt;
995
996 &lt;p&gt;The kids still keep me too busy to get much free software work
997 done, but I did manage to organise a project to get a Norwegian port
998 of the British service
999 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.fixmystreet.com/&quot;&gt;FixMyStreet&lt;/a&gt; up and running,
1000 and it has been running for a month now. The entire project has been
1001 organised by me and two others. Around Christmas we gathered sponsors
1002 to fund the development work. In January I drafted a contract with
1003 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.mysociety.org/&quot;&gt;mySociety&lt;/a&gt; on what to develop,
1004 and in February the development took place. Most of it involved
1005 converting the source to use GPS coordinates instead of British
1006 easting/northing, and the resulting code should be a lot easier to get
1007 running in any country by now. The Norwegian
1008 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.fiksgatami.no/&quot;&gt;FiksGataMi&lt;/a&gt; is using
1009 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.openstreetmap.org/&quot;&gt;OpenStreetmap&lt;/a&gt; as the map
1010 source and the source for administrative borders in Norway, and
1011 support for this had to be added/fixed.&lt;/p&gt;
1012
1013 &lt;p&gt;The Norwegian version went live March 3th, and we spent the weekend
1014 polishing the system before we announced it March 7th. The system is
1015 running on a KVM instance of Debian/Squeeze, and has seen almost 3000
1016 problem reports in a few weeks. Soon we hope to announce the Android
1017 and iPhone versions making it even easier to report problems with the
1018 public infrastructure.&lt;/p&gt;
1019
1020 &lt;p&gt;Perhaps something to consider for those of you in countries without
1021 such service?&lt;/p&gt;
1022 </description>
1023 </item>
1024
1025 <item>
1026 <title>Using NVD and CPE to track CVEs in locally maintained software</title>
1027 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Using_NVD_and_CPE_to_track_CVEs_in_locally_maintained_software.html</link>
1028 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Using_NVD_and_CPE_to_track_CVEs_in_locally_maintained_software.html</guid>
1029 <pubDate>Fri, 28 Jan 2011 15:40:00 +0100</pubDate>
1030 <description>&lt;p&gt;The last few days I have looked at ways to track open security
1031 issues here at my work with the University of Oslo. My idea is that
1032 it should be possible to use the information about security issues
1033 available on the Internet, and check our locally
1034 maintained/distributed software against this information. It should
1035 allow us to verify that no known security issues are forgotten. The
1036 CVE database listing vulnerabilities seem like a great central point,
1037 and by using the package lists from Debian mapped to CVEs provided by
1038 the testing security team, I believed it should be possible to figure
1039 out which security holes were present in our free software
1040 collection.&lt;/p&gt;
1041
1042 &lt;p&gt;After reading up on the topic, it became obvious that the first
1043 building block is to be able to name software packages in a unique and
1044 consistent way across data sources. I considered several ways to do
1045 this, for example coming up with my own naming scheme like using URLs
1046 to project home pages or URLs to the Freshmeat entries, or using some
1047 existing naming scheme. And it seem like I am not the first one to
1048 come across this problem, as MITRE already proposed and implemented a
1049 solution. Enter the &lt;a href=&quot;http://cpe.mitre.org/index.html&quot;&gt;Common
1050 Platform Enumeration&lt;/a&gt; dictionary, a vocabulary for referring to
1051 software, hardware and other platform components. The CPE ids are
1052 mapped to CVEs in the &lt;a href=&quot;http://web.nvd.nist.gov/&quot;&gt;National
1053 Vulnerability Database&lt;/a&gt;, allowing me to look up know security
1054 issues for any CPE name. With this in place, all I need to do is to
1055 locate the CPE id for the software packages we use at the university.
1056 This is fairly trivial (I google for &#39;cve cpe $package&#39; and check the
1057 NVD entry if a CVE for the package exist).&lt;/p&gt;
1058
1059 &lt;p&gt;To give you an example. The GNU gzip source package have the CPE
1060 name cpe:/a:gnu:gzip. If the old version 1.3.3 was the package to
1061 check out, one could look up
1062 &lt;a href=&quot;http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/search?cpe=cpe%3A%2Fa%3Agnu%3Agzip:1.3.3&quot;&gt;cpe:/a:gnu:gzip:1.3.3
1063 in NVD&lt;/a&gt; and get a list of 6 security holes with public CVE entries.
1064 The most recent one is
1065 &lt;a href=&quot;http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2010-0001&quot;&gt;CVE-2010-0001&lt;/a&gt;,
1066 and at the bottom of the NVD page for this vulnerability the complete
1067 list of affected versions is provided.&lt;/p&gt;
1068
1069 &lt;p&gt;The NVD database of CVEs is also available as a XML dump, allowing
1070 for offline processing of issues. Using this dump, I&#39;ve written a
1071 small script taking a list of CPEs as input and list all CVEs
1072 affecting the packages represented by these CPEs. One give it CPEs
1073 with version numbers as specified above and get a list of open
1074 security issues out.&lt;/p&gt;
1075
1076 &lt;p&gt;Of course for this approach to be useful, the quality of the NVD
1077 information need to be high. For that to happen, I believe as many as
1078 possible need to use and contribute to the NVD database. I notice
1079 RHEL is providing
1080 &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.redhat.com/security/data/metrics/rhsamapcpe.txt&quot;&gt;a
1081 map from CVE to CPE&lt;/a&gt;, indicating that they are using the CPE
1082 information. I&#39;m not aware of Debian and Ubuntu doing the same.&lt;/p&gt;
1083
1084 &lt;p&gt;To get an idea about the quality for free software, I spent some
1085 time making it possible to compare the CVE database from Debian with
1086 the CVE database in NVD. The result look fairly good, but there are
1087 some inconsistencies in NVD (same software package having several
1088 CPEs), and some inaccuracies (NVD not mentioning buggy packages that
1089 Debian believe are affected by a CVE). Hope to find time to improve
1090 the quality of NVD, but that require being able to get in touch with
1091 someone maintaining it. So far my three emails with questions and
1092 corrections have not seen any reply, but I hope contact can be
1093 established soon.&lt;/p&gt;
1094
1095 &lt;p&gt;An interesting application for CPEs is cross platform package
1096 mapping. It would be useful to know which packages in for example
1097 RHEL, OpenSuSe and Mandriva are missing from Debian and Ubuntu, and
1098 this would be trivial if all linux distributions provided CPE entries
1099 for their packages.&lt;/p&gt;
1100 </description>
1101 </item>
1102
1103 <item>
1104 <title>Which module is loaded for a given PCI and USB device?</title>
1105 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Which_module_is_loaded_for_a_given_PCI_and_USB_device_.html</link>
1106 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Which_module_is_loaded_for_a_given_PCI_and_USB_device_.html</guid>
1107 <pubDate>Sun, 23 Jan 2011 00:20:00 +0100</pubDate>
1108 <description>&lt;p&gt;In the
1109 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/discover-data&quot;&gt;discover-data&lt;/a&gt;
1110 package in Debian, there is a script to report useful information
1111 about the running hardware for use when people report missing
1112 information. One part of this script that I find very useful when
1113 debugging hardware problems, is the part mapping loaded kernel module
1114 to the PCI device it claims. It allow me to quickly see if the kernel
1115 module I expect is driving the hardware I am struggling with. To see
1116 the output, make sure discover-data is installed and run
1117 &lt;tt&gt;/usr/share/bug/discover-data 3&gt;&amp;1&lt;/tt&gt;. The relevant output on
1118 one of my machines like this:&lt;/p&gt;
1119
1120 &lt;pre&gt;
1121 loaded modules:
1122 10de:03eb i2c_nforce2
1123 10de:03f1 ohci_hcd
1124 10de:03f2 ehci_hcd
1125 10de:03f0 snd_hda_intel
1126 10de:03ec pata_amd
1127 10de:03f6 sata_nv
1128 1022:1103 k8temp
1129 109e:036e bttv
1130 109e:0878 snd_bt87x
1131 11ab:4364 sky2
1132 &lt;/pre&gt;
1133
1134 &lt;p&gt;The code in question look like this, slightly modified for
1135 readability and to drop the output to file descriptor 3:&lt;/p&gt;
1136
1137 &lt;pre&gt;
1138 if [ -d /sys/bus/pci/devices/ ] ; then
1139 echo loaded pci modules:
1140 (
1141 cd /sys/bus/pci/devices/
1142 for address in * ; do
1143 if [ -d &quot;$address/driver/module&quot; ] ; then
1144 module=`cd $address/driver/module ; pwd -P | xargs basename`
1145 if grep -q &quot;^$module &quot; /proc/modules ; then
1146 address=$(echo $address |sed s/0000://)
1147 id=`lspci -n -s $address | tail -n 1 | awk &#39;{print $3}&#39;`
1148 echo &quot;$id $module&quot;
1149 fi
1150 fi
1151 done
1152 )
1153 echo
1154 fi
1155 &lt;/pre&gt;
1156
1157 &lt;p&gt;Similar code could be used to extract USB device module
1158 mappings:&lt;/p&gt;
1159
1160 &lt;pre&gt;
1161 if [ -d /sys/bus/usb/devices/ ] ; then
1162 echo loaded usb modules:
1163 (
1164 cd /sys/bus/usb/devices/
1165 for address in * ; do
1166 if [ -d &quot;$address/driver/module&quot; ] ; then
1167 module=`cd $address/driver/module ; pwd -P | xargs basename`
1168 if grep -q &quot;^$module &quot; /proc/modules ; then
1169 address=$(echo $address |sed s/0000://)
1170 id=$(lsusb -s $address | tail -n 1 | awk &#39;{print $6}&#39;)
1171 if [ &quot;$id&quot; ] ; then
1172 echo &quot;$id $module&quot;
1173 fi
1174 fi
1175 fi
1176 done
1177 )
1178 echo
1179 fi
1180 &lt;/pre&gt;
1181
1182 &lt;p&gt;This might perhaps be something to include in other tools as
1183 well.&lt;/p&gt;
1184 </description>
1185 </item>
1186
1187 <item>
1188 <title>How to test if a laptop is working with Linux</title>
1189 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_to_test_if_a_laptop_is_working_with_Linux.html</link>
1190 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/How_to_test_if_a_laptop_is_working_with_Linux.html</guid>
1191 <pubDate>Wed, 22 Dec 2010 14:55:00 +0100</pubDate>
1192 <description>&lt;p&gt;The last few days I have spent at work here at the &lt;a
1193 href=&quot;http://www.uio.no/&quot;&gt;University of Oslo&lt;/a&gt; testing if the new
1194 batch of computers will work with Linux. Every year for the last few
1195 years the university have organised shared bid of a few thousand
1196 computers, and this year HP won the bid. Two different desktops and
1197 five different laptops are on the list this year. We in the UNIX
1198 group want to know which one of these computers work well with RHEL
1199 and Ubuntu, the two Linux distributions we currently handle at the
1200 university.&lt;/p&gt;
1201
1202 &lt;p&gt;My test method is simple, and I share it here to get feedback and
1203 perhaps inspire others to test hardware as well. To test, I PXE
1204 install the OS version of choice, and log in as my normal user and run
1205 a few applications and plug in selected pieces of hardware. When
1206 something fail, I make a note about this in the test matrix and move
1207 on. If I have some spare time I try to report the bug to the OS
1208 vendor, but as I only have the machines for a short time, I rarely
1209 have the time to do this for all the problems I find.&lt;/p&gt;
1210
1211 &lt;p&gt;Anyway, to get to the point of this post. Here is the simple tests
1212 I perform on a new model.&lt;/p&gt;
1213
1214 &lt;ul&gt;
1215
1216 &lt;li&gt;Is PXE installation working? I&#39;m testing with RHEL6, Ubuntu Lucid
1217 and Ubuntu Maverik at the moment. If I feel like it, I also test with
1218 RHEL5 and Debian Edu/Squeeze.&lt;/li&gt;
1219
1220 &lt;li&gt;Is X.org working? If the graphical login screen show up after
1221 installation, X.org is working.&lt;/li&gt;
1222
1223 &lt;li&gt;Is hardware accelerated OpenGL working? Running glxgears (in
1224 package mesa-utils on Ubuntu) and writing down the frames per second
1225 reported by the program.&lt;/li&gt;
1226
1227 &lt;li&gt;Is sound working? With Gnome and KDE, a sound is played when
1228 logging in, and if I can hear this the test is successful. If there
1229 are several audio exits on the machine, I try them all and check if
1230 the Gnome/KDE audio mixer can control where to send the sound. I
1231 normally test this by playing
1232 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.nuug.no/aktiviteter/20101012-chef/ &quot;&gt;a HTML5
1233 video&lt;/a&gt; in Firefox/Iceweasel.&lt;/li&gt;
1234
1235 &lt;li&gt;Is the USB subsystem working? I test this by plugging in a USB
1236 memory stick and see if Gnome/KDE notices this.&lt;/li&gt;
1237
1238 &lt;li&gt;Is the CD/DVD player working? I test this by inserting any CD/DVD
1239 I have lying around, and see if Gnome/KDE notices this.&lt;/li&gt;
1240
1241 &lt;li&gt;Is any built in camera working? Test using cheese, and see if a
1242 picture from the v4l device show up.&lt;/li&gt;
1243
1244 &lt;li&gt;Is bluetooth working? Use the Gnome/KDE browsing tool to see if
1245 any bluetooth devices are discovered. In my office, I normally see a
1246 few.&lt;/li&gt;
1247
1248 &lt;li&gt;For laptops, is the SD or Compaq Flash reader working. I have
1249 memory modules lying around, and stick them in and see if Gnome/KDE
1250 notice this.&lt;/li&gt;
1251
1252 &lt;li&gt;For laptops, is suspend/hibernate working? I&#39;m testing if the
1253 special button work, and if the laptop continue to work after
1254 resume.&lt;/li&gt;
1255
1256 &lt;li&gt;For laptops, is the extra buttons working, like audio level,
1257 adjusting background light, switching on/off external video output,
1258 switching on/off wifi, bluetooth, etc? The set of buttons differ from
1259 laptop to laptop, so I just write down which are working and which are
1260 not.&lt;/li&gt;
1261
1262 &lt;li&gt;Some laptops have smart card readers, finger print readers,
1263 acceleration sensors etc. I rarely test these, as I do not know how
1264 to quickly test if they are working or not, so I only document their
1265 existence.&lt;/li&gt;
1266
1267 &lt;/ul&gt;
1268
1269 &lt;p&gt;By now I suspect you are really curious what the test results are
1270 for the HP machines I am testing. I&#39;m not done yet, so I will report
1271 the test results later. For now I can report that HP 8100 Elite work
1272 fine, and hibernation fail with HP EliteBook 8440p on Ubuntu Lucid,
1273 and audio fail on RHEL6. Ubuntu Maverik worked with 8440p. As you
1274 can see, I have most machines left to test. One interesting
1275 observation is that Ubuntu Lucid has almost twice the frame rate than
1276 RHEL6 with glxgears. No idea why.&lt;/p&gt;
1277 </description>
1278 </item>
1279
1280 <item>
1281 <title>Some thoughts on BitCoins</title>
1282 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Some_thoughts_on_BitCoins.html</link>
1283 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Some_thoughts_on_BitCoins.html</guid>
1284 <pubDate>Sat, 11 Dec 2010 15:10:00 +0100</pubDate>
1285 <description>&lt;p&gt;As I continue to explore
1286 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoin.org/&quot;&gt;BitCoin&lt;/a&gt;, I&#39;ve starting to wonder
1287 what properties the system have, and how it will be affected by laws
1288 and regulations here in Norway. Here are some random notes.&lt;/p&gt;
1289
1290 &lt;p&gt;One interesting thing to note is that since the transactions are
1291 verified using a peer to peer network, all details about a transaction
1292 is known to everyone. This means that if a BitCoin address has been
1293 published like I did with mine in my initial post about BitCoin, it is
1294 possible for everyone to see how many BitCoins have been transfered to
1295 that address. There is even a web service to look at the details for
1296 all transactions. There I can see that my address
1297 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blockexplorer.com/address/15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&quot;&gt;15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&lt;/a&gt;
1298 have received 16.06 Bitcoin, the
1299 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blockexplorer.com/address/1LfdGnGuWkpSJgbQySxxCWhv8MHqvwst3&quot;&gt;1LfdGnGuWkpSJgbQySxxCWhv8MHqvwst3&lt;/a&gt;
1300 address of Simon Phipps have received 181.97 BitCoin and the address
1301 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blockexplorer.com/address/1MCwBbhNGp5hRm5rC1Aims2YFRe2SXPYKt&quot;&gt;1MCwBbhNGp5hRm5rC1Aims2YFRe2SXPYKt&lt;/A&gt;
1302 of EFF have received 2447.38 BitCoins so far. Thank you to each and
1303 every one of you that donated bitcoins to support my activity. The
1304 fact that anyone can see how much money was transfered to a given
1305 address make it more obvious why the BitCoin community recommend to
1306 generate and hand out a new address for each transaction. I&#39;m told
1307 there is no way to track which addresses belong to a given person or
1308 organisation without the person or organisation revealing it
1309 themselves, as Simon, EFF and I have done.&lt;/p&gt;
1310
1311 &lt;p&gt;In Norway, and in most other countries, there are laws and
1312 regulations limiting how much money one can transfer across the border
1313 without declaring it. There are money laundering, tax and accounting
1314 laws and regulations I would expect to apply to the use of BitCoin.
1315 If the Skolelinux foundation
1316 (&lt;a href=&quot;http://linuxiskolen.no/slxdebianlabs/donations.html&quot;&gt;SLX
1317 Debian Labs&lt;/a&gt;) were to accept donations in BitCoin in addition to
1318 normal bank transfers like EFF is doing, how should this be accounted?
1319 Given that it is impossible to know if money can cross the border or
1320 not, should everything or nothing be declared? What exchange rate
1321 should be used when calculating taxes? Would receivers have to pay
1322 income tax if the foundation were to pay Skolelinux contributors in
1323 BitCoin? I have no idea, but it would be interesting to know.&lt;/p&gt;
1324
1325 &lt;p&gt;For a currency to be useful and successful, it must be trusted and
1326 accepted by a lot of users. It must be possible to get easy access to
1327 the currency (as a wage or using currency exchanges), and it must be
1328 easy to spend it. At the moment BitCoin seem fairly easy to get
1329 access to, but there are very few places to spend it. I am not really
1330 a regular user of any of the vendor types currently accepting BitCoin,
1331 so I wonder when my kind of shop would start accepting BitCoins. I
1332 would like to buy electronics, travels and subway tickets, not herbs
1333 and books. :) The currency is young, and this will improve over time
1334 if it become popular, but I suspect regular banks will start to lobby
1335 to get BitCoin declared illegal if it become popular. I&#39;m sure they
1336 will claim it is helping fund terrorism and money laundering (which
1337 probably would be true, as is any currency in existence), but I
1338 believe the problems should be solved elsewhere and not by blaming
1339 currencies.&lt;/p&gt;
1340
1341 &lt;p&gt;The process of creating new BitCoins is called mining, and it is
1342 CPU intensive process that depend on a bit of luck as well (as one is
1343 competing against all the other miners currently spending CPU cycles
1344 to see which one get the next lump of cash). The &quot;winner&quot; get 50
1345 BitCoin when this happen. Yesterday I came across the obvious way to
1346 join forces to increase ones changes of getting at least some coins,
1347 by coordinating the work on mining BitCoins across several machines
1348 and people, and sharing the result if one is lucky and get the 50
1349 BitCoins. Check out
1350 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bluishcoder.co.nz/bitcoin-pool/&quot;&gt;BitCoin Pool&lt;/a&gt;
1351 if this sounds interesting. I have not had time to try to set up a
1352 machine to participate there yet, but have seen that running on ones
1353 own for a few days have not yield any BitCoins througth mining
1354 yet.&lt;/p&gt;
1355
1356 &lt;p&gt;Update 2010-12-15: Found an &lt;a
1357 href=&quot;http://inertia.posterous.com/reply-to-the-underground-economist-why-bitcoi&quot;&gt;interesting
1358 criticism&lt;/a&gt; of bitcoin. Not quite sure how valid it is, but thought
1359 it was interesting to read. The arguments presented seem to be
1360 equally valid for gold, which was used as a currency for many years.&lt;/p&gt;
1361 </description>
1362 </item>
1363
1364 <item>
1365 <title>Now accepting bitcoins - anonymous and distributed p2p crypto-money</title>
1366 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Now_accepting_bitcoins___anonymous_and_distributed_p2p_crypto_money.html</link>
1367 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Now_accepting_bitcoins___anonymous_and_distributed_p2p_crypto_money.html</guid>
1368 <pubDate>Fri, 10 Dec 2010 08:20:00 +0100</pubDate>
1369 <description>&lt;p&gt;With this weeks lawless
1370 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/12/06/wikileaks/index.html&quot;&gt;governmental
1371 attacks&lt;/a&gt; on Wikileak and
1372 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.salon.com/technology/dan_gillmor/2010/12/06/war_on_speech&quot;&gt;free
1373 speech&lt;/a&gt;, it has become obvious that PayPal, visa and mastercard can
1374 not be trusted to handle money transactions.
1375 A blog post from
1376 &lt;a href=&quot;http://webmink.com/2010/12/06/now-accepting-bitcoin/&quot;&gt;Simon
1377 Phipps on bitcoin&lt;/a&gt; reminded me about a project that a friend of
1378 mine mentioned earlier. I decided to follow Simon&#39;s example, and get
1379 involved with &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoin.org/&quot;&gt;BitCoin&lt;/a&gt;. I got
1380 some help from my friend to get it all running, and he even handed me
1381 some bitcoins to get started. I even donated a few bitcoins to Simon
1382 for helping me remember BitCoin.&lt;/p&gt;
1383
1384 &lt;p&gt;So, what is bitcoins, you probably wonder? It is a digital
1385 crypto-currency, decentralised and handled using peer-to-peer
1386 networks. It allows anonymous transactions and prohibits central
1387 control over the transactions, making it impossible for governments
1388 and companies alike to block donations and other transactions. The
1389 source is free software, and while the key dependency wxWidgets 2.9
1390 for the graphical user interface is missing in Debian, the command
1391 line client builds just fine. Hopefully Jonas
1392 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/578157&quot;&gt;will get the package into
1393 Debian&lt;/a&gt; soon.&lt;/p&gt;
1394
1395 &lt;p&gt;Bitcoins can be converted to other currencies, like USD and EUR.
1396 There are &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoin.org/trade&quot;&gt;companies accepting
1397 bitcoins&lt;/a&gt; when selling services and goods, and there are even
1398 currency &quot;stock&quot; markets where the exchange rate is decided. There
1399 are not many users so far, but the concept seems promising. If you
1400 want to get started and lack a friend with any bitcoins to spare,
1401 you can even get
1402 &lt;a href=&quot;https://freebitcoins.appspot.com/&quot;&gt;some for free&lt;/a&gt; (0.05
1403 bitcoin at the time of writing). Use
1404 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.bitcoinwatch.com/&quot;&gt;BitcoinWatch&lt;/a&gt; to keep an eye
1405 on the current exchange rates.&lt;/p&gt;
1406
1407 &lt;p&gt;As an experiment, I have decided to set up bitcoind on one of my
1408 machines. If you want to support my activity, please send Bitcoin
1409 donations to the address
1410 &lt;b&gt;15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b&lt;/b&gt;. Thank you!&lt;/p&gt;
1411 </description>
1412 </item>
1413
1414 <item>
1415 <title>Why isn&#39;t Debian Edu using VLC?</title>
1416 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Why_isn_t_Debian_Edu_using_VLC_.html</link>
1417 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Why_isn_t_Debian_Edu_using_VLC_.html</guid>
1418 <pubDate>Sat, 27 Nov 2010 11:30:00 +0100</pubDate>
1419 <description>&lt;p&gt;In the latest issue of Linux Journal, the readers choices were
1420 presented, and the winner among the multimedia player were VLC.
1421 Personally, I like VLC, and it is my player of choice when I first try
1422 to play a video file or stream. Only if VLC fail will I drag out
1423 gmplayer to see if it can do better. The reason is mostly the failure
1424 model and trust. When VLC fail, it normally pop up a error message
1425 reporting the problem. When mplayer fail, it normally segfault or
1426 just hangs. The latter failure mode drain my trust in the program.&lt;p&gt;
1427
1428 &lt;p&gt;But even if VLC is my player of choice, we have choosen to use
1429 mplayer in &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Debian
1430 Edu/Skolelinux&lt;/a&gt;. The reason is simple. We need a good browser
1431 plugin to play web videos seamlessly, and the VLC browser plugin is
1432 not very good. For example, it lack in-line control buttons, so there
1433 is no way for the user to pause the video. Also, when I
1434 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/DebianEdu/BrowserMultimedia&quot;&gt;last
1435 tested the browser plugins&lt;/a&gt; available in Debian, the VLC plugin
1436 failed on several video pages where mplayer based plugins worked. If
1437 the browser plugin for VLC was as good as the gecko-mediaplayer
1438 package (which uses mplayer), we would switch.&lt;/P&gt;
1439
1440 &lt;p&gt;While VLC is a good player, its user interface is slightly
1441 annoying. The most annoying feature is its inconsistent use of
1442 keyboard shortcuts. When the player is in full screen mode, its
1443 shortcuts are different from when it is playing the video in a window.
1444 For example, space only work as pause when in full screen mode. I
1445 wish it had consisten shortcuts and that space also would work when in
1446 window mode. Another nice shortcut in gmplayer is [enter] to restart
1447 the current video. It is very nice when playing short videos from the
1448 web and want to restart it when new people arrive to have a look at
1449 what is going on.&lt;/p&gt;
1450 </description>
1451 </item>
1452
1453 <item>
1454 <title>Lenny-&gt;Squeeze upgrades of the Gnome and KDE desktop, now with apt-get autoremove</title>
1455 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades_of_the_Gnome_and_KDE_desktop__now_with_apt_get_autoremove.html</link>
1456 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades_of_the_Gnome_and_KDE_desktop__now_with_apt_get_autoremove.html</guid>
1457 <pubDate>Mon, 22 Nov 2010 14:15:00 +0100</pubDate>
1458 <description>&lt;p&gt;Michael Biebl suggested to me on IRC, that I changed my automated
1459 upgrade testing of the
1460 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/~pere/debian-upgrade-testing/&quot;&gt;Lenny
1461 Gnome and KDE Desktop&lt;/a&gt; to do &lt;tt&gt;apt-get autoremove&lt;/tt&gt; when using apt-get.
1462 This seem like a very good idea, so I adjusted by test scripts and
1463 can now present the updated result from today:&lt;/p&gt;
1464
1465 &lt;p&gt;This is for Gnome:&lt;/p&gt;
1466
1467 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, missing with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
1468
1469 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1470 apache2.2-bin
1471 aptdaemon
1472 baobab
1473 binfmt-support
1474 browser-plugin-gnash
1475 cheese-common
1476 cli-common
1477 cups-pk-helper
1478 dmz-cursor-theme
1479 empathy
1480 empathy-common
1481 freedesktop-sound-theme
1482 freeglut3
1483 gconf-defaults-service
1484 gdm-themes
1485 gedit-plugins
1486 geoclue
1487 geoclue-hostip
1488 geoclue-localnet
1489 geoclue-manual
1490 geoclue-yahoo
1491 gnash
1492 gnash-common
1493 gnome
1494 gnome-backgrounds
1495 gnome-cards-data
1496 gnome-codec-install
1497 gnome-core
1498 gnome-desktop-environment
1499 gnome-disk-utility
1500 gnome-screenshot
1501 gnome-search-tool
1502 gnome-session-canberra
1503 gnome-system-log
1504 gnome-themes-extras
1505 gnome-themes-more
1506 gnome-user-share
1507 gstreamer0.10-fluendo-mp3
1508 gstreamer0.10-tools
1509 gtk2-engines
1510 gtk2-engines-pixbuf
1511 gtk2-engines-smooth
1512 hamster-applet
1513 libapache2-mod-dnssd
1514 libapr1
1515 libaprutil1
1516 libaprutil1-dbd-sqlite3
1517 libaprutil1-ldap
1518 libart2.0-cil
1519 libboost-date-time1.42.0
1520 libboost-python1.42.0
1521 libboost-thread1.42.0
1522 libchamplain-0.4-0
1523 libchamplain-gtk-0.4-0
1524 libcheese-gtk18
1525 libclutter-gtk-0.10-0
1526 libcryptui0
1527 libdiscid0
1528 libelf1
1529 libepc-1.0-2
1530 libepc-common
1531 libepc-ui-1.0-2
1532 libfreerdp-plugins-standard
1533 libfreerdp0
1534 libgconf2.0-cil
1535 libgdata-common
1536 libgdata7
1537 libgdu-gtk0
1538 libgee2
1539 libgeoclue0
1540 libgexiv2-0
1541 libgif4
1542 libglade2.0-cil
1543 libglib2.0-cil
1544 libgmime2.4-cil
1545 libgnome-vfs2.0-cil
1546 libgnome2.24-cil
1547 libgnomepanel2.24-cil
1548 libgpod-common
1549 libgpod4
1550 libgtk2.0-cil
1551 libgtkglext1
1552 libgtksourceview2.0-common
1553 libmono-addins-gui0.2-cil
1554 libmono-addins0.2-cil
1555 libmono-cairo2.0-cil
1556 libmono-corlib2.0-cil
1557 libmono-i18n-west2.0-cil
1558 libmono-posix2.0-cil
1559 libmono-security2.0-cil
1560 libmono-sharpzip2.84-cil
1561 libmono-system2.0-cil
1562 libmtp8
1563 libmusicbrainz3-6
1564 libndesk-dbus-glib1.0-cil
1565 libndesk-dbus1.0-cil
1566 libopal3.6.8
1567 libpolkit-gtk-1-0
1568 libpt2.6.7
1569 libpython2.6
1570 librpm1
1571 librpmio1
1572 libsdl1.2debian
1573 libsrtp0
1574 libssh-4
1575 libtelepathy-farsight0
1576 libtelepathy-glib0
1577 libtidy-0.99-0
1578 media-player-info
1579 mesa-utils
1580 mono-2.0-gac
1581 mono-gac
1582 mono-runtime
1583 nautilus-sendto
1584 nautilus-sendto-empathy
1585 p7zip-full
1586 pkg-config
1587 python-aptdaemon
1588 python-aptdaemon-gtk
1589 python-axiom
1590 python-beautifulsoup
1591 python-bugbuddy
1592 python-clientform
1593 python-coherence
1594 python-configobj
1595 python-crypto
1596 python-cupshelpers
1597 python-elementtree
1598 python-epsilon
1599 python-evolution
1600 python-feedparser
1601 python-gdata
1602 python-gdbm
1603 python-gst0.10
1604 python-gtkglext1
1605 python-gtksourceview2
1606 python-httplib2
1607 python-louie
1608 python-mako
1609 python-markupsafe
1610 python-mechanize
1611 python-nevow
1612 python-notify
1613 python-opengl
1614 python-openssl
1615 python-pam
1616 python-pkg-resources
1617 python-pyasn1
1618 python-pysqlite2
1619 python-rdflib
1620 python-serial
1621 python-tagpy
1622 python-twisted-bin
1623 python-twisted-conch
1624 python-twisted-core
1625 python-twisted-web
1626 python-utidylib
1627 python-webkit
1628 python-xdg
1629 python-zope.interface
1630 remmina
1631 remmina-plugin-data
1632 remmina-plugin-rdp
1633 remmina-plugin-vnc
1634 rhythmbox-plugin-cdrecorder
1635 rhythmbox-plugins
1636 rpm-common
1637 rpm2cpio
1638 seahorse-plugins
1639 shotwell
1640 software-center
1641 system-config-printer-udev
1642 telepathy-gabble
1643 telepathy-mission-control-5
1644 telepathy-salut
1645 tomboy
1646 totem
1647 totem-coherence
1648 totem-mozilla
1649 totem-plugins
1650 transmission-common
1651 xdg-user-dirs
1652 xdg-user-dirs-gtk
1653 xserver-xephyr
1654 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1655
1656 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, removed with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
1657
1658 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1659 cheese
1660 ekiga
1661 eog
1662 epiphany-extensions
1663 evolution-exchange
1664 fast-user-switch-applet
1665 file-roller
1666 gcalctool
1667 gconf-editor
1668 gdm
1669 gedit
1670 gedit-common
1671 gnome-games
1672 gnome-games-data
1673 gnome-nettool
1674 gnome-system-tools
1675 gnome-themes
1676 gnuchess
1677 gucharmap
1678 guile-1.8-libs
1679 libavahi-ui0
1680 libdmx1
1681 libgalago3
1682 libgtk-vnc-1.0-0
1683 libgtksourceview2.0-0
1684 liblircclient0
1685 libsdl1.2debian-alsa
1686 libspeexdsp1
1687 libsvga1
1688 rhythmbox
1689 seahorse
1690 sound-juicer
1691 system-config-printer
1692 totem-common
1693 transmission-gtk
1694 vinagre
1695 vino
1696 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1697
1698 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, missing with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
1699
1700 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1701 gstreamer0.10-gnomevfs
1702 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1703
1704 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, removed with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
1705
1706 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1707 [nothing]
1708 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1709
1710 &lt;p&gt;This is for KDE:&lt;/p&gt;
1711
1712 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, missing with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
1713
1714 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1715 ksmserver
1716 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1717
1718 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, removed with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
1719
1720 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1721 kwin
1722 network-manager-kde
1723 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1724
1725 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, missing with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
1726
1727 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1728 arts
1729 dolphin
1730 freespacenotifier
1731 google-gadgets-gst
1732 google-gadgets-xul
1733 kappfinder
1734 kcalc
1735 kcharselect
1736 kde-core
1737 kde-plasma-desktop
1738 kde-standard
1739 kde-window-manager
1740 kdeartwork
1741 kdeartwork-emoticons
1742 kdeartwork-style
1743 kdeartwork-theme-icon
1744 kdebase
1745 kdebase-apps
1746 kdebase-workspace
1747 kdebase-workspace-bin
1748 kdebase-workspace-data
1749 kdeeject
1750 kdelibs
1751 kdeplasma-addons
1752 kdeutils
1753 kdewallpapers
1754 kdf
1755 kfloppy
1756 kgpg
1757 khelpcenter4
1758 kinfocenter
1759 konq-plugins-l10n
1760 konqueror-nsplugins
1761 kscreensaver
1762 kscreensaver-xsavers
1763 ktimer
1764 kwrite
1765 libgle3
1766 libkde4-ruby1.8
1767 libkonq5
1768 libkonq5-templates
1769 libnetpbm10
1770 libplasma-ruby
1771 libplasma-ruby1.8
1772 libqt4-ruby1.8
1773 marble-data
1774 marble-plugins
1775 netpbm
1776 nuvola-icon-theme
1777 plasma-dataengines-workspace
1778 plasma-desktop
1779 plasma-desktopthemes-artwork
1780 plasma-runners-addons
1781 plasma-scriptengine-googlegadgets
1782 plasma-scriptengine-python
1783 plasma-scriptengine-qedje
1784 plasma-scriptengine-ruby
1785 plasma-scriptengine-webkit
1786 plasma-scriptengines
1787 plasma-wallpapers-addons
1788 plasma-widget-folderview
1789 plasma-widget-networkmanagement
1790 ruby
1791 sweeper
1792 update-notifier-kde
1793 xscreensaver-data-extra
1794 xscreensaver-gl
1795 xscreensaver-gl-extra
1796 xscreensaver-screensaver-bsod
1797 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1798
1799 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, removed with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
1800
1801 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1802 ark
1803 google-gadgets-common
1804 google-gadgets-qt
1805 htdig
1806 kate
1807 kdebase-bin
1808 kdebase-data
1809 kdepasswd
1810 kfind
1811 klipper
1812 konq-plugins
1813 konqueror
1814 ksysguard
1815 ksysguardd
1816 libarchive1
1817 libcln6
1818 libeet1
1819 libeina-svn-06
1820 libggadget-1.0-0b
1821 libggadget-qt-1.0-0b
1822 libgps19
1823 libkdecorations4
1824 libkephal4
1825 libkonq4
1826 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
1827 libkscreensaver5
1828 libksgrd4
1829 libksignalplotter4
1830 libkunitconversion4
1831 libkwineffects1a
1832 libmarblewidget4
1833 libntrack-qt4-1
1834 libntrack0
1835 libplasma-geolocation-interface4
1836 libplasmaclock4a
1837 libplasmagenericshell4
1838 libprocesscore4a
1839 libprocessui4a
1840 libqalculate5
1841 libqedje0a
1842 libqtruby4shared2
1843 libqzion0a
1844 libruby1.8
1845 libscim8c2a
1846 libsmokekdecore4-3
1847 libsmokekdeui4-3
1848 libsmokekfile3
1849 libsmokekhtml3
1850 libsmokekio3
1851 libsmokeknewstuff2-3
1852 libsmokeknewstuff3-3
1853 libsmokekparts3
1854 libsmokektexteditor3
1855 libsmokekutils3
1856 libsmokenepomuk3
1857 libsmokephonon3
1858 libsmokeplasma3
1859 libsmokeqtcore4-3
1860 libsmokeqtdbus4-3
1861 libsmokeqtgui4-3
1862 libsmokeqtnetwork4-3
1863 libsmokeqtopengl4-3
1864 libsmokeqtscript4-3
1865 libsmokeqtsql4-3
1866 libsmokeqtsvg4-3
1867 libsmokeqttest4-3
1868 libsmokeqtuitools4-3
1869 libsmokeqtwebkit4-3
1870 libsmokeqtxml4-3
1871 libsmokesolid3
1872 libsmokesoprano3
1873 libtaskmanager4a
1874 libtidy-0.99-0
1875 libweather-ion4a
1876 libxklavier16
1877 libxxf86misc1
1878 okteta
1879 oxygencursors
1880 plasma-dataengines-addons
1881 plasma-scriptengine-superkaramba
1882 plasma-widget-lancelot
1883 plasma-widgets-addons
1884 plasma-widgets-workspace
1885 polkit-kde-1
1886 ruby1.8
1887 systemsettings
1888 update-notifier-common
1889 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1890
1891 &lt;p&gt;Running apt-get autoremove made the results using apt-get and
1892 aptitude a bit more similar, but there are still quite a lott of
1893 differences. I have no idea what packages should be installed after
1894 the upgrade, but hope those that do can have a look.&lt;/p&gt;
1895 </description>
1896 </item>
1897
1898 <item>
1899 <title>Migrating Xen virtual machines using LVM to KVM using disk images</title>
1900 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Migrating_Xen_virtual_machines_using_LVM_to_KVM_using_disk_images.html</link>
1901 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Migrating_Xen_virtual_machines_using_LVM_to_KVM_using_disk_images.html</guid>
1902 <pubDate>Mon, 22 Nov 2010 11:20:00 +0100</pubDate>
1903 <description>&lt;p&gt;Most of the computers in use by the
1904 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Debian Edu/Skolelinux project&lt;/a&gt;
1905 are virtual machines. And they have been Xen machines running on a
1906 fairly old IBM eserver xseries 345 machine, and we wanted to migrate
1907 them to KVM on a newer Dell PowerEdge 2950 host machine. This was a
1908 bit harder that it could have been, because we set up the Xen virtual
1909 machines to get the virtual partitions from LVM, which as far as I
1910 know is not supported by KVM. So to migrate, we had to convert
1911 several LVM logical volumes to partitions on a virtual disk file.&lt;/p&gt;
1912
1913 &lt;p&gt;I found
1914 &lt;a href=&quot;http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com.au/articles/35011-Six-steps-for-migrating-Xen-virtual-machines-to-KVM&quot;&gt;a
1915 nice recipe&lt;/a&gt; to do this, and wrote the following script to do the
1916 migration. It uses qemu-img from the qemu package to make the disk
1917 image, parted to partition it, losetup and kpartx to present the disk
1918 image partions as devices, and dd to copy the data. I NFS mounted the
1919 new servers storage area on the old server to do the migration.&lt;/p&gt;
1920
1921 &lt;pre&gt;
1922 #!/bin/sh
1923
1924 # Based on
1925 # http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com.au/articles/35011-Six-steps-for-migrating-Xen-virtual-machines-to-KVM
1926
1927 set -e
1928 set -x
1929
1930 if [ -z &quot;$1&quot; ] ; then
1931 echo &quot;Usage: $0 &amp;lt;hostname&amp;gt;&quot;
1932 exit 1
1933 else
1934 host=&quot;$1&quot;
1935 fi
1936
1937 if [ ! -e /dev/vg_data/$host-disk ] ; then
1938 echo &quot;error: unable to find LVM volume for $host&quot;
1939 exit 1
1940 fi
1941
1942 # Partitions need to be a bit bigger than the LVM LVs. not sure why.
1943 disksize=$( lvs --units m | grep $host-disk | awk &#39;{sum = sum + $4} END { print int(sum * 1.05) }&#39;)
1944 swapsize=$( lvs --units m | grep $host-swap | awk &#39;{sum = sum + $4} END { print int(sum * 1.05) }&#39;)
1945 totalsize=$(( ( $disksize + $swapsize ) ))
1946
1947 img=$host.img
1948 #dd if=/dev/zero of=$img bs=1M count=$(( $disksize + $swapsize ))
1949 qemu-img create $img ${totalsize}MMaking room on the Debian Edu/Sqeeze DVD
1950
1951 parted $img mklabel msdos
1952 parted $img mkpart primary linux-swap 0 $disksize
1953 parted $img mkpart primary ext2 $disksize $totalsize
1954 parted $img set 1 boot on
1955
1956 modprobe dm-mod
1957 losetup /dev/loop0 $img
1958 kpartx -a /dev/loop0
1959
1960 dd if=/dev/vg_data/$host-disk of=/dev/mapper/loop0p1 bs=1M
1961 fsck.ext3 -f /dev/mapper/loop0p1 || true
1962 mkswap /dev/mapper/loop0p2
1963
1964 kpartx -d /dev/loop0
1965 losetup -d /dev/loop0
1966 &lt;/pre&gt;
1967
1968 &lt;p&gt;The script is perhaps so simple that it is not copyrightable, but
1969 if it is, it is licenced using GPL v2 or later at your discretion.&lt;/p&gt;
1970
1971 &lt;p&gt;After doing this, I booted a Debian CD in rescue mode in KVM with
1972 the new disk image attached, installed grub-pc and linux-image-686 and
1973 set up grub to boot from the disk image. After this, the KVM machines
1974 seem to work just fine.&lt;/p&gt;
1975 </description>
1976 </item>
1977
1978 <item>
1979 <title>Lenny-&gt;Squeeze upgrades, apt vs aptitude with the Gnome and KDE desktop</title>
1980 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__apt_vs_aptitude_with_the_Gnome_and_KDE_desktop.html</link>
1981 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__apt_vs_aptitude_with_the_Gnome_and_KDE_desktop.html</guid>
1982 <pubDate>Sat, 20 Nov 2010 22:50:00 +0100</pubDate>
1983 <description>&lt;p&gt;I&#39;m still running upgrade testing of the
1984 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/~pere/debian-upgrade-testing/&quot;&gt;Lenny
1985 Gnome and KDE Desktop&lt;/a&gt;, but have not had time to spend on reporting the
1986 status. Here is a short update based on a test I ran 20101118.&lt;/p&gt;
1987
1988 &lt;p&gt;I still do not know what a correct migration should look like, so I
1989 report any differences between apt and aptitude and hope someone else
1990 can see if anything should be changed.&lt;/p&gt;
1991
1992 &lt;p&gt;This is for Gnome:&lt;/p&gt;
1993
1994 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, missing with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
1995
1996 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
1997 apache2.2-bin aptdaemon at-spi baobab binfmt-support
1998 browser-plugin-gnash cheese-common cli-common cpp-4.3 cups-pk-helper
1999 dmz-cursor-theme empathy empathy-common finger
2000 freedesktop-sound-theme freeglut3 gconf-defaults-service gdm-themes
2001 gedit-plugins geoclue geoclue-hostip geoclue-localnet geoclue-manual
2002 geoclue-yahoo gnash gnash-common gnome gnome-backgrounds
2003 gnome-cards-data gnome-codec-install gnome-core
2004 gnome-desktop-environment gnome-disk-utility gnome-screenshot
2005 gnome-search-tool gnome-session-canberra gnome-spell
2006 gnome-system-log gnome-themes-extras gnome-themes-more
2007 gnome-user-share gs-common gstreamer0.10-fluendo-mp3
2008 gstreamer0.10-tools gtk2-engines gtk2-engines-pixbuf
2009 gtk2-engines-smooth hal-info hamster-applet libapache2-mod-dnssd
2010 libapr1 libaprutil1 libaprutil1-dbd-sqlite3 libaprutil1-ldap
2011 libart2.0-cil libatspi1.0-0 libboost-date-time1.42.0
2012 libboost-python1.42.0 libboost-thread1.42.0 libchamplain-0.4-0
2013 libchamplain-gtk-0.4-0 libcheese-gtk18 libclutter-gtk-0.10-0
2014 libcryptui0 libcupsys2 libdiscid0 libeel2-data libelf1 libepc-1.0-2
2015 libepc-common libepc-ui-1.0-2 libfreerdp-plugins-standard
2016 libfreerdp0 libgail-common libgconf2.0-cil libgdata-common libgdata7
2017 libgdl-1-common libgdu-gtk0 libgee2 libgeoclue0 libgexiv2-0 libgif4
2018 libglade2.0-cil libglib2.0-cil libgmime2.4-cil libgnome-vfs2.0-cil
2019 libgnome2.24-cil libgnomepanel2.24-cil libgnomeprint2.2-data
2020 libgnomeprintui2.2-common libgnomevfs2-bin libgpod-common libgpod4
2021 libgtk2.0-cil libgtkglext1 libgtksourceview-common
2022 libgtksourceview2.0-common libmono-addins-gui0.2-cil
2023 libmono-addins0.2-cil libmono-cairo2.0-cil libmono-corlib2.0-cil
2024 libmono-i18n-west2.0-cil libmono-posix2.0-cil
2025 libmono-security2.0-cil libmono-sharpzip2.84-cil
2026 libmono-system2.0-cil libmtp8 libmusicbrainz3-6
2027 libndesk-dbus-glib1.0-cil libndesk-dbus1.0-cil libopal3.6.8
2028 libpolkit-gtk-1-0 libpt-1.10.10-plugins-alsa
2029 libpt-1.10.10-plugins-v4l libpt2.6.7 libpython2.6 librpm1 librpmio1
2030 libsdl1.2debian libservlet2.4-java libsrtp0 libssh-4
2031 libtelepathy-farsight0 libtelepathy-glib0 libtidy-0.99-0
2032 libxalan2-java libxerces2-java media-player-info mesa-utils
2033 mono-2.0-gac mono-gac mono-runtime nautilus-sendto
2034 nautilus-sendto-empathy openoffice.org-writer2latex
2035 openssl-blacklist p7zip p7zip-full pkg-config python-4suite-xml
2036 python-aptdaemon python-aptdaemon-gtk python-axiom
2037 python-beautifulsoup python-bugbuddy python-clientform
2038 python-coherence python-configobj python-crypto python-cupshelpers
2039 python-cupsutils python-eggtrayicon python-elementtree
2040 python-epsilon python-evolution python-feedparser python-gdata
2041 python-gdbm python-gst0.10 python-gtkglext1 python-gtkmozembed
2042 python-gtksourceview2 python-httplib2 python-louie python-mako
2043 python-markupsafe python-mechanize python-nevow python-notify
2044 python-opengl python-openssl python-pam python-pkg-resources
2045 python-pyasn1 python-pysqlite2 python-rdflib python-serial
2046 python-tagpy python-twisted-bin python-twisted-conch
2047 python-twisted-core python-twisted-web python-utidylib python-webkit
2048 python-xdg python-zope.interface remmina remmina-plugin-data
2049 remmina-plugin-rdp remmina-plugin-vnc rhythmbox-plugin-cdrecorder
2050 rhythmbox-plugins rpm-common rpm2cpio seahorse-plugins shotwell
2051 software-center svgalibg1 system-config-printer-udev
2052 telepathy-gabble telepathy-mission-control-5 telepathy-salut tomboy
2053 totem totem-coherence totem-mozilla totem-plugins
2054 transmission-common xdg-user-dirs xdg-user-dirs-gtk xserver-xephyr
2055 zip
2056 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2057
2058 Installed using apt-get, removed with aptitude
2059
2060 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2061 arj bluez-utils cheese dhcdbd djvulibre-desktop ekiga eog
2062 epiphany-extensions epiphany-gecko evolution-exchange
2063 fast-user-switch-applet file-roller gcalctool gconf-editor gdm gedit
2064 gedit-common gnome-app-install gnome-games gnome-games-data
2065 gnome-nettool gnome-system-tools gnome-themes gnome-utils
2066 gnome-vfs-obexftp gnome-volume-manager gnuchess gucharmap
2067 guile-1.8-libs hal libavahi-compat-libdnssd1 libavahi-core5
2068 libavahi-ui0 libbind9-50 libbluetooth2 libcamel1.2-11 libcdio7
2069 libcucul0 libcurl3 libdirectfb-1.0-0 libdmx1 libdvdread3
2070 libedata-cal1.2-6 libedataserver1.2-9 libeel2-2.20 libepc-1.0-1
2071 libepc-ui-1.0-1 libexchange-storage1.2-3 libfaad0 libgadu3
2072 libgalago3 libgd2-noxpm libgda3-3 libgda3-common libggz2 libggzcore9
2073 libggzmod4 libgksu1.2-0 libgksuui1.0-1 libgmyth0 libgnome-desktop-2
2074 libgnome-pilot2 libgnomecups1.0-1 libgnomeprint2.2-0
2075 libgnomeprintui2.2-0 libgpod3 libgraphviz4 libgtk-vnc-1.0-0
2076 libgtkhtml2-0 libgtksourceview1.0-0 libgtksourceview2.0-0
2077 libgucharmap6 libhesiod0 libicu38 libisccc50 libisccfg50 libiw29
2078 libjaxp1.3-java-gcj libkpathsea4 liblircclient0 libltdl3 liblwres50
2079 libmagick++10 libmagick10 libmalaga7 libmozjs1d libmpfr1ldbl libmtp7
2080 libmysqlclient15off libnautilus-burn4 libneon27 libnm-glib0
2081 libnm-util0 libopal-2.2 libosp5 libparted1.8-10 libpisock9
2082 libpisync1 libpoppler-glib3 libpoppler3 libpt-1.10.10 libraw1394-8
2083 libsdl1.2debian-alsa libsensors3 libsexy2 libsmbios2 libsoup2.2-8
2084 libspeexdsp1 libssh2-1 libsuitesparse-3.1.0 libsvga1
2085 libswfdec-0.6-90 libtalloc1 libtotem-plparser10 libtrackerclient0
2086 libvoikko1 libxalan2-java-gcj libxerces2-java-gcj libxklavier12
2087 libxtrap6 libxxf86misc1 libzephyr3 mysql-common rhythmbox seahorse
2088 sound-juicer swfdec-gnome system-config-printer totem-common
2089 totem-gstreamer transmission-gtk vinagre vino w3c-dtd-xhtml wodim
2090 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2091
2092 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, missing with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2093
2094 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2095 gstreamer0.10-gnomevfs
2096 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2097
2098 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, removed with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2099
2100 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2101 [nothing]
2102 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2103
2104 &lt;p&gt;This is for KDE:&lt;/p&gt;
2105
2106 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, missing with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
2107
2108 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2109 autopoint bomber bovo cantor cantor-backend-kalgebra cpp-4.3 dcoprss
2110 edict espeak espeak-data eyesapplet fifteenapplet finger gettext
2111 ghostscript-x git gnome-audio gnugo granatier gs-common
2112 gstreamer0.10-pulseaudio indi kaddressbook-plugins kalgebra
2113 kalzium-data kanjidic kapman kate-plugins kblocks kbreakout kbstate
2114 kde-icons-mono kdeaccessibility kdeaddons-kfile-plugins
2115 kdeadmin-kfile-plugins kdeartwork-misc kdeartwork-theme-window
2116 kdeedu kdeedu-data kdeedu-kvtml-data kdegames kdegames-card-data
2117 kdegames-mahjongg-data kdegraphics-kfile-plugins kdelirc
2118 kdemultimedia-kfile-plugins kdenetwork-kfile-plugins
2119 kdepim-kfile-plugins kdepim-kio-plugins kdessh kdetoys kdewebdev
2120 kdiamond kdnssd kfilereplace kfourinline kgeography-data kigo
2121 killbots kiriki klettres-data kmoon kmrml knewsticker-scripts
2122 kollision kpf krosspython ksirk ksmserver ksquares kstars-data
2123 ksudoku kubrick kweather libasound2-plugins libboost-python1.42.0
2124 libcfitsio3 libconvert-binhex-perl libcrypt-ssleay-perl libdb4.6++
2125 libdjvulibre-text libdotconf1.0 liberror-perl libespeak1
2126 libfinance-quote-perl libgail-common libgsl0ldbl libhtml-parser-perl
2127 libhtml-tableextract-perl libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-tree-perl
2128 libio-stringy-perl libkdeedu4 libkdegames5 libkiten4 libkpathsea5
2129 libkrossui4 libmailtools-perl libmime-tools-perl
2130 libnews-nntpclient-perl libopenbabel3 libportaudio2 libpulse-browse0
2131 libservlet2.4-java libspeechd2 libtiff-tools libtimedate-perl
2132 libunistring0 liburi-perl libwww-perl libxalan2-java libxerces2-java
2133 lirc luatex marble networkstatus noatun-plugins
2134 openoffice.org-writer2latex palapeli palapeli-data parley
2135 parley-data poster psutils pulseaudio pulseaudio-esound-compat
2136 pulseaudio-module-x11 pulseaudio-utils quanta-data rocs rsync
2137 speech-dispatcher step svgalibg1 texlive-binaries texlive-luatex
2138 ttf-sazanami-gothic
2139 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2140
2141 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, removed with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
2142
2143 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2144 amor artsbuilder atlantik atlantikdesigner blinken bluez-utils cvs
2145 dhcdbd djvulibre-desktop imlib-base imlib11 kalzium kanagram kandy
2146 kasteroids katomic kbackgammon kbattleship kblackbox kbounce kbruch
2147 kcron kdat kdemultimedia-kappfinder-data kdeprint kdict kdvi kedit
2148 keduca kenolaba kfax kfaxview kfouleggs kgeography kghostview
2149 kgoldrunner khangman khexedit kiconedit kig kimagemapeditor
2150 kitchensync kiten kjumpingcube klatin klettres klickety klines
2151 klinkstatus kmag kmahjongg kmailcvt kmenuedit kmid kmilo kmines
2152 kmousetool kmouth kmplot knetwalk kodo kolf kommander konquest kooka
2153 kpager kpat kpdf kpercentage kpilot kpoker kpovmodeler krec
2154 kregexpeditor kreversi ksame ksayit kshisen ksig ksim ksirc ksirtet
2155 ksmiletris ksnake ksokoban kspaceduel kstars ksvg ksysv kteatime
2156 ktip ktnef ktouch ktron kttsd ktuberling kturtle ktux kuickshow
2157 kverbos kview kviewshell kvoctrain kwifimanager kwin kwin4 kwordquiz
2158 kworldclock kxsldbg libakode2 libarts1-akode libarts1-audiofile
2159 libarts1-mpeglib libarts1-xine libavahi-compat-libdnssd1
2160 libavahi-core5 libavc1394-0 libbind9-50 libbluetooth2
2161 libboost-python1.34.1 libcucul0 libcurl3 libcvsservice0
2162 libdirectfb-1.0-0 libdjvulibre21 libdvdread3 libfaad0 libfreebob0
2163 libgd2-noxpm libgraphviz4 libgsmme1c2a libgtkhtml2-0 libicu38
2164 libiec61883-0 libindex0 libisccc50 libisccfg50 libiw29
2165 libjaxp1.3-java-gcj libk3b3 libkcal2b libkcddb1 libkdeedu3
2166 libkdegames1 libkdepim1a libkgantt0 libkleopatra1 libkmime2
2167 libkpathsea4 libkpimexchange1 libkpimidentities1 libkscan1
2168 libksieve0 libktnef1 liblockdev1 libltdl3 liblwres50 libmagick10
2169 libmimelib1c2a libmodplug0c2 libmozjs1d libmpcdec3 libmpfr1ldbl
2170 libneon27 libnm-util0 libopensync0 libpisock9 libpoppler-glib3
2171 libpoppler-qt2 libpoppler3 libraw1394-8 librss1 libsensors3
2172 libsmbios2 libssh2-1 libsuitesparse-3.1.0 libswfdec-0.6-90
2173 libtalloc1 libxalan2-java-gcj libxerces2-java-gcj libxtrap6 lskat
2174 mpeglib network-manager-kde noatun pmount tex-common texlive-base
2175 texlive-common texlive-doc-base texlive-fonts-recommended tidy
2176 ttf-dustin ttf-kochi-gothic ttf-sjfonts
2177 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2178
2179 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, missing with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2180
2181 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2182 dolphin kde-core kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-window-manager
2183 kdeartwork kdebase kdebase-apps kdebase-workspace
2184 kdebase-workspace-bin kdebase-workspace-data kdeutils kscreensaver
2185 kscreensaver-xsavers libgle3 libkonq5 libkonq5-templates libnetpbm10
2186 netpbm plasma-widget-folderview plasma-widget-networkmanagement
2187 xscreensaver-data-extra xscreensaver-gl xscreensaver-gl-extra
2188 xscreensaver-screensaver-bsod
2189 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2190
2191 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, removed with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2192
2193 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2194 kdebase-bin konq-plugins konqueror
2195 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2196 </description>
2197 </item>
2198
2199 <item>
2200 <title>Gnash buildbot slave and Debian kfreebsd</title>
2201 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Gnash_buildbot_slave_and_Debian_kfreebsd.html</link>
2202 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Gnash_buildbot_slave_and_Debian_kfreebsd.html</guid>
2203 <pubDate>Sat, 20 Nov 2010 07:20:00 +0100</pubDate>
2204 <description>&lt;p&gt;Answering
2205 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.listware.net/201011/gnash-dev/67431-gnash-dev-buildbot-looking-for-slaves.html&quot;&gt;the
2206 call from the Gnash project&lt;/a&gt; for
2207 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gnashdev.org:8010&quot;&gt;buildbot&lt;/a&gt; slaves to test the
2208 current source, I have set up a virtual KVM machine on the Debian
2209 Edu/Skolelinux virtualization host to test the git source on
2210 Debian/Squeeze. I hope this can help the developers in getting new
2211 releases out more often.&lt;/p&gt;
2212
2213 &lt;p&gt;As the developers want less main-stream build platforms tested to,
2214 I have considered setting up a &lt;a
2215 href=&quot;http://www.debian.org/ports/kfreebsd-gnu/&quot;&gt;Debian/kfreebsd&lt;/a&gt;
2216 machine as well. I have also considered using the kfreebsd
2217 architecture in Debian as a file server in NUUG to get access to the 5
2218 TB zfs volume we currently use to store DV video. Because of this, I
2219 finally got around to do a test installation of Debian/Squeeze with
2220 kfreebsd. Installation went fairly smooth, thought I noticed some
2221 visual glitches in the cdebconf dialogs (black cursor left on the
2222 screen at random locations). Have not gotten very far with the
2223 testing. Noticed cfdisk did not work, but fdisk did so it was not a
2224 fatal problem. Have to spend some more time on it to see if it is
2225 useful as a file server for NUUG. Will try to find time to set up a
2226 gnash buildbot slave on the Debian Edu/Skolelinux this weekend.&lt;/p&gt;
2227 </description>
2228 </item>
2229
2230 <item>
2231 <title>Debian in 3D</title>
2232 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_in_3D.html</link>
2233 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_in_3D.html</guid>
2234 <pubDate>Tue, 9 Nov 2010 16:10:00 +0100</pubDate>
2235 <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://thingiverse-production.s3.amazonaws.com/renders/23/e0/c4/f9/2b/debswagtdose_preview_medium.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
2236
2237 &lt;p&gt;3D printing is just great. I just came across this Debian logo in
2238 3D linked in from
2239 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blog.thingiverse.com/2010/11/09/participatory-branding/&quot;&gt;the
2240 thingiverse blog&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
2241 </description>
2242 </item>
2243
2244 <item>
2245 <title>Software updates 2010-10-24</title>
2246 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Software_updates_2010_10_24.html</link>
2247 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Software_updates_2010_10_24.html</guid>
2248 <pubDate>Sun, 24 Oct 2010 22:45:00 +0200</pubDate>
2249 <description>&lt;p&gt;Some updates.&lt;/p&gt;
2250
2251 &lt;p&gt;My &lt;a href=&quot;http://pledgebank.com/gnash-avm2&quot;&gt;gnash pledge&lt;/a&gt; to
2252 raise money for the project is going well. The lower limit of 10
2253 signers was reached in 24 hours, and so far 13 people have signed it.
2254 More signers and more funding is most welcome, and I am really curious
2255 how far we can get before the time limit of December 24 is reached.
2256 :)&lt;/p&gt;
2257
2258 &lt;p&gt;On the #gnash IRC channel on irc.freenode.net, I was just tipped
2259 about what appear to be a great code coverage tool capable of
2260 generating code coverage stats without any changes to the source code.
2261 It is called
2262 &lt;a href=&quot;http://simonkagstrom.github.com/kcov/index.html&quot;&gt;kcov&lt;/a&gt;,
2263 and can be used using &lt;tt&gt;kcov &amp;lt;directory&amp;gt; &amp;lt;binary&amp;gt;&lt;/tt&gt;.
2264 It is missing in Debian, but the git source built just fine in Squeeze
2265 after I installed libelf-dev, libdwarf-dev, pkg-config and
2266 libglib2.0-dev. Failed to build in Lenny, but suspect that is
2267 solvable. I hope kcov make it into Debian soon.&lt;/p&gt;
2268
2269 &lt;p&gt;Finally found time to wrap up the release notes for &lt;a
2270 href=&quot;http://lists.debian.org/debian-edu-announce/2010/10/msg00002.html&quot;&gt;a
2271 new alpha release of Debian Edu&lt;/a&gt;, and just published the second
2272 alpha test release of the Squeeze based Debian Edu /
2273 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Skolelinux&lt;/a&gt;
2274 release. Give it a try if you need a complete linux solution for your
2275 school, including central infrastructure server, workstations, thin
2276 client servers and diskless workstations. A nice touch added
2277 yesterday is RDP support on the thin client servers, for windows
2278 clients to get a Linux desktop on request.&lt;/p&gt;
2279 </description>
2280 </item>
2281
2282 <item>
2283 <title>Some notes on Flash in Debian and Debian Edu</title>
2284 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Some_notes_on_Flash_in_Debian_and_Debian_Edu.html</link>
2285 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Some_notes_on_Flash_in_Debian_and_Debian_Edu.html</guid>
2286 <pubDate>Sat, 4 Sep 2010 10:10:00 +0200</pubDate>
2287 <description>&lt;p&gt;In the &lt;a href=&quot;http://popcon.debian.org/unknown/by_vote&quot;&gt;Debian
2288 popularity-contest numbers&lt;/a&gt;, the adobe-flashplugin package the
2289 second most popular used package that is missing in Debian. The sixth
2290 most popular is flashplayer-mozilla. This is a clear indication that
2291 working flash is important for Debian users. Around 10 percent of the
2292 users submitting data to popcon.debian.org have this package
2293 installed.&lt;/p&gt;
2294
2295 &lt;p&gt;In the report written by Lars Risan in August 2008
2296&lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.skolelinux.no/Dokumentasjon/Rapporter?action=AttachFile&amp;do=view&amp;target=Skolelinux_i_bruk_rapport_1.0.pdf&quot;&gt;Skolelinux
2297 i bruk – Rapport for Hurum kommune, Universitetet i Agder og
2298 stiftelsen SLX Debian Labs&lt;/a&gt;»), one of the most important problems
2299 schools experienced with &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Debian
2300 Edu/Skolelinux&lt;/a&gt; was the lack of working Flash. A lot of educational
2301 web sites require Flash to work, and lacking working Flash support in
2302 the web browser and the problems with installing it was perceived as a
2303 good reason to stay with Windows.&lt;/p&gt;
2304
2305 &lt;p&gt;I once saw a funny and sad comment in a web forum, where Linux was
2306 said to be the retarded cousin that did not really understand
2307 everything you told him but could work fairly well. This was a
2308 comment regarding the problems Linux have with proprietary formats and
2309 non-standard web pages, and is sad because it exposes a fairly common
2310 understanding of whose fault it is if web pages that only work in for
2311 example Internet Explorer 6 fail to work on Firefox, and funny because
2312 it explain very well how annoying it is for users when Linux
2313 distributions do not work with the documents they receive or the web
2314 pages they want to visit.&lt;/p&gt;
2315
2316 &lt;p&gt;This is part of the reason why I believe it is important for Debian
2317 and Debian Edu to have a well working Flash implementation in the
2318 distribution, to get at least popular sites as Youtube and Google
2319 Video to working out of the box. For Squeeze, Debian have the chance
2320 to include the latest version of Gnash that will make this happen, as
2321 the new release 0.8.8 was published a few weeks ago and is resting in
2322 unstable. The new version work with more sites that version 0.8.7.
2323 The Gnash maintainers have asked for a freeze exception, but the
2324 release team have not had time to reply to it yet. I hope they agree
2325 with me that Flash is important for the Debian desktop users, and thus
2326 accept the new package into Squeeze.&lt;/p&gt;
2327 </description>
2328 </item>
2329
2330 <item>
2331 <title>Circular package dependencies harms apt recovery</title>
2332 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Circular_package_dependencies_harms_apt_recovery.html</link>
2333 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Circular_package_dependencies_harms_apt_recovery.html</guid>
2334 <pubDate>Tue, 27 Jul 2010 23:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
2335 <description>&lt;p&gt;I discovered this while doing
2336 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatic_upgrade_testing_from_Lenny_to_Squeeze.html&quot;&gt;automated
2337 testing of upgrades from Debian Lenny to Squeeze&lt;/a&gt;. A few packages
2338 in Debian still got circular dependencies, and it is often claimed
2339 that apt and aptitude should be able to handle this just fine, but
2340 some times these dependency loops causes apt to fail.&lt;/p&gt;
2341
2342 &lt;p&gt;An example is from todays
2343 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/~pere/debian-upgrade-testing//test-20100727-lenny-squeeze-kde-aptitude.txt&quot;&gt;upgrade
2344 of KDE using aptitude&lt;/a&gt;. In it, a bug in kdebase-workspace-data
2345 causes perl-modules to fail to upgrade. The cause is simple. If a
2346 package fail to unpack, then only part of packages with the circular
2347 dependency might end up being unpacked when unpacking aborts, and the
2348 ones already unpacked will fail to configure in the recovery phase
2349 because its dependencies are unavailable.&lt;/p&gt;
2350
2351 &lt;p&gt;In this log, the problem manifest itself with this error:&lt;/p&gt;
2352
2353 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2354 dpkg: dependency problems prevent configuration of perl-modules:
2355 perl-modules depends on perl (&gt;= 5.10.1-1); however:
2356 Version of perl on system is 5.10.0-19lenny2.
2357 dpkg: error processing perl-modules (--configure):
2358 dependency problems - leaving unconfigured
2359 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2360
2361 &lt;p&gt;The perl/perl-modules circular dependency is already
2362 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/527917&quot;&gt;reported as a bug&lt;/a&gt;, and will
2363 hopefully be solved as soon as possible, but it is not the only one,
2364 and each one of these loops in the dependency tree can cause similar
2365 failures. Of course, they only occur when there are bugs in other
2366 packages causing the unpacking to fail, but it is rather nasty when
2367 the failure of one package causes the problem to become worse because
2368 of dependency loops.&lt;/p&gt;
2369
2370 &lt;p&gt;Thanks to
2371 &lt;a href=&quot;http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2010/06/msg00116.html&quot;&gt;the
2372 tireless effort by Bill Allombert&lt;/a&gt;, the number of circular
2373 dependencies
2374 &lt;a href=&quot;http://debian.semistable.com/debgraph.out.html&quot;&gt;left in Debian
2375 is dropping&lt;/a&gt;, and perhaps it will reach zero one day. :)&lt;/p&gt;
2376
2377 &lt;p&gt;Todays testing also exposed a bug in
2378 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/590605&quot;&gt;update-notifier&lt;/a&gt; and
2379 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/590604&quot;&gt;different behaviour&lt;/a&gt; between
2380 apt-get and aptitude, the latter possibly caused by some circular
2381 dependency. Reported both to BTS to try to get someone to look at
2382 it.&lt;/p&gt;
2383 </description>
2384 </item>
2385
2386 <item>
2387 <title>What are they searching for - PowerDNS and ISC DHCP in LDAP</title>
2388 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_are_they_searching_for___PowerDNS_and_ISC_DHCP_in_LDAP.html</link>
2389 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/What_are_they_searching_for___PowerDNS_and_ISC_DHCP_in_LDAP.html</guid>
2390 <pubDate>Sat, 17 Jul 2010 21:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
2391 <description>&lt;p&gt;This is a
2392 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Time_for_new__LDAP_schemas_replacing_RFC_2307_.html&quot;&gt;followup&lt;/a&gt;
2393 on my
2394 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Idea_for_a_change_to_LDAP_schemas_allowing_DNS_and_DHCP_info_to_be_combined_into_one_object.html&quot;&gt;previous
2395 work&lt;/a&gt; on
2396 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Combining_PowerDNS_and_ISC_DHCP_LDAP_objects.html&quot;&gt;merging
2397 all&lt;/a&gt; the computer related LDAP objects in Debian Edu.&lt;/p&gt;
2398
2399 &lt;p&gt;As a step to try to see if it possible to merge the DNS and DHCP
2400 LDAP objects, I have had a look at how the packages pdns-backend-ldap
2401 and dhcp3-server-ldap in Debian use the LDAP server. The two
2402 implementations are quite different in how they use LDAP.&lt;/p&gt;
2403
2404 To get this information, I started slapd with debugging enabled and
2405 dumped the debug output to a file to get the LDAP searches performed
2406 on a Debian Edu main-server. Here is a summary.
2407
2408 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;powerdns&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
2409
2410 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.linuxnetworks.de/doc/index.php/PowerDNS_LDAP_Backend&quot;&gt;Clues
2411 on how to&lt;/a&gt; set up PowerDNS to use a LDAP backend is available on
2412 the web.
2413
2414 &lt;p&gt;PowerDNS have two modes of operation using LDAP as its backend.
2415 One &quot;strict&quot; mode where the forward and reverse DNS lookups are done
2416 using the same LDAP objects, and a &quot;tree&quot; mode where the forward and
2417 reverse entries are in two different subtrees in LDAP with a structure
2418 based on the DNS names, as in tjener.intern and
2419 2.2.0.10.in-addr.arpa.&lt;/p&gt;
2420
2421 &lt;p&gt;In tree mode, the server is set up to use a LDAP subtree as its
2422 base, and uses a &quot;base&quot; scoped search for the DNS name by adding
2423 &quot;dc=tjener,dc=intern,&quot; to the base with a filter for
2424 &quot;(associateddomain=tjener.intern)&quot; for the forward entry and
2425 &quot;dc=2,dc=2,dc=0,dc=10,dc=in-addr,dc=arpa,&quot; with a filter for
2426 &quot;(associateddomain=2.2.0.10.in-addr.arpa)&quot; for the reverse entry. For
2427 forward entries, it is looking for attributes named dnsttl, arecord,
2428 nsrecord, cnamerecord, soarecord, ptrrecord, hinforecord, mxrecord,
2429 txtrecord, rprecord, afsdbrecord, keyrecord, aaaarecord, locrecord,
2430 srvrecord, naptrrecord, kxrecord, certrecord, dsrecord, sshfprecord,
2431 ipseckeyrecord, rrsigrecord, nsecrecord, dnskeyrecord, dhcidrecord,
2432 spfrecord and modifytimestamp. For reverse entries it is looking for
2433 the attributes dnsttl, arecord, nsrecord, cnamerecord, soarecord,
2434 ptrrecord, hinforecord, mxrecord, txtrecord, rprecord, aaaarecord,
2435 locrecord, srvrecord, naptrrecord and modifytimestamp. The equivalent
2436 ldapsearch commands could look like this:&lt;/p&gt;
2437
2438 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2439 ldapsearch -h ldap \
2440 -b dc=tjener,dc=intern,ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no \
2441 -s base -x &#39;(associateddomain=tjener.intern)&#39; dNSTTL aRecord nSRecord \
2442 cNAMERecord sOARecord pTRRecord hInfoRecord mXRecord tXTRecord \
2443 rPRecord aFSDBRecord KeyRecord aAAARecord lOCRecord sRVRecord \
2444 nAPTRRecord kXRecord certRecord dSRecord sSHFPRecord iPSecKeyRecord \
2445 rRSIGRecord nSECRecord dNSKeyRecord dHCIDRecord sPFRecord modifyTimestamp
2446
2447 ldapsearch -h ldap \
2448 -b dc=2,dc=2,dc=0,dc=10,dc=in-addr,dc=arpa,ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no \
2449 -s base -x &#39;(associateddomain=2.2.0.10.in-addr.arpa)&#39;
2450 dnsttl, arecord, nsrecord, cnamerecord soarecord ptrrecord \
2451 hinforecord mxrecord txtrecord rprecord aaaarecord locrecord \
2452 srvrecord naptrrecord modifytimestamp
2453 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2454
2455 &lt;p&gt;In Debian Edu/Lenny, the PowerDNS tree mode is used with
2456 ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no as the base, and these are two
2457 example LDAP objects used there. In addition to these objects, the
2458 parent objects all th way up to ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2459 also exist.&lt;/p&gt;
2460
2461 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2462 dn: dc=tjener,dc=intern,ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2463 objectclass: top
2464 objectclass: dnsdomain
2465 objectclass: domainrelatedobject
2466 dc: tjener
2467 arecord: 10.0.2.2
2468 associateddomain: tjener.intern
2469
2470 dn: dc=2,dc=2,dc=0,dc=10,dc=in-addr,dc=arpa,ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2471 objectclass: top
2472 objectclass: dnsdomain2
2473 objectclass: domainrelatedobject
2474 dc: 2
2475 ptrrecord: tjener.intern
2476 associateddomain: 2.2.0.10.in-addr.arpa
2477 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2478
2479 &lt;p&gt;In strict mode, the server behaves differently. When looking for
2480 forward DNS entries, it is doing a &quot;subtree&quot; scoped search with the
2481 same base as in the tree mode for a object with filter
2482 &quot;(associateddomain=tjener.intern)&quot; and requests the attributes dnsttl,
2483 arecord, nsrecord, cnamerecord, soarecord, ptrrecord, hinforecord,
2484 mxrecord, txtrecord, rprecord, aaaarecord, locrecord, srvrecord,
2485 naptrrecord and modifytimestamp. For reverse entires it also do a
2486 subtree scoped search but this time the filter is &quot;(arecord=10.0.2.2)&quot;
2487 and the requested attributes are associateddomain, dnsttl and
2488 modifytimestamp. In short, in strict mode the objects with ptrrecord
2489 go away, and the arecord attribute in the forward object is used
2490 instead.&lt;/p&gt;
2491
2492 &lt;p&gt;The forward and reverse searches can be simulated using ldapsearch
2493 like this:&lt;/p&gt;
2494
2495 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2496 ldapsearch -h ldap -b ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no -s sub -x \
2497 &#39;(associateddomain=tjener.intern)&#39; dNSTTL aRecord nSRecord \
2498 cNAMERecord sOARecord pTRRecord hInfoRecord mXRecord tXTRecord \
2499 rPRecord aFSDBRecord KeyRecord aAAARecord lOCRecord sRVRecord \
2500 nAPTRRecord kXRecord certRecord dSRecord sSHFPRecord iPSecKeyRecord \
2501 rRSIGRecord nSECRecord dNSKeyRecord dHCIDRecord sPFRecord modifyTimestamp
2502
2503 ldapsearch -h ldap -b ou=hosts,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no -s sub -x \
2504 &#39;(arecord=10.0.2.2)&#39; associateddomain dnsttl modifytimestamp
2505 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2506
2507 &lt;p&gt;In addition to the forward and reverse searches , there is also a
2508 search for SOA records, which behave similar to the forward and
2509 reverse lookups.&lt;/p&gt;
2510
2511 &lt;p&gt;A thing to note with the PowerDNS behaviour is that it do not
2512 specify any objectclass names, and instead look for the attributes it
2513 need to generate a DNS reply. This make it able to work with any
2514 objectclass that provide the needed attributes.&lt;/p&gt;
2515
2516 &lt;p&gt;The attributes are normally provided in the cosine (RFC 1274) and
2517 dnsdomain2 schemas. The latter is used for reverse entries like
2518 ptrrecord and recent DNS additions like aaaarecord and srvrecord.&lt;/p&gt;
2519
2520 &lt;p&gt;In Debian Edu, we have created DNS objects using the object classes
2521 dcobject (for dc), dnsdomain or dnsdomain2 (structural, for the DNS
2522 attributes) and domainrelatedobject (for associatedDomain). The use
2523 of structural object classes make it impossible to combine these
2524 classes with the object classes used by DHCP.&lt;/p&gt;
2525
2526 &lt;p&gt;There are other schemas that could be used too, for example the
2527 dnszone structural object class used by Gosa and bind-sdb for the DNS
2528 attributes combined with the domainrelatedobject object class, but in
2529 this case some unused attributes would have to be included as well
2530 (zonename and relativedomainname).&lt;/p&gt;
2531
2532 &lt;p&gt;My proposal for Debian Edu would be to switch PowerDNS to strict
2533 mode and not use any of the existing objectclasses (dnsdomain,
2534 dnsdomain2 and dnszone) when one want to combine the DNS information
2535 with DHCP information, and instead create a auxiliary object class
2536 defined something like this (using the attributes defined for
2537 dnsdomain and dnsdomain2 or dnszone):&lt;/p&gt;
2538
2539 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2540 objectclass ( some-oid NAME &#39;dnsDomainAux&#39;
2541 SUP top
2542 AUXILIARY
2543 MAY ( ARecord $ MDRecord $ MXRecord $ NSRecord $ SOARecord $ CNAMERecord $
2544 DNSTTL $ DNSClass $ PTRRecord $ HINFORecord $ MINFORecord $
2545 TXTRecord $ SIGRecord $ KEYRecord $ AAAARecord $ LOCRecord $
2546 NXTRecord $ SRVRecord $ NAPTRRecord $ KXRecord $ CERTRecord $
2547 A6Record $ DNAMERecord
2548 ))
2549 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2550
2551 &lt;p&gt;This will allow any object to become a DNS entry when combined with
2552 the domainrelatedobject object class, and allow any entity to include
2553 all the attributes PowerDNS wants. I&#39;ve sent an email to the PowerDNS
2554 developers asking for their view on this schema and if they are
2555 interested in providing such schema with PowerDNS, and I hope my
2556 message will be accepted into their mailing list soon.&lt;/p&gt;
2557
2558 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;ISC dhcp&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
2559
2560 &lt;p&gt;The DHCP server searches for specific objectclass and requests all
2561 the object attributes, and then uses the attributes it want. This
2562 make it harder to figure out exactly what attributes are used, but
2563 thanks to the working example in Debian Edu I can at least get an idea
2564 what is needed without having to read the source code.&lt;/p&gt;
2565
2566 &lt;p&gt;In the DHCP server configuration, the LDAP base to use and the
2567 search filter to use to locate the correct dhcpServer entity is
2568 stored. These are the relevant entries from
2569 /etc/dhcp3/dhcpd.conf:&lt;/p&gt;
2570
2571 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2572 ldap-base-dn &quot;dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no&quot;;
2573 ldap-dhcp-server-cn &quot;dhcp&quot;;
2574 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2575
2576 &lt;p&gt;The DHCP server uses this information to nest all the DHCP
2577 configuration it need. The cn &quot;dhcp&quot; is located using the given LDAP
2578 base and the filter &quot;(&amp;(objectClass=dhcpServer)(cn=dhcp))&quot;. The
2579 search result is this entry:&lt;/p&gt;
2580
2581 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2582 dn: cn=dhcp,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2583 cn: dhcp
2584 objectClass: top
2585 objectClass: dhcpServer
2586 dhcpServiceDN: cn=DHCP Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2587 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2588
2589 &lt;p&gt;The content of the dhcpServiceDN attribute is next used to locate the
2590 subtree with DHCP configuration. The DHCP configuration subtree base
2591 is located using a base scope search with base &quot;cn=DHCP
2592 Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no&quot; and filter
2593 &quot;(&amp;(objectClass=dhcpService)(|(dhcpPrimaryDN=cn=dhcp,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no)(dhcpSecondaryDN=cn=dhcp,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no)))&quot;.
2594 The search result is this entry:&lt;/p&gt;
2595
2596 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2597 dn: cn=DHCP Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2598 cn: DHCP Config
2599 objectClass: top
2600 objectClass: dhcpService
2601 objectClass: dhcpOptions
2602 dhcpPrimaryDN: cn=dhcp, dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2603 dhcpStatements: ddns-update-style none
2604 dhcpStatements: authoritative
2605 dhcpOption: smtp-server code 69 = array of ip-address
2606 dhcpOption: www-server code 72 = array of ip-address
2607 dhcpOption: wpad-url code 252 = text
2608 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2609
2610 &lt;p&gt;Next, the entire subtree is processed, one level at the time. When
2611 all the DHCP configuration is loaded, it is ready to receive requests.
2612 The subtree in Debian Edu contain objects with object classes
2613 top/dhcpService/dhcpOptions, top/dhcpSharedNetwork/dhcpOptions,
2614 top/dhcpSubnet, top/dhcpGroup and top/dhcpHost. These provide options
2615 and information about netmasks, dynamic range etc. Leaving out the
2616 details here because it is not relevant for the focus of my
2617 investigation, which is to see if it is possible to merge dns and dhcp
2618 related computer objects.&lt;/p&gt;
2619
2620 &lt;p&gt;When a DHCP request come in, LDAP is searched for the MAC address
2621 of the client (00:00:00:00:00:00 in this example), using a subtree
2622 scoped search with &quot;cn=DHCP Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no&quot; as
2623 the base and &quot;(&amp;(objectClass=dhcpHost)(dhcpHWAddress=ethernet
2624 00:00:00:00:00:00))&quot; as the filter. This is what a host object look
2625 like:&lt;/p&gt;
2626
2627 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2628 dn: cn=hostname,cn=group1,cn=THINCLIENTS,cn=DHCP Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2629 cn: hostname
2630 objectClass: top
2631 objectClass: dhcpHost
2632 dhcpHWAddress: ethernet 00:00:00:00:00:00
2633 dhcpStatements: fixed-address hostname
2634 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2635
2636 &lt;p&gt;There is less flexiblity in the way LDAP searches are done here.
2637 The object classes need to have fixed names, and the configuration
2638 need to be stored in a fairly specific LDAP structure. On the
2639 positive side, the invidiual dhcpHost entires can be anywhere without
2640 the DN pointed to by the dhcpServer entries. The latter should make
2641 it possible to group all host entries in a subtree next to the
2642 configuration entries, and this subtree can also be shared with the
2643 DNS server if the schema proposed above is combined with the dhcpHost
2644 structural object class.
2645
2646 &lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Conclusion&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
2647
2648 &lt;p&gt;The PowerDNS implementation seem to be very flexible when it come
2649 to which LDAP schemas to use. While its &quot;tree&quot; mode is rigid when it
2650 come to the the LDAP structure, the &quot;strict&quot; mode is very flexible,
2651 allowing DNS objects to be stored anywhere under the base cn specified
2652 in the configuration.&lt;/p&gt;
2653
2654 &lt;p&gt;The DHCP implementation on the other hand is very inflexible, both
2655 regarding which LDAP schemas to use and which LDAP structure to use.
2656 I guess one could implement ones own schema, as long as the
2657 objectclasses and attributes have the names used, but this do not
2658 really help when the DHCP subtree need to have a fairly fixed
2659 structure.&lt;/p&gt;
2660
2661 &lt;p&gt;Based on the observed behaviour, I suspect a LDAP structure like
2662 this might work for Debian Edu:&lt;/p&gt;
2663
2664 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2665 ou=services
2666 cn=machine-info (dhcpService) - dhcpServiceDN points here
2667 cn=dhcp (dhcpServer)
2668 cn=dhcp-internal (dhcpSharedNetwork/dhcpOptions)
2669 cn=10.0.2.0 (dhcpSubnet)
2670 cn=group1 (dhcpGroup/dhcpOptions)
2671 cn=dhcp-thinclients (dhcpSharedNetwork/dhcpOptions)
2672 cn=192.168.0.0 (dhcpSubnet)
2673 cn=group1 (dhcpGroup/dhcpOptions)
2674 ou=machines - PowerDNS base points here
2675 cn=hostname (dhcpHost/domainrelatedobject/dnsDomainAux)
2676 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2677
2678 &lt;P&gt;This is not tested yet. If the DHCP server require the dhcpHost
2679 entries to be in the dhcpGroup subtrees, the entries can be stored
2680 there instead of a common machines subtree, and the PowerDNS base
2681 would have to be moved one level up to the machine-info subtree.&lt;/p&gt;
2682
2683 &lt;p&gt;The combined object under the machines subtree would look something
2684 like this:&lt;/p&gt;
2685
2686 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2687 dn: dc=hostname,ou=machines,cn=machine-info,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2688 dc: hostname
2689 objectClass: top
2690 objectClass: dhcpHost
2691 objectclass: domainrelatedobject
2692 objectclass: dnsDomainAux
2693 associateddomain: hostname.intern
2694 arecord: 10.11.12.13
2695 dhcpHWAddress: ethernet 00:00:00:00:00:00
2696 dhcpStatements: fixed-address hostname.intern
2697 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2698
2699 &lt;/p&gt;One could even add the LTSP configuration associated with a given
2700 machine, as long as the required attributes are available in a
2701 auxiliary object class.&lt;/p&gt;
2702 </description>
2703 </item>
2704
2705 <item>
2706 <title>Combining PowerDNS and ISC DHCP LDAP objects</title>
2707 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Combining_PowerDNS_and_ISC_DHCP_LDAP_objects.html</link>
2708 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Combining_PowerDNS_and_ISC_DHCP_LDAP_objects.html</guid>
2709 <pubDate>Wed, 14 Jul 2010 23:45:00 +0200</pubDate>
2710 <description>&lt;p&gt;For a while now, I have wanted to find a way to change the DNS and
2711 DHCP services in Debian Edu to use the same LDAP objects for a given
2712 computer, to avoid the possibility of having a inconsistent state for
2713 a computer in LDAP (as in DHCP but no DNS entry or the other way
2714 around) and make it easier to add computers to LDAP.&lt;/p&gt;
2715
2716 &lt;p&gt;I&#39;ve looked at how powerdns and dhcpd is using LDAP, and using this
2717 information finally found a solution that seem to work.&lt;/p&gt;
2718
2719 &lt;p&gt;The old setup required three LDAP objects for a given computer.
2720 One forward DNS entry, one reverse DNS entry and one DHCP entry. If
2721 we switch powerdns to use its strict LDAP method (ldap-method=strict
2722 in pdns-debian-edu.conf), the forward and reverse DNS entries are
2723 merged into one while making it impossible to transfer the reverse map
2724 to a slave DNS server.&lt;/p&gt;
2725
2726 &lt;p&gt;If we also replace the object class used to get the DNS related
2727 attributes to one allowing these attributes to be combined with the
2728 dhcphost object class, we can merge the DNS and DHCP entries into one.
2729 I&#39;ve written such object class in the dnsdomainaux.schema file (need
2730 proper OIDs, but that is a minor issue), and tested the setup. It
2731 seem to work.&lt;/p&gt;
2732
2733 &lt;p&gt;With this test setup in place, we can get away with one LDAP object
2734 for both DNS and DHCP, and even the LTSP configuration I suggested in
2735 an earlier email. The combined LDAP object will look something like
2736 this:&lt;/p&gt;
2737
2738 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2739 dn: cn=hostname,cn=group1,cn=THINCLIENTS,cn=DHCP Config,dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no
2740 cn: hostname
2741 objectClass: dhcphost
2742 objectclass: domainrelatedobject
2743 objectclass: dnsdomainaux
2744 associateddomain: hostname.intern
2745 arecord: 10.11.12.13
2746 dhcphwaddress: ethernet 00:00:00:00:00:00
2747 dhcpstatements: fixed-address hostname
2748 ldapconfigsound: Y
2749 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2750
2751 &lt;p&gt;The DNS server uses the associateddomain and arecord entries, while
2752 the DHCP server uses the dhcphwaddress and dhcpstatements entries
2753 before asking DNS to resolve the fixed-adddress. LTSP will use
2754 dhcphwaddress or associateddomain and the ldapconfig* attributes.&lt;/p&gt;
2755
2756 &lt;p&gt;I am not yet sure if I can get the DHCP server to look for its
2757 dhcphost in a different location, to allow us to put the objects
2758 outside the &quot;DHCP Config&quot; subtree, but hope to figure out a way to do
2759 that. If I can&#39;t figure out a way to do that, we can still get rid of
2760 the hosts subtree and move all its content into the DHCP Config tree
2761 (which probably should be renamed to be more related to the new
2762 content. I suspect cn=dnsdhcp,ou=services or something like that
2763 might be a good place to put it.&lt;/p&gt;
2764
2765 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help out with implementing this for Debian Edu,
2766 please contact us on debian-edu@lists.debian.org.&lt;/p&gt;
2767 </description>
2768 </item>
2769
2770 <item>
2771 <title>Idea for storing LTSP configuration in LDAP</title>
2772 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Idea_for_storing_LTSP_configuration_in_LDAP.html</link>
2773 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Idea_for_storing_LTSP_configuration_in_LDAP.html</guid>
2774 <pubDate>Sun, 11 Jul 2010 22:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
2775 <description>&lt;p&gt;Vagrant mentioned on IRC today that ltsp_config now support
2776 sourcing files from /usr/share/ltsp/ltsp_config.d/ on the thin
2777 clients, and that this can be used to fetch configuration from LDAP if
2778 Debian Edu choose to store configuration there.&lt;/p&gt;
2779
2780 &lt;p&gt;Armed with this information, I got inspired and wrote a test module
2781 to get configuration from LDAP. The idea is to look up the MAC
2782 address of the client in LDAP, and look for attributes on the form
2783 ltspconfigsetting=value, and use this to export SETTING=value to the
2784 LTSP clients.&lt;/p&gt;
2785
2786 &lt;p&gt;The goal is to be able to store the LTSP configuration attributes
2787 in a &quot;computer&quot; LDAP object used by both DNS and DHCP, and thus
2788 allowing us to store all information about a computer in one place.&lt;/p&gt;
2789
2790 &lt;p&gt;This is a untested draft implementation, and I welcome feedback on
2791 this approach. A real LDAP schema for the ltspClientAux objectclass
2792 need to be written. Comments, suggestions, etc?&lt;/p&gt;
2793
2794 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
2795 # Store in /opt/ltsp/$arch/usr/share/ltsp/ltsp_config.d/ldap-config
2796 #
2797 # Fetch LTSP client settings from LDAP based on MAC address
2798 #
2799 # Uses ethernet address as stored in the dhcpHost objectclass using
2800 # the dhcpHWAddress attribute or ethernet address stored in the
2801 # ieee802Device objectclass with the macAddress attribute.
2802 #
2803 # This module is written to be schema agnostic, and only depend on the
2804 # existence of attribute names.
2805 #
2806 # The LTSP configuration variables are saved directly using a
2807 # ltspConfig prefix and uppercasing the rest of the attribute name.
2808 # To set the SERVER variable, set the ltspConfigServer attribute.
2809 #
2810 # Some LDAP schema should be created with all the relevant
2811 # configuration settings. Something like this should work:
2812 #
2813 # objectclass ( 1.1.2.2 NAME &#39;ltspClientAux&#39;
2814 # SUP top
2815 # AUXILIARY
2816 # MAY ( ltspConfigServer $ ltsConfigSound $ ... )
2817
2818 LDAPSERVER=$(debian-edu-ldapserver)
2819 if [ &quot;$LDAPSERVER&quot; ] ; then
2820 LDAPBASE=$(debian-edu-ldapserver -b)
2821 for MAC in $(LANG=C ifconfig |grep -i hwaddr| awk &#39;{print $5}&#39;|sort -u) ; do
2822 filter=&quot;(|(dhcpHWAddress=ethernet $MAC)(macAddress=$MAC))&quot;
2823 ldapsearch -h &quot;$LDAPSERVER&quot; -b &quot;$LDAPBASE&quot; -v -x &quot;$filter&quot; | \
2824 grep &#39;^ltspConfig&#39; | while read attr value ; do
2825 # Remove prefix and convert to upper case
2826 attr=$(echo $attr | sed &#39;s/^ltspConfig//i&#39; | tr a-z A-Z)
2827 # bass value on to clients
2828 eval &quot;$attr=$value; export $attr&quot;
2829 done
2830 done
2831 fi
2832 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2833
2834 &lt;p&gt;I&#39;m not sure this shell construction will work, because I suspect
2835 the while block might end up in a subshell causing the variables set
2836 there to not show up in ltsp-config, but if that is the case I am sure
2837 the code can be restructured to make sure the variables are passed on.
2838 I expect that can be solved with some testing. :)&lt;/p&gt;
2839
2840 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help out with implementing this for Debian Edu,
2841 please contact us on debian-edu@lists.debian.org.&lt;/p&gt;
2842
2843 &lt;p&gt;Update 2010-07-17: I am aware of another effort to store LTSP
2844 configuration in LDAP that was created around year 2000 by
2845 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.pcxperience.com/thinclient/documentation/ldap.html&quot;&gt;PC
2846 Xperience, Inc., 2000&lt;/a&gt;. I found its
2847 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.redhat.com/alikins/ltsp/ldap/&quot;&gt;files&lt;/a&gt; on a
2848 personal home page over at redhat.com.&lt;/p&gt;
2849 </description>
2850 </item>
2851
2852 <item>
2853 <title>jXplorer, a very nice LDAP GUI</title>
2854 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/jXplorer__a_very_nice_LDAP_GUI.html</link>
2855 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/jXplorer__a_very_nice_LDAP_GUI.html</guid>
2856 <pubDate>Fri, 9 Jul 2010 12:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
2857 <description>&lt;p&gt;Since
2858 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/LUMA__a_very_nice_LDAP_GUI.html&quot;&gt;my
2859 last post&lt;/a&gt; about available LDAP tools in Debian, I was told about a
2860 LDAP GUI that is even better than luma. The java application
2861 &lt;a href=&quot;http://jxplorer.org/&quot;&gt;jXplorer&lt;/a&gt; is claimed to be capable of
2862 moving LDAP objects and subtrees using drag-and-drop, and can
2863 authenticate using Kerberos. I have only tested the Kerberos
2864 authentication, but do not have a LDAP setup allowing me to rewrite
2865 LDAP with my test user yet. It is
2866 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/j/jxplorer.html&quot;&gt;available in
2867 Debian&lt;/a&gt; testing and unstable at the moment. The only problem I
2868 have with it is how it handle errors. If something go wrong, its
2869 non-intuitive behaviour require me to go through some query work list
2870 and remove the failing query. Nothing big, but very annoying.&lt;/p&gt;
2871 </description>
2872 </item>
2873
2874 <item>
2875 <title>Lenny-&gt;Squeeze upgrades, apt vs aptitude with the Gnome desktop</title>
2876 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__apt_vs_aptitude_with_the_Gnome_desktop.html</link>
2877 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__apt_vs_aptitude_with_the_Gnome_desktop.html</guid>
2878 <pubDate>Sat, 3 Jul 2010 23:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
2879 <description>&lt;p&gt;Here is a short update on my &lt;a
2880 href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/~pere/debian-upgrade-testing/&quot;&gt;my
2881 Debian Lenny-&gt;Squeeze upgrade testing&lt;/a&gt;. Here is a summary of the
2882 difference for Gnome when it is upgraded by apt-get and aptitude. I&#39;m
2883 not reporting the status for KDE, because the upgrade crashes when
2884 aptitude try because of missing conflicts
2885 (&lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/584861&quot;&gt;#584861&lt;/a&gt; and
2886 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/585716&quot;&gt;#585716&lt;/a&gt;).&lt;/p&gt;
2887
2888 &lt;p&gt;At the end of the upgrade test script, dpkg -l is executed to get a
2889 complete list of the installed packages. Based on this I see these
2890 differences when I did a test run today. As usual, I do not really
2891 know what the correct set of packages would be, but thought it best to
2892 publish the difference.&lt;/p&gt;
2893
2894 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, missing with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
2895
2896 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2897 at-spi cpp-4.3 finger gnome-spell gstreamer0.10-gnomevfs
2898 libatspi1.0-0 libcupsys2 libeel2-data libgail-common libgdl-1-common
2899 libgnomeprint2.2-data libgnomeprintui2.2-common libgnomevfs2-bin
2900 libgtksourceview-common libpt-1.10.10-plugins-alsa
2901 libpt-1.10.10-plugins-v4l libservlet2.4-java libxalan2-java
2902 libxerces2-java openoffice.org-writer2latex openssl-blacklist p7zip
2903 python-4suite-xml python-eggtrayicon python-gtkhtml2
2904 python-gtkmozembed svgalibg1 xserver-xephyr zip
2905 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2906
2907 &lt;p&gt;Installed using apt-get, removed with aptitude&lt;/p&gt;
2908
2909 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2910 bluez-utils dhcdbd djvulibre-desktop epiphany-gecko
2911 gnome-app-install gnome-mount gnome-vfs-obexftp gnome-volume-manager
2912 libao2 libavahi-compat-libdnssd1 libavahi-core5 libbind9-50
2913 libbluetooth2 libcamel1.2-11 libcdio7 libcucul0 libcurl3
2914 libdirectfb-1.0-0 libdvdread3 libedata-cal1.2-6 libedataserver1.2-9
2915 libeel2-2.20 libepc-1.0-1 libepc-ui-1.0-1 libexchange-storage1.2-3
2916 libfaad0 libgd2-noxpm libgda3-3 libgda3-common libggz2 libggzcore9
2917 libggzmod4 libgksu1.2-0 libgksuui1.0-1 libgmyth0 libgnome-desktop-2
2918 libgnome-pilot2 libgnomecups1.0-1 libgnomeprint2.2-0
2919 libgnomeprintui2.2-0 libgpod3 libgraphviz4 libgtkhtml2-0
2920 libgtksourceview1.0-0 libgucharmap6 libhesiod0 libicu38 libisccc50
2921 libisccfg50 libiw29 libkpathsea4 libltdl3 liblwres50 libmagick++10
2922 libmagick10 libmalaga7 libmtp7 libmysqlclient15off libnautilus-burn4
2923 libneon27 libnm-glib0 libnm-util0 libopal-2.2 libosp5
2924 libparted1.8-10 libpisock9 libpisync1 libpoppler-glib3 libpoppler3
2925 libpt-1.10.10 libraw1394-8 libsensors3 libsmbios2 libsoup2.2-8
2926 libssh2-1 libsuitesparse-3.1.0 libswfdec-0.6-90 libtalloc1
2927 libtotem-plparser10 libtrackerclient0 libvoikko1 libxalan2-java-gcj
2928 libxerces2-java-gcj libxklavier12 libxtrap6 libxxf86misc1 libzephyr3
2929 mysql-common swfdec-gnome totem-gstreamer wodim
2930 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2931
2932 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, missing with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2933
2934 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2935 gnome gnome-desktop-environment hamster-applet python-gnomeapplet
2936 python-gnomekeyring python-wnck rhythmbox-plugins xorg
2937 xserver-xorg-input-all xserver-xorg-input-evdev
2938 xserver-xorg-input-kbd xserver-xorg-input-mouse
2939 xserver-xorg-input-synaptics xserver-xorg-video-all
2940 xserver-xorg-video-apm xserver-xorg-video-ark xserver-xorg-video-ati
2941 xserver-xorg-video-chips xserver-xorg-video-cirrus
2942 xserver-xorg-video-dummy xserver-xorg-video-fbdev
2943 xserver-xorg-video-glint xserver-xorg-video-i128
2944 xserver-xorg-video-i740 xserver-xorg-video-mach64
2945 xserver-xorg-video-mga xserver-xorg-video-neomagic
2946 xserver-xorg-video-nouveau xserver-xorg-video-nv
2947 xserver-xorg-video-r128 xserver-xorg-video-radeon
2948 xserver-xorg-video-radeonhd xserver-xorg-video-rendition
2949 xserver-xorg-video-s3 xserver-xorg-video-s3virge
2950 xserver-xorg-video-savage xserver-xorg-video-siliconmotion
2951 xserver-xorg-video-sis xserver-xorg-video-sisusb
2952 xserver-xorg-video-tdfx xserver-xorg-video-tga
2953 xserver-xorg-video-trident xserver-xorg-video-tseng
2954 xserver-xorg-video-vesa xserver-xorg-video-vmware
2955 xserver-xorg-video-voodoo
2956 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2957
2958 &lt;p&gt;Installed using aptitude, removed with apt-get&lt;/p&gt;
2959
2960 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;
2961 deskbar-applet xserver-xorg xserver-xorg-core
2962 xserver-xorg-input-wacom xserver-xorg-video-intel
2963 xserver-xorg-video-openchrome
2964 &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2965
2966 &lt;p&gt;I was told on IRC that the xorg-xserver package was
2967 &lt;a href=&quot;http://git.debian.org/?p=pkg-xorg/xserver/xorg-server.git;a=commit;h=9c8080d06c457932d3bfec021c69ac000aa60120&quot;&gt;changed
2968 in git&lt;/a&gt; today to try to get apt-get to not remove xorg completely.
2969 No idea when it hits Squeeze, but when it does I hope it will reduce
2970 the difference somewhat.
2971 </description>
2972 </item>
2973
2974 <item>
2975 <title>LUMA, a very nice LDAP GUI</title>
2976 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/LUMA__a_very_nice_LDAP_GUI.html</link>
2977 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/LUMA__a_very_nice_LDAP_GUI.html</guid>
2978 <pubDate>Mon, 28 Jun 2010 00:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
2979 <description>&lt;p&gt;The last few days I have been looking into the status of the LDAP
2980 directory in Debian Edu, and in the process I started to miss a GUI
2981 tool to browse the LDAP tree. The only one I was able to find in
2982 Debian/Squeeze and Lenny is
2983 &lt;a href=&quot;http://luma.sourceforge.net/&quot;&gt;LUMA&lt;/a&gt;, which has proved to
2984 be a great tool to get a overview of the current LDAP directory
2985 populated by default in Skolelinux. Thanks to it, I have been able to
2986 find empty and obsolete subtrees, misplaced objects and duplicate
2987 objects. It will be installed by default in Debian/Squeeze. If you
2988 are working with LDAP, give it a go. :)&lt;/p&gt;
2989
2990 &lt;p&gt;I did notice one problem with it I have not had time to report to
2991 the BTS yet. There is no .desktop file in the package, so the tool do
2992 not show up in the Gnome and KDE menus, but only deep down in in the
2993 Debian submenu in KDE. I hope that can be fixed before Squeeze is
2994 released.&lt;/p&gt;
2995
2996 &lt;p&gt;I have not yet been able to get it to modify the tree yet. I would
2997 like to move objects and remove subtrees directly in the GUI, but have
2998 not found a way to do that with LUMA yet. So in the mean time, I use
2999 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.lichteblau.com/ldapvi/&quot;&gt;ldapvi&lt;/a&gt; for that.&lt;/p&gt;
3000
3001 &lt;p&gt;If you have tips on other GUI tools for LDAP that might be useful
3002 in Debian Edu, please contact us on debian-edu@lists.debian.org.&lt;/p&gt;
3003
3004 &lt;p&gt;Update 2010-06-29: Ross Reedstrom tipped us about the
3005 &lt;a href=&quot;http://packages.qa.debian.org/g/gq.html&quot;&gt;gq&lt;/a&gt; package as a
3006 useful GUI alternative. It seem like a good tool, but is unmaintained
3007 in Debian and got a RC bug keeping it out of Squeeze. Unless that
3008 changes, it will not be an option for Debian Edu based on Squeeze.&lt;/p&gt;
3009 </description>
3010 </item>
3011
3012 <item>
3013 <title>Idea for a change to LDAP schemas allowing DNS and DHCP info to be combined into one object</title>
3014 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Idea_for_a_change_to_LDAP_schemas_allowing_DNS_and_DHCP_info_to_be_combined_into_one_object.html</link>
3015 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Idea_for_a_change_to_LDAP_schemas_allowing_DNS_and_DHCP_info_to_be_combined_into_one_object.html</guid>
3016 <pubDate>Thu, 24 Jun 2010 00:35:00 +0200</pubDate>
3017 <description>&lt;p&gt;A while back, I
3018 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Time_for_new__LDAP_schemas_replacing_RFC_2307_.html&quot;&gt;complained
3019 about the fact&lt;/a&gt; that it is not possible with the provided schemas
3020 for storing DNS and DHCP information in LDAP to combine the two sets
3021 of information into one LDAP object representing a computer.&lt;/p&gt;
3022
3023 &lt;p&gt;In the mean time, I discovered that a simple fix would be to make
3024 the dhcpHost object class auxiliary, to allow it to be combined with
3025 the dNSDomain object class, and thus forming one object for one
3026 computer when storing both DHCP and DNS information in LDAP.&lt;/p&gt;
3027
3028 &lt;p&gt;If I understand this correctly, it is not safe to do this change
3029 without also changing the assigned number for the object class, and I
3030 do not know enough about LDAP schema design to do that properly for
3031 Debian Edu.&lt;/p&gt;
3032
3033 &lt;p&gt;Anyway, for future reference, this is how I believe we could change
3034 the
3035 &lt;a href=&quot;http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dhc-ldap-schema-00&quot;&gt;DHCP
3036 schema&lt;/a&gt; to solve at least part of the problem with the LDAP schemas
3037 available today from IETF.&lt;/p&gt;
3038
3039 &lt;pre&gt;
3040 --- dhcp.schema (revision 65192)
3041 +++ dhcp.schema (working copy)
3042 @@ -376,7 +376,7 @@
3043 objectclass ( 2.16.840.1.113719.1.203.6.6
3044 NAME &#39;dhcpHost&#39;
3045 DESC &#39;This represents information about a particular client&#39;
3046 - SUP top
3047 + SUP top AUXILIARY
3048 MUST cn
3049 MAY (dhcpLeaseDN $ dhcpHWAddress $ dhcpOptionsDN $ dhcpStatements $ dhcpComments $ dhcpOption)
3050 X-NDS_CONTAINMENT (&#39;dhcpService&#39; &#39;dhcpSubnet&#39; &#39;dhcpGroup&#39;) )
3051 &lt;/pre&gt;
3052
3053 &lt;p&gt;I very much welcome clues on how to do this properly for Debian
3054 Edu/Squeeze. We provide the DHCP schema in our debian-edu-config
3055 package, and should thus be free to rewrite it as we see fit.&lt;/p&gt;
3056
3057 &lt;p&gt;If you want to help out with implementing this for Debian Edu,
3058 please contact us on debian-edu@lists.debian.org.&lt;/p&gt;
3059 </description>
3060 </item>
3061
3062 <item>
3063 <title>Calling tasksel like the installer, while still getting useful output</title>
3064 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Calling_tasksel_like_the_installer__while_still_getting_useful_output.html</link>
3065 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Calling_tasksel_like_the_installer__while_still_getting_useful_output.html</guid>
3066 <pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 2010 14:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
3067 <description>&lt;p&gt;A few times I have had the need to simulate the way tasksel
3068 installs packages during the normal debian-installer run. Until now,
3069 I have ended up letting tasksel do the work, with the annoying problem
3070 of not getting any feedback at all when something fails (like a
3071 conffile question from dpkg or a download that fails), using code like
3072 this:
3073
3074 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3075 export DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
3076 tasksel --new-install
3077 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3078
3079 This would invoke tasksel, let its automatic task selection pick the
3080 tasks to install, and continue to install the requested tasks without
3081 any output what so ever.
3082
3083 Recently I revisited this problem while working on the automatic
3084 package upgrade testing, because tasksel would some times hang without
3085 any useful feedback, and I want to see what is going on when it
3086 happen. Then it occured to me, I can parse the output from tasksel
3087 when asked to run in test mode, and use that aptitude command line
3088 printed by tasksel then to simulate the tasksel run. I ended up using
3089 code like this:
3090
3091 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3092 export DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
3093 cmd=&quot;$(in_target tasksel -t --new-install | sed &#39;s/debconf-apt-progress -- //&#39;)&quot;
3094 $cmd
3095 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3096
3097 &lt;p&gt;The content of $cmd is typically something like &quot;&lt;tt&gt;aptitude -q
3098 --without-recommends -o APT::Install-Recommends=no -y install
3099 ~t^desktop$ ~t^gnome-desktop$ ~t^laptop$ ~pstandard ~prequired
3100 ~pimportant&lt;/tt&gt;&quot;, which will install the gnome desktop task, the
3101 laptop task and all packages with priority standard , required and
3102 important, just like tasksel would have done it during
3103 installation.&lt;/p&gt;
3104
3105 &lt;p&gt;A better approach is probably to extend tasksel to be able to
3106 install packages without using debconf-apt-progress, for use cases
3107 like this.&lt;/p&gt;
3108 </description>
3109 </item>
3110
3111 <item>
3112 <title>Lenny-&gt;Squeeze upgrades, removals by apt and aptitude</title>
3113 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__removals_by_apt_and_aptitude.html</link>
3114 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Lenny__Squeeze_upgrades__removals_by_apt_and_aptitude.html</guid>
3115 <pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2010 09:05:00 +0200</pubDate>
3116 <description>&lt;p&gt;My
3117 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatic_upgrade_testing_from_Lenny_to_Squeeze.html&quot;&gt;testing
3118 of Debian upgrades&lt;/a&gt; from Lenny to Squeeze continues, and I&#39;ve
3119 finally made the upgrade logs available from
3120 &lt;a href=&quot;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/debian-upgrade-testing/&quot;&gt;http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/debian-upgrade-testing/&lt;/a&gt;.
3121 I am now testing dist-upgrade of Gnome and KDE in a chroot using both
3122 apt and aptitude, and found their differences interesting. This time
3123 I will only focus on their removal plans.&lt;/p&gt;
3124
3125 &lt;p&gt;After installing a Gnome desktop and the laptop task, apt-get wants
3126 to remove 72 packages when dist-upgrading from Lenny to Squeeze. The
3127 surprising part is that it want to remove xorg and all
3128 xserver-xorg-video* drivers. Clearly not a good choice, but I am not
3129 sure why. When asking aptitude to do the same, it want to remove 129
3130 packages, but most of them are library packages I suspect are no
3131 longer needed. Both of them want to remove bluetooth packages, which
3132 I do not know. Perhaps these bluetooth packages are obsolete?&lt;/p&gt;
3133
3134 &lt;p&gt;For KDE, apt-get want to remove 82 packages, among them kdebase
3135 which seem like a bad idea and xorg the same way as with Gnome. Asking
3136 aptitude for the same, it wants to remove 192 packages, none which are
3137 too surprising.&lt;/p&gt;
3138
3139 &lt;p&gt;I guess the removal of xorg during upgrades should be investigated
3140 and avoided, and perhaps others as well. Here are the complete list
3141 of planned removals. The complete logs is available from the URL
3142 above. Note if you want to repeat these tests, that the upgrade test
3143 for kde+apt-get hung in the tasksel setup because of dpkg asking
3144 conffile questions. No idea why. I worked around it by using
3145 &#39;&lt;tt&gt;echo &gt;&gt; /proc/&lt;em&gt;pidofdpkg&lt;/em&gt;/fd/0&lt;/tt&gt;&#39; to tell dpkg to
3146 continue.&lt;/p&gt;
3147
3148 &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;apt-get gnome 72&lt;/b&gt;
3149 &lt;br&gt;bluez-gnome cupsddk-drivers deskbar-applet gnome
3150 gnome-desktop-environment gnome-network-admin gtkhtml3.14
3151 iceweasel-gnome-support libavcodec51 libdatrie0 libgdl-1-0
3152 libgnomekbd2 libgnomekbdui2 libmetacity0 libslab0 libxcb-xlib0
3153 nautilus-cd-burner python-gnome2-desktop python-gnome2-extras
3154 serpentine swfdec-mozilla update-manager xorg xserver-xorg
3155 xserver-xorg-core xserver-xorg-input-all xserver-xorg-input-evdev
3156 xserver-xorg-input-kbd xserver-xorg-input-mouse
3157 xserver-xorg-input-synaptics xserver-xorg-input-wacom
3158 xserver-xorg-video-all xserver-xorg-video-apm xserver-xorg-video-ark
3159 xserver-xorg-video-ati xserver-xorg-video-chips
3160 xserver-xorg-video-cirrus xserver-xorg-video-cyrix
3161 xserver-xorg-video-dummy xserver-xorg-video-fbdev
3162 xserver-xorg-video-glint xserver-xorg-video-i128
3163 xserver-xorg-video-i740 xserver-xorg-video-imstt
3164 xserver-xorg-video-intel xserver-xorg-video-mach64
3165 xserver-xorg-video-mga xserver-xorg-video-neomagic
3166 xserver-xorg-video-nsc xserver-xorg-video-nv
3167 xserver-xorg-video-openchrome xserver-xorg-video-r128
3168 xserver-xorg-video-radeon xserver-xorg-video-radeonhd
3169 xserver-xorg-video-rendition xserver-xorg-video-s3
3170 xserver-xorg-video-s3virge xserver-xorg-video-savage
3171 xserver-xorg-video-siliconmotion xserver-xorg-video-sis
3172 xserver-xorg-video-sisusb xserver-xorg-video-tdfx
3173 xserver-xorg-video-tga xserver-xorg-video-trident
3174 xserver-xorg-video-tseng xserver-xorg-video-v4l
3175 xserver-xorg-video-vesa xserver-xorg-video-vga
3176 xserver-xorg-video-vmware xserver-xorg-video-voodoo xulrunner-1.9
3177 xulrunner-1.9-gnome-support&lt;/p&gt;
3178
3179 &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;aptitude gnome 129&lt;/b&gt;
3180
3181 &lt;br&gt;bluez-gnome bluez-utils cpp-4.3 cupsddk-drivers dhcdbd
3182 djvulibre-desktop finger gnome-app-install gnome-mount
3183 gnome-network-admin gnome-spell gnome-vfs-obexftp
3184 gnome-volume-manager gstreamer0.10-gnomevfs gtkhtml3.14 libao2
3185 libavahi-compat-libdnssd1 libavahi-core5 libavcodec51 libbluetooth2
3186 libcamel1.2-11 libcdio7 libcucul0 libcupsys2 libcurl3 libdatrie0
3187 libdirectfb-1.0-0 libdvdread3 libedataserver1.2-9 libeel2-2.20
3188 libeel2-data libepc-1.0-1 libepc-ui-1.0-1 libfaad0 libgail-common
3189 libgd2-noxpm libgda3-3 libgda3-common libgdl-1-0 libgdl-1-common
3190 libggz2 libggzcore9 libggzmod4 libgksu1.2-0 libgksuui1.0-1 libgmyth0
3191 libgnomecups1.0-1 libgnomekbd2 libgnomekbdui2 libgnomeprint2.2-0
3192 libgnomeprint2.2-data libgnomeprintui2.2-0 libgnomeprintui2.2-common
3193 libgnomevfs2-bin libgpod3 libgraphviz4 libgtkhtml2-0
3194 libgtksourceview-common libgtksourceview1.0-0 libgucharmap6
3195 libhesiod0 libicu38 libiw29 libkpathsea4 libltdl3 libmagick++10
3196 libmagick10 libmalaga7 libmetacity0 libmtp7 libmysqlclient15off
3197 libnautilus-burn4 libneon27 libnm-glib0 libnm-util0 libopal-2.2
3198 libosp5 libparted1.8-10 libpoppler-glib3 libpoppler3 libpt-1.10.10
3199 libpt-1.10.10-plugins-alsa libpt-1.10.10-plugins-v4l libraw1394-8
3200 libsensors3 libslab0 libsmbios2 libsoup2.2-8 libssh2-1
3201 libsuitesparse-3.1.0 libswfdec-0.6-90 libtalloc1 libtotem-plparser10
3202 libtrackerclient0 libxalan2-java libxalan2-java-gcj libxcb-xlib0
3203 libxerces2-java libxerces2-java-gcj libxklavier12 libxtrap6
3204 libxxf86misc1 libzephyr3 mysql-common nautilus-cd-burner
3205 openoffice.org-writer2latex openssl-blacklist p7zip
3206 python-4suite-xml python-eggtrayicon python-gnome2-desktop
3207 python-gnome2-extras python-gtkhtml2 python-gtkmozembed
3208 python-numeric python-sexy serpentine svgalibg1 swfdec-gnome
3209 swfdec-mozilla totem-gstreamer update-manager wodim
3210 xserver-xorg-video-cyrix xserver-xorg-video-imstt
3211 xserver-xorg-video-nsc xserver-xorg-video-v4l xserver-xorg-video-vga
3212 zip&lt;/p&gt;
3213
3214 &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;apt-get kde 82&lt;/b&gt;
3215
3216 &lt;br&gt;cupsddk-drivers karm kaudiocreator kcoloredit kcontrol kde kde-core
3217 kdeaddons kdeartwork kdebase kdebase-bin kdebase-bin-kde3
3218 kdebase-kio-plugins kdesktop kdeutils khelpcenter kicker
3219 kicker-applets knewsticker kolourpaint konq-plugins konqueror korn
3220 kpersonalizer kscreensaver ksplash libavcodec51 libdatrie0 libkiten1
3221 libxcb-xlib0 quanta superkaramba texlive-base-bin xorg xserver-xorg
3222 xserver-xorg-core xserver-xorg-input-all xserver-xorg-input-evdev
3223 xserver-xorg-input-kbd xserver-xorg-input-mouse
3224 xserver-xorg-input-synaptics xserver-xorg-input-wacom
3225 xserver-xorg-video-all xserver-xorg-video-apm xserver-xorg-video-ark
3226 xserver-xorg-video-ati xserver-xorg-video-chips
3227 xserver-xorg-video-cirrus xserver-xorg-video-cyrix
3228 xserver-xorg-video-dummy xserver-xorg-video-fbdev
3229 xserver-xorg-video-glint xserver-xorg-video-i128
3230 xserver-xorg-video-i740 xserver-xorg-video-imstt
3231 xserver-xorg-video-intel xserver-xorg-video-mach64
3232 xserver-xorg-video-mga xserver-xorg-video-neomagic
3233 xserver-xorg-video-nsc xserver-xorg-video-nv
3234 xserver-xorg-video-openchrome xserver-xorg-video-r128
3235 xserver-xorg-video-radeon xserver-xorg-video-radeonhd
3236 xserver-xorg-video-rendition xserver-xorg-video-s3
3237 xserver-xorg-video-s3virge xserver-xorg-video-savage
3238 xserver-xorg-video-siliconmotion xserver-xorg-video-sis
3239 xserver-xorg-video-sisusb xserver-xorg-video-tdfx
3240 xserver-xorg-video-tga xserver-xorg-video-trident
3241 xserver-xorg-video-tseng xserver-xorg-video-v4l
3242 xserver-xorg-video-vesa xserver-xorg-video-vga
3243 xserver-xorg-video-vmware xserver-xorg-video-voodoo xulrunner-1.9&lt;/p&gt;
3244
3245 &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;aptitude kde 192&lt;/b&gt;
3246 &lt;br&gt;bluez-utils cpp-4.3 cupsddk-drivers cvs dcoprss dhcdbd
3247 djvulibre-desktop dosfstools eyesapplet fifteenapplet finger gettext
3248 ghostscript-x imlib-base imlib11 indi kandy karm kasteroids
3249 kaudiocreator kbackgammon kbstate kcoloredit kcontrol kcron kdat
3250 kdeadmin-kfile-plugins kdeartwork-misc kdeartwork-theme-window
3251 kdebase-bin-kde3 kdebase-kio-plugins kdeedu-data
3252 kdegraphics-kfile-plugins kdelirc kdemultimedia-kappfinder-data
3253 kdemultimedia-kfile-plugins kdenetwork-kfile-plugins
3254 kdepim-kfile-plugins kdepim-kio-plugins kdeprint kdesktop kdessh
3255 kdict kdnssd kdvi kedit keduca kenolaba kfax kfaxview kfouleggs
3256 kghostview khelpcenter khexedit kiconedit kitchensync klatin
3257 klickety kmailcvt kmenuedit kmid kmilo kmoon kmrml kodo kolourpaint
3258 kooka korn kpager kpdf kpercentage kpf kpilot kpoker kpovmodeler
3259 krec kregexpeditor ksayit ksim ksirc ksirtet ksmiletris ksmserver
3260 ksnake ksokoban ksplash ksvg ksysv ktip ktnef kuickshow kverbos
3261 kview kviewshell kvoctrain kwifimanager kwin kwin4 kworldclock
3262 kxsldbg libakode2 libao2 libarts1-akode libarts1-audiofile
3263 libarts1-mpeglib libarts1-xine libavahi-compat-libdnssd1
3264 libavahi-core5 libavc1394-0 libavcodec51 libbluetooth2
3265 libboost-python1.34.1 libcucul0 libcurl3 libcvsservice0 libdatrie0
3266 libdirectfb-1.0-0 libdjvulibre21 libdvdread3 libfaad0 libfreebob0
3267 libgail-common libgd2-noxpm libgraphviz4 libgsmme1c2a libgtkhtml2-0
3268 libicu38 libiec61883-0 libindex0 libiw29 libk3b3 libkcal2b libkcddb1
3269 libkdeedu3 libkdepim1a libkgantt0 libkiten1 libkleopatra1 libkmime2
3270 libkpathsea4 libkpimexchange1 libkpimidentities1 libkscan1
3271 libksieve0 libktnef1 liblockdev1 libltdl3 libmagick10 libmimelib1c2a
3272 libmozjs1d libmpcdec3 libneon27 libnm-util0 libopensync0 libpisock9
3273 libpoppler-glib3 libpoppler-qt2 libpoppler3 libraw1394-8 libsmbios2
3274 libssh2-1 libsuitesparse-3.1.0 libtalloc1 libtiff-tools
3275 libxalan2-java libxalan2-java-gcj libxcb-xlib0 libxerces2-java
3276 libxerces2-java-gcj libxtrap6 mpeglib networkstatus
3277 openoffice.org-writer2latex pmount poster psutils quanta quanta-data
3278 superkaramba svgalibg1 tex-common texlive-base texlive-base-bin
3279 texlive-common texlive-doc-base texlive-fonts-recommended
3280 xserver-xorg-video-cyrix xserver-xorg-video-imstt
3281 xserver-xorg-video-nsc xserver-xorg-video-v4l xserver-xorg-video-vga
3282 xulrunner-1.9&lt;/p&gt;
3283
3284 </description>
3285 </item>
3286
3287 <item>
3288 <title>Automatic upgrade testing from Lenny to Squeeze</title>
3289 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatic_upgrade_testing_from_Lenny_to_Squeeze.html</link>
3290 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Automatic_upgrade_testing_from_Lenny_to_Squeeze.html</guid>
3291 <pubDate>Fri, 11 Jun 2010 22:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
3292 <description>&lt;p&gt;The last few days I have done some upgrade testing in Debian, to
3293 see if the upgrade from Lenny to Squeeze will go smoothly. A few bugs
3294 have been discovered and reported in the process
3295 (&lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/585410&quot;&gt;#585410&lt;/a&gt; in nagios3-cgi,
3296 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/584879&quot;&gt;#584879&lt;/a&gt; already fixed in
3297 enscript and &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/584861&quot;&gt;#584861&lt;/a&gt; in
3298 kdebase-workspace-data), and to get a more regular testing going on, I
3299 am working on a script to automate the test.&lt;/p&gt;
3300
3301 &lt;p&gt;The idea is to create a Lenny chroot and use tasksel to install a
3302 Gnome or KDE desktop installation inside the chroot before upgrading
3303 it. To ensure no services are started in the chroot, a policy-rc.d
3304 script is inserted. To make sure tasksel believe it is to install a
3305 desktop on a laptop, the tasksel tests are replaced in the chroot
3306 (only acceptable because this is a throw-away chroot).&lt;/p&gt;
3307
3308 &lt;p&gt;A naive upgrade from Lenny to Squeeze using aptitude dist-upgrade
3309 currently always fail because udev refuses to upgrade with the kernel
3310 in Lenny, so to avoid that problem the file /etc/udev/kernel-upgrade
3311 is created. The bug report
3312 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/566000&quot;&gt;#566000&lt;/a&gt; make me suspect
3313 this problem do not trigger in a chroot, but I touch the file anyway
3314 to make sure the upgrade go well. Testing on virtual and real
3315 hardware have failed me because of udev so far, and creating this file
3316 do the trick in such settings anyway. This is a
3317 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/debian-26/failed-dist-upgrade-due-to-udev-config_sysfs_deprecated-nonsense-804130/&quot;&gt;known
3318 issue&lt;/a&gt; and the current udev behaviour is intended by the udev
3319 maintainer because he lack the resources to rewrite udev to keep
3320 working with old kernels or something like that. I really wish the
3321 udev upstream would keep udev backwards compatible, to avoid such
3322 upgrade problem, but given that they fail to do so, I guess
3323 documenting the way out of this mess is the best option we got for
3324 Debian Squeeze.&lt;/p&gt;
3325
3326 &lt;p&gt;Anyway, back to the task at hand, testing upgrades. This test
3327 script, which I call &lt;tt&gt;upgrade-test&lt;/tt&gt; for now, is doing the
3328 trick:&lt;/p&gt;
3329
3330 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3331 #!/bin/sh
3332 set -ex
3333
3334 if [ &quot;$1&quot; ] ; then
3335 desktop=$1
3336 else
3337 desktop=gnome
3338 fi
3339
3340 from=lenny
3341 to=squeeze
3342
3343 exec &amp;lt; /dev/null
3344 unset LANG
3345 mirror=http://ftp.skolelinux.org/debian
3346 tmpdir=chroot-$from-upgrade-$to-$desktop
3347 fuser -mv .
3348 debootstrap $from $tmpdir $mirror
3349 chroot $tmpdir aptitude update
3350 cat &gt; $tmpdir/usr/sbin/policy-rc.d &amp;lt;&amp;lt;EOF
3351 #!/bin/sh
3352 exit 101
3353 EOF
3354 chmod a+rx $tmpdir/usr/sbin/policy-rc.d
3355 exit_cleanup() {
3356 umount $tmpdir/proc
3357 }
3358 mount -t proc proc $tmpdir/proc
3359 # Make sure proc is unmounted also on failure
3360 trap exit_cleanup EXIT INT
3361
3362 chroot $tmpdir aptitude -y install debconf-utils
3363
3364 # Make sure tasksel autoselection trigger. It need the test scripts
3365 # to return the correct answers.
3366 echo tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect $desktop | \
3367 chroot $tmpdir debconf-set-selections
3368
3369 # Include the desktop and laptop task
3370 for test in desktop laptop ; do
3371 echo &gt; $tmpdir/usr/lib/tasksel/tests/$test &amp;lt;&amp;lt;EOF
3372 #!/bin/sh
3373 exit 2
3374 EOF
3375 chmod a+rx $tmpdir/usr/lib/tasksel/tests/$test
3376 done
3377
3378 DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
3379 DEBIAN_PRIORITY=critical
3380 export DEBIAN_FRONTEND DEBIAN_PRIORITY
3381 chroot $tmpdir tasksel --new-install
3382
3383 echo deb $mirror $to main &gt; $tmpdir/etc/apt/sources.list
3384 chroot $tmpdir aptitude update
3385 touch $tmpdir/etc/udev/kernel-upgrade
3386 chroot $tmpdir aptitude -y dist-upgrade
3387 fuser -mv
3388 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3389
3390 &lt;p&gt;I suspect it would be useful to test upgrades with both apt-get and
3391 with aptitude, but I have not had time to look at how they behave
3392 differently so far. I hope to get a cron job running to do the test
3393 regularly and post the result on the web. The Gnome upgrade currently
3394 work, while the KDE upgrade fail because of the bug in
3395 kdebase-workspace-data&lt;/p&gt;
3396
3397 &lt;p&gt;I am not quite sure what kind of extract from the huge upgrade logs
3398 (KDE 167 KiB, Gnome 516 KiB) it make sense to include in this blog
3399 post, so I will refrain from trying. I can report that for Gnome,
3400 aptitude report 760 packages upgraded, 448 newly installed, 129 to
3401 remove and 1 not upgraded and 1024MB need to be downloaded while for
3402 KDE the same numbers are 702 packages upgraded, 507 newly installed,
3403 193 to remove and 0 not upgraded and 1117MB need to be downloaded&lt;/p&gt;
3404
3405 &lt;p&gt;I am very happy to notice that the Gnome desktop + laptop upgrade
3406 is able to migrate to dependency based boot sequencing and parallel
3407 booting without a hitch. Was unsure if there were still bugs with
3408 packages failing to clean up their obsolete init.d script during
3409 upgrades, and no such problem seem to affect the Gnome desktop+laptop
3410 packages.&lt;/p&gt;
3411 </description>
3412 </item>
3413
3414 <item>
3415 <title>Upstart or sysvinit - as init.d scripts see it</title>
3416 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Upstart_or_sysvinit___as_init_d_scripts_see_it.html</link>
3417 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Upstart_or_sysvinit___as_init_d_scripts_see_it.html</guid>
3418 <pubDate>Sun, 6 Jun 2010 23:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
3419 <description>&lt;p&gt;If Debian is to migrate to upstart on Linux, I expect some init.d
3420 scripts to migrate (some of) their operations to upstart job while
3421 keeping the init.d for hurd and kfreebsd. The packages with such
3422 needs will need a way to get their init.d scripts to behave
3423 differently when used with sysvinit and with upstart. Because of
3424 this, I had a look at the environment variables set when a init.d
3425 script is running under upstart, and when it is not.&lt;/p&gt;
3426
3427 &lt;p&gt;With upstart, I notice these environment variables are set when a
3428 script is started from rcS.d/ (ignoring some irrelevant ones like
3429 COLUMNS):&lt;/p&gt;
3430
3431 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3432 DEFAULT_RUNLEVEL=2
3433 previous=N
3434 PREVLEVEL=
3435 RUNLEVEL=
3436 runlevel=S
3437 UPSTART_EVENTS=startup
3438 UPSTART_INSTANCE=
3439 UPSTART_JOB=rc-sysinit
3440 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3441
3442 &lt;p&gt;With sysvinit, these environment variables are set for the same
3443 script.&lt;/p&gt;
3444
3445 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3446 INIT_VERSION=sysvinit-2.88
3447 previous=N
3448 PREVLEVEL=N
3449 RUNLEVEL=S
3450 runlevel=S
3451 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3452
3453 &lt;p&gt;The RUNLEVEL and PREVLEVEL environment variables passed on from
3454 sysvinit are not set by upstart. Not sure if it is intentional or not
3455 to not be compatible with sysvinit in this regard.&lt;/p&gt;
3456
3457 &lt;p&gt;For scripts needing to behave differently when upstart is used,
3458 looking for the UPSTART_JOB environment variable seem to be a good
3459 choice.&lt;/p&gt;
3460 </description>
3461 </item>
3462
3463 <item>
3464 <title>A manual for standards wars...</title>
3465 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_manual_for_standards_wars___.html</link>
3466 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/A_manual_for_standards_wars___.html</guid>
3467 <pubDate>Sun, 6 Jun 2010 14:15:00 +0200</pubDate>
3468 <description>&lt;p&gt;Via the
3469 &lt;a href=&quot;http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/robweir/antic-atom/~3/QzU4RgoAGMg/weekly-links-10.html&quot;&gt;blog
3470 of Rob Weir&lt;/a&gt; I came across the very interesting essay named
3471 &lt;a href=&quot;http://faculty.haas.berkeley.edu/shapiro/wars.pdf&quot;&gt;The Art of
3472 Standards Wars&lt;/a&gt; (PDF 25 pages). I recommend it for everyone
3473 following the standards wars of today.&lt;/p&gt;
3474 </description>
3475 </item>
3476
3477 <item>
3478 <title>Sitesummary tip: Listing computer hardware models used at site</title>
3479 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Sitesummary_tip__Listing_computer_hardware_models_used_at_site.html</link>
3480 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Sitesummary_tip__Listing_computer_hardware_models_used_at_site.html</guid>
3481 <pubDate>Thu, 3 Jun 2010 12:05:00 +0200</pubDate>
3482 <description>&lt;p&gt;When using sitesummary at a site to track machines, it is possible
3483 to get a list of the machine types in use thanks to the DMI
3484 information extracted from each machine. The script to do so is
3485 included in the sitesummary package, and here is example output from
3486 the Skolelinux build servers:&lt;/p&gt;
3487
3488 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3489 maintainer:~# /usr/lib/sitesummary/hardware-model-summary
3490 vendor count
3491 Dell Computer Corporation 1
3492 PowerEdge 1750 1
3493 IBM 1
3494 eserver xSeries 345 -[8670M1X]- 1
3495 Intel 2
3496 [no-dmi-info] 3
3497 maintainer:~#
3498 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3499
3500 &lt;p&gt;The quality of the report depend on the quality of the DMI tables
3501 provided in each machine. Here there are Intel machines without model
3502 information listed with Intel as vendor and no model, and virtual Xen
3503 machines listed as [no-dmi-info]. One can add -l as a command line
3504 option to list the individual machines.&lt;/p&gt;
3505
3506 &lt;p&gt;A larger list is
3507 &lt;a href=&quot;http://narvikskolen.no/sitesummary/&quot;&gt;available from the the
3508 city of Narvik&lt;/a&gt;, which uses Skolelinux on all their shools and also
3509 provide the basic sitesummary report publicly. In their report there
3510 are ~1400 machines. I know they use both Ubuntu and Skolelinux on
3511 their machines, and as sitesummary is available in both distributions,
3512 it is trivial to get all of them to report to the same central
3513 collector.&lt;/p&gt;
3514 </description>
3515 </item>
3516
3517 <item>
3518 <title>KDM fail at boot with NVidia cards - and no one try to fix it?</title>
3519 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/KDM_fail_at_boot_with_NVidia_cards___and_no_one_try_to_fix_it_.html</link>
3520 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/KDM_fail_at_boot_with_NVidia_cards___and_no_one_try_to_fix_it_.html</guid>
3521 <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jun 2010 17:05:00 +0200</pubDate>
3522 <description>&lt;p&gt;It is strange to watch how a bug in Debian causing KDM to fail to
3523 start at boot when an NVidia video card is used is handled. The
3524 problem seem to be that the nvidia X.org driver uses a long time to
3525 initialize, and this duration is longer than kdm is configured to
3526 wait.&lt;/p&gt;
3527
3528 &lt;p&gt;I came across two bugs related to this issue,
3529 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/583312&quot;&gt;#583312&lt;/a&gt; initially filed
3530 against initscripts and passed on to nvidia-glx when it became obvious
3531 that the nvidia drivers were involved, and
3532 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/524751&quot;&gt;#524751&lt;/a&gt; initially filed against
3533 kdm and passed on to src:nvidia-graphics-drivers for unknown reasons.&lt;/p&gt;
3534
3535 &lt;p&gt;To me, it seem that no-one is interested in actually solving the
3536 problem nvidia video card owners experience and make sure the Debian
3537 distribution work out of the box for these users. The nvidia driver
3538 maintainers expect kdm to be set up to wait longer, while kdm expect
3539 the nvidia driver maintainers to fix the driver to start faster, and
3540 while they wait for each other I guess the users end up switching to a
3541 distribution that work for them. I have no idea what the solution is,
3542 but I am pretty sure that waiting for each other is not it.&lt;/p&gt;
3543
3544 &lt;p&gt;I wonder why we end up handling bugs this way.&lt;/p&gt;
3545 </description>
3546 </item>
3547
3548 <item>
3549 <title>Parallellized boot seem to hold up well in Debian/testing</title>
3550 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellized_boot_seem_to_hold_up_well_in_Debian_testing.html</link>
3551 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellized_boot_seem_to_hold_up_well_in_Debian_testing.html</guid>
3552 <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2010 23:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
3553 <description>&lt;p&gt;A few days ago, parallel booting was enabled in Debian/testing.
3554 The feature seem to hold up pretty well, but three fairly serious
3555 issues are known and should be solved:
3556
3557 &lt;p&gt;&lt;ul&gt;
3558
3559 &lt;li&gt;The wicd package seen to
3560 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/508289&quot;&gt;break NFS mounting&lt;/a&gt; and
3561 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/581586&quot;&gt;network setup&lt;/a&gt; when
3562 parallel booting is enabled. No idea why, but the wicd maintainer
3563 seem to be on the case.&lt;/li&gt;
3564
3565 &lt;li&gt;The nvidia X driver seem to
3566 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/583312&quot;&gt;have a race condition&lt;/a&gt;
3567 triggered more easily when parallel booting is in effect. The
3568 maintainer is on the case.&lt;/li&gt;
3569
3570 &lt;li&gt;The sysv-rc package fail to properly enable dependency based boot
3571 sequencing (the shutdown is broken) when old file-rc users
3572 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/575080&quot;&gt;try to switch back&lt;/a&gt; to
3573 sysv-rc. One way to solve it would be for file-rc to create
3574 /etc/init.d/.legacy-bootordering, and another is to try to make
3575 sysv-rc more robust. Will investigate some more and probably upload a
3576 workaround in sysv-rc to help those trying to move from file-rc to
3577 sysv-rc get a working shutdown.&lt;/li&gt;
3578
3579 &lt;/ul&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
3580
3581 &lt;p&gt;All in all not many surprising issues, and all of them seem
3582 solvable before Squeeze is released. In addition to these there are
3583 some packages with bugs in their dependencies and run level settings,
3584 which I expect will be fixed in a reasonable time span.&lt;/p&gt;
3585
3586 &lt;p&gt;If you report any problems with dependencies in init.d scripts to
3587 the BTS, please usertag the report to get it to show up at
3588 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?users=initscripts-ng-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org&quot;&gt;the
3589 list of usertagged bugs related to this&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
3590
3591 &lt;p&gt;Update: Correct bug number to file-rc issue.&lt;/p&gt;
3592 </description>
3593 </item>
3594
3595 <item>
3596 <title>More flexible firmware handling in debian-installer</title>
3597 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/More_flexible_firmware_handling_in_debian_installer.html</link>
3598 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/More_flexible_firmware_handling_in_debian_installer.html</guid>
3599 <pubDate>Sat, 22 May 2010 21:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
3600 <description>&lt;p&gt;After a long break from debian-installer development, I finally
3601 found time today to return to the project. Having to spend less time
3602 working dependency based boot in debian, as it is almost complete now,
3603 definitely helped freeing some time.&lt;/p&gt;
3604
3605 &lt;p&gt;A while back, I ran into a problem while working on Debian Edu. We
3606 include some firmware packages on the Debian Edu CDs, those needed to
3607 get disk and network controllers working. Without having these
3608 firmware packages available during installation, it is impossible to
3609 install Debian Edu on the given machine, and because our target group
3610 are non-technical people, asking them to provide firmware packages on
3611 an external medium is a support pain. Initially, I expected it to be
3612 enough to include the firmware packages on the CD to get
3613 debian-installer to find and use them. This proved to be wrong.
3614 Next, I hoped it was enough to symlink the relevant firmware packages
3615 to some useful location on the CD (tried /cdrom/ and
3616 /cdrom/firmware/). This also proved to not work, and at this point I
3617 found time to look at the debian-installer code to figure out what was
3618 going to work.&lt;/p&gt;
3619
3620 &lt;p&gt;The firmware loading code is in the hw-detect package, and a closer
3621 look revealed that it would only look for firmware packages outside
3622 the installation media, so the CD was never checked for firmware
3623 packages. It would only check USB sticks, floppies and other
3624 &quot;external&quot; media devices. Today I changed it to also look in the
3625 /cdrom/firmware/ directory on the mounted CD or DVD, which should
3626 solve the problem I ran into with Debian edu. I also changed it to
3627 look in /firmware/, to make sure the installer also find firmware
3628 provided in the initrd when booting the installer via PXE, to allow us
3629 to provide the same feature in the PXE setup included in Debian
3630 Edu.&lt;/p&gt;
3631
3632 &lt;p&gt;To make sure firmware deb packages with a license questions are not
3633 activated without asking if the license is accepted, I extended
3634 hw-detect to look for preinst scripts in the firmware packages, and
3635 run these before activating the firmware during installation. The
3636 license question is asked using debconf in the preinst, so this should
3637 solve the issue for the firmware packages I have looked at so far.&lt;/p&gt;
3638
3639 &lt;p&gt;If you want to discuss the details of these features, please
3640 contact us on debian-boot@lists.debian.org.&lt;/p&gt;
3641 </description>
3642 </item>
3643
3644 <item>
3645 <title>Parallellized boot is now the default in Debian/unstable</title>
3646 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellized_boot_is_now_the_default_in_Debian_unstable.html</link>
3647 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellized_boot_is_now_the_default_in_Debian_unstable.html</guid>
3648 <pubDate>Fri, 14 May 2010 22:40:00 +0200</pubDate>
3649 <description>&lt;p&gt;Since this evening, parallel booting is the default in
3650 Debian/unstable for machines using dependency based boot sequencing.
3651 Apparently the testing of concurrent booting has been wider than
3652 expected, if I am to believe the
3653 &lt;a href=&quot;http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2010/05/msg00122.html&quot;&gt;input
3654 on debian-devel@&lt;/a&gt;, and I concluded a few days ago to move forward
3655 with the feature this weekend, to give us some time to detect any
3656 remaining problems before Squeeze is frozen. If serious problems are
3657 detected, it is simple to change the default back to sequential boot.
3658 The upload of the new sysvinit package also activate a new upstream
3659 version.&lt;/p&gt;
3660
3661 More information about
3662 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/LSBInitScripts/DependencyBasedBoot&quot;&gt;dependency
3663 based boot sequencing&lt;/a&gt; is available from the Debian wiki. It is
3664 currently possible to disable parallel booting when one run into
3665 problems caused by it, by adding this line to /etc/default/rcS:&lt;/p&gt;
3666
3667 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3668 CONCURRENCY=none
3669 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3670
3671 &lt;p&gt;If you report any problems with dependencies in init.d scripts to
3672 the BTS, please usertag the report to get it to show up at
3673 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?users=initscripts-ng-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org&quot;&gt;the
3674 list of usertagged bugs related to this&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
3675 </description>
3676 </item>
3677
3678 <item>
3679 <title>Sitesummary tip: Listing MAC address of all clients</title>
3680 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Sitesummary_tip__Listing_MAC_address_of_all_clients.html</link>
3681 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Sitesummary_tip__Listing_MAC_address_of_all_clients.html</guid>
3682 <pubDate>Fri, 14 May 2010 21:10:00 +0200</pubDate>
3683 <description>&lt;p&gt;In the recent Debian Edu versions, the
3684 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/DebianEdu/HowTo/SiteSummary&quot;&gt;sitesummary
3685 system&lt;/a&gt; is used to keep track of the machines in the school
3686 network. Each machine will automatically report its status to the
3687 central server after boot and once per night. The network setup is
3688 also reported, and using this information it is possible to get the
3689 MAC address of all network interfaces in the machines. This is useful
3690 to update the DHCP configuration.&lt;/p&gt;
3691
3692 &lt;p&gt;To give some idea how to use sitesummary, here is a one-liner to
3693 ist all MAC addresses of all machines reporting to sitesummary. Run
3694 this on the collector host:&lt;/p&gt;
3695
3696 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3697 perl -MSiteSummary -e &#39;for_all_hosts(sub { print join(&quot; &quot;, get_macaddresses(shift)), &quot;\n&quot;; });&#39;
3698 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3699
3700 &lt;p&gt;This will list all MAC addresses assosiated with all machine, one
3701 line per machine and with space between the MAC addresses.&lt;/p&gt;
3702
3703 &lt;p&gt;To allow system administrators easier job at adding static DHCP
3704 addresses for hosts, it would be possible to extend this to fetch
3705 machine information from sitesummary and update the DHCP and DNS
3706 tables in LDAP using this information. Such tool is unfortunately not
3707 written yet.&lt;/p&gt;
3708 </description>
3709 </item>
3710
3711 <item>
3712 <title>systemd, an interesting alternative to upstart</title>
3713 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/systemd__an_interesting_alternative_to_upstart.html</link>
3714 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/systemd__an_interesting_alternative_to_upstart.html</guid>
3715 <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 22:20:00 +0200</pubDate>
3716 <description>&lt;p&gt;The last few days a new boot system called
3717 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd&quot;&gt;systemd&lt;/a&gt;
3718 has been
3719 &lt;a href=&quot;http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/systemd.html&quot;&gt;introduced&lt;/a&gt;
3720
3721 to the free software world. I have not yet had time to play around
3722 with it, but it seem to be a very interesting alternative to
3723 &lt;a href=&quot;http://upstart.ubuntu.com/&quot;&gt;upstart&lt;/a&gt;, and might prove to be
3724 a good alternative for Debian when we are able to switch to an event
3725 based boot system. Tollef is
3726 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/580814&quot;&gt;in the process&lt;/a&gt; of getting
3727 systemd into Debian, and I look forward to seeing how well it work. I
3728 like the fact that systemd handles init.d scripts with dependency
3729 information natively, allowing them to run in parallel where upstart
3730 at the moment do not.&lt;/p&gt;
3731
3732 &lt;p&gt;Unfortunately do systemd have the same problem as upstart regarding
3733 platform support. It only work on recent Linux kernels, and also need
3734 some new kernel features enabled to function properly. This means
3735 kFreeBSD and Hurd ports of Debian will need a port or a different boot
3736 system. Not sure how that will be handled if systemd proves to be the
3737 way forward.&lt;/p&gt;
3738
3739 &lt;p&gt;In the mean time, based on the
3740 &lt;a href=&quot;http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2010/05/msg00122.html&quot;&gt;input
3741 on debian-devel@&lt;/a&gt; regarding parallel booting in Debian, I have
3742 decided to enable full parallel booting as the default in Debian as
3743 soon as possible (probably this weekend or early next week), to see if
3744 there are any remaining serious bugs in the init.d dependencies. A
3745 new version of the sysvinit package implementing this change is
3746 already in experimental. If all go well, Squeeze will be released
3747 with parallel booting enabled by default.&lt;/p&gt;
3748 </description>
3749 </item>
3750
3751 <item>
3752 <title>Parallellizing the boot in Debian Squeeze - ready for wider testing</title>
3753 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellizing_the_boot_in_Debian_Squeeze___ready_for_wider_testing.html</link>
3754 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Parallellizing_the_boot_in_Debian_Squeeze___ready_for_wider_testing.html</guid>
3755 <pubDate>Thu, 6 May 2010 23:25:00 +0200</pubDate>
3756 <description>&lt;p&gt;These days, the init.d script dependencies in Squeeze are quite
3757 complete, so complete that it is actually possible to run all the
3758 init.d scripts in parallell based on these dependencies. If you want
3759 to test your Squeeze system, make sure
3760 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/LSBInitScripts/DependencyBasedBoot&quot;&gt;dependency
3761 based boot sequencing&lt;/a&gt; is enabled, and add this line to
3762 /etc/default/rcS:&lt;/p&gt;
3763
3764 &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;pre&gt;
3765 CONCURRENCY=makefile
3766 &lt;/pre&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
3767
3768 &lt;p&gt;That is it. It will cause sysv-rc to use the startpar tool to run
3769 scripts in parallel using the dependency information stored in
3770 /etc/init.d/.depend.boot, /etc/init.d/.depend.start and
3771 /etc/init.d/.depend.stop to order the scripts. Startpar is configured
3772 to try to start the kdm and gdm scripts as early as possible, and will
3773 start the facilities required by kdm or gdm as early as possible to
3774 make this happen.&lt;/p&gt;
3775
3776 &lt;p&gt;Give it a try, and see if you like the result. If some services
3777 fail to start properly, it is most likely because they have incomplete
3778 init.d script dependencies in their startup script (or some of their
3779 dependent scripts have incomplete dependencies). Report bugs and get
3780 the package maintainers to fix it. :)&lt;/p&gt;
3781
3782 &lt;p&gt;Running scripts in parallel could be the default in Debian when we
3783 manage to get the init.d script dependencies complete and correct. I
3784 expect we will get there in Squeeze+1, if we get manage to test and
3785 fix the remaining issues.&lt;/p&gt;
3786
3787 &lt;p&gt;If you report any problems with dependencies in init.d scripts to
3788 the BTS, please usertag the report to get it to show up at
3789 &lt;a href=&quot;http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?users=initscripts-ng-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org&quot;&gt;the
3790 list of usertagged bugs related to this&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
3791 </description>
3792 </item>
3793
3794 <item>
3795 <title>Debian has switched to dependency based boot sequencing</title>
3796 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_has_switched_to_dependency_based_boot_sequencing.html</link>
3797 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_has_switched_to_dependency_based_boot_sequencing.html</guid>
3798 <pubDate>Mon, 27 Jul 2009 23:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
3799 <description>&lt;p&gt;Since this evening, with the upload of sysvinit version 2.87dsf-2,
3800 and the upload of insserv version 1.12.0-10 yesterday, Debian unstable
3801 have been migrated to using dependency based boot sequencing. This
3802 conclude work me and others have been doing for the last three days.
3803 It feels great to see this finally part of the default Debian
3804 installation. Now we just need to weed out the last few problems that
3805 are bound to show up, to get everything ready for Squeeze.&lt;/p&gt;
3806
3807 &lt;p&gt;The next step is migrating /sbin/init from sysvinit to upstart, and
3808 fixing the more fundamental problem of handing the event based
3809 non-predictable kernel in the early boot.&lt;/p&gt;
3810 </description>
3811 </item>
3812
3813 <item>
3814 <title>Taking over sysvinit development</title>
3815 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Taking_over_sysvinit_development.html</link>
3816 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Taking_over_sysvinit_development.html</guid>
3817 <pubDate>Wed, 22 Jul 2009 23:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
3818 <description>&lt;p&gt;After several years of frustration with the lack of activity from
3819 the existing sysvinit upstream developer, I decided a few weeks ago to
3820 take over the package and become the new upstream. The number of
3821 patches to track for the Debian package was becoming a burden, and the
3822 lack of synchronization between the distribution made it hard to keep
3823 the package up to date.&lt;/p&gt;
3824
3825 &lt;p&gt;On the new sysvinit team is the SuSe maintainer Dr. Werner Fink,
3826 and my Debian co-maintainer Kel Modderman. About 10 days ago, I made
3827 a new upstream tarball with version number 2.87dsf (for Debian, SuSe
3828 and Fedora), based on the patches currently in use in these
3829 distributions. We Debian maintainers plan to move to this tarball as
3830 the new upstream as soon as we find time to do the merge. Since the
3831 new tarball was created, we agreed with Werner at SuSe to make a new
3832 upstream project at &lt;a href=&quot;http://savannah.nongnu.org/&quot;&gt;Savannah&lt;/a&gt;, and continue
3833 development there. The project is registered and currently waiting
3834 for approval by the Savannah administrators, and as soon as it is
3835 approved, we will import the old versions from svn and continue
3836 working on the future release.&lt;/p&gt;
3837
3838 &lt;p&gt;It is a bit ironic that this is done now, when some of the involved
3839 distributions are moving to upstart as a syvinit replacement.&lt;/p&gt;
3840 </description>
3841 </item>
3842
3843 <item>
3844 <title>Debian boots quicker and quicker</title>
3845 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_boots_quicker_and_quicker.html</link>
3846 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Debian_boots_quicker_and_quicker.html</guid>
3847 <pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2009 21:40:00 +0200</pubDate>
3848 <description>&lt;p&gt;I spent Monday and tuesday this week in London with a lot of the
3849 people involved in the boot system on Debian and Ubuntu, to see if we
3850 could find more ways to speed up the boot system. This was an Ubuntu
3851 funded
3852 &lt;a href=&quot;https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FoundationsTeam/BootPerformance/DebianUbuntuSprint&quot;&gt;developer
3853 gathering&lt;/a&gt;. It was quite productive. We also discussed the future
3854 of boot systems, and ways to handle the increasing number of boot
3855 issues introduced by the Linux kernel becoming more and more
3856 asynchronous and event base. The Ubuntu approach using udev and
3857 upstart might be a good way forward. Time will show.&lt;/p&gt;
3858
3859 &lt;p&gt;Anyway, there are a few ways at the moment to speed up the boot
3860 process in Debian. All of these should be applied to get a quick
3861 boot:&lt;/p&gt;
3862
3863 &lt;ul&gt;
3864
3865 &lt;li&gt;Use dash as /bin/sh.&lt;/li&gt;
3866
3867 &lt;li&gt;Disable the init.d/hwclock*.sh scripts and make sure the hardware
3868 clock is in UTC.&lt;/li&gt;
3869
3870 &lt;li&gt;Install and activate the insserv package to enable
3871 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/LSBInitScripts/DependencyBasedBoot&quot;&gt;dependency
3872 based boot sequencing&lt;/a&gt;, and enable concurrent booting.&lt;/li&gt;
3873
3874 &lt;/ul&gt;
3875
3876 These points are based on the Google summer of code work done by
3877 &lt;a href=&quot;http://initscripts-ng.alioth.debian.org/soc2006-bootsystem/&quot;&gt;Carlos
3878 Villegas&lt;/a&gt;.
3879
3880 &lt;p&gt;Support for makefile-style concurrency during boot was uploaded to
3881 unstable yesterday. When we tested it, we were able to cut 6 seconds
3882 from the boot sequence. It depend on very correct dependency
3883 declaration in all init.d scripts, so I expect us to find edge cases
3884 where the dependences in some scripts are slightly wrong when we start
3885 using this.&lt;/p&gt;
3886
3887 &lt;p&gt;On our IRC channel for this effort, #pkg-sysvinit, a new idea was
3888 introduced by Raphael Geissert today, one that could affect the
3889 startup speed as well. Instead of starting some scripts concurrently
3890 from rcS.d/ and another set of scripts from rc2.d/, it would be
3891 possible to run a of them in the same process. A quick way to test
3892 this would be to enable insserv and run &#39;mv /etc/rc2.d/S* /etc/rcS.d/;
3893 insserv&#39;. Will need to test if that work. :)&lt;/p&gt;
3894 </description>
3895 </item>
3896
3897 <item>
3898 <title>BSAs påstander om piratkopiering møter motstand</title>
3899 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/BSAs_p_stander_om_piratkopiering_m_ter_motstand.html</link>
3900 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/BSAs_p_stander_om_piratkopiering_m_ter_motstand.html</guid>
3901 <pubDate>Sun, 17 May 2009 23:05:00 +0200</pubDate>
3902 <description>&lt;p&gt;Hvert år de siste årene har BSA, lobbyfronten til de store
3903 programvareselskapene som Microsoft og Apple, publisert en rapport der
3904 de gjetter på hvor mye piratkopiering påfører i tapte inntekter i
3905 ulike land rundt om i verden. Resultatene er tendensiøse. For noen
3906 dager siden kom
3907 &lt;a href=&quot;http://global.bsa.org/globalpiracy2008/studies/globalpiracy2008.pdf&quot;&gt;siste
3908 rapport&lt;/a&gt;, og det er flere kritiske kommentarer publisert de siste
3909 dagene. Et spesielt interessant kommentar fra Sverige,
3910 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.idg.se/2.1085/1.229795/bsa-hoftade-sverigesiffror&quot;&gt;BSA
3911 höftade Sverigesiffror&lt;/a&gt;, oppsummeres slik:&lt;/p&gt;
3912
3913 &lt;blockquote&gt;
3914 I sin senaste rapport slår BSA fast att 25 procent av all mjukvara i
3915 Sverige är piratkopierad. Det utan att ha pratat med ett enda svenskt
3916 företag. &quot;Man bör nog kanske inte se de här siffrorna som helt
3917 exakta&quot;, säger BSAs Sverigechef John Hugosson.
3918 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
3919
3920 &lt;p&gt;Mon tro om de er like metodiske når de gjetter på andelen piratkopiering i Norge? To andre kommentarer er &lt;a
3921 href=&quot;http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/comment/2242134/bsa-piracy-figures-shot-reality&quot;&gt;BSA
3922 piracy figures need a shot of reality&lt;/a&gt; og &lt;a
3923 href=&quot;http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/3958/125/&quot;&gt;Does The WIPO
3924 Copyright Treaty Work?&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
3925
3926 &lt;p&gt;Fant lenkene via &lt;a
3927 href=&quot;http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/05/17/1632242&quot;&gt;oppslag
3928 på Slashdot&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
3929 </description>
3930 </item>
3931
3932 <item>
3933 <title>IDG mener linux i servermarkedet vil vokse med 21% i 2009</title>
3934 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/IDG_mener_linux_i_servermarkedet_vil_vokse_med_21__i_2009.html</link>
3935 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/IDG_mener_linux_i_servermarkedet_vil_vokse_med_21__i_2009.html</guid>
3936 <pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2009 22:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
3937 <description>&lt;p&gt;Kom over
3938 &lt;a href=&quot;http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10216873-16.html&quot;&gt;interessante
3939 tall&lt;/a&gt; fra IDG om utviklingen av linuxservermarkedet. Fikk meg til
3940 å tenke på antall tjenermaskiner ved Universitetet i Oslo der jeg
3941 jobber til daglig. En rask opptelling forteller meg at vi har 490
3942 (61%) fysiske unix-tjener (mest linux men også noen solaris) og 196
3943 (25%) windowstjenere, samt 112 (14%) virtuelle unix-tjenere. Med den
3944 bakgrunnskunnskapen kan jeg godt tro at IDG er inne på noe.&lt;/p&gt;
3945 </description>
3946 </item>
3947
3948 <item>
3949 <title>Kryptert harddisk - naturligvis</title>
3950 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Kryptert_harddisk___naturligvis.html</link>
3951 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Kryptert_harddisk___naturligvis.html</guid>
3952 <pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2009 15:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
3953 <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.dagensit.no/trender/article1658676.ece&quot;&gt;Dagens
3954 IT melder&lt;/a&gt; at Intel hevder at det er dyrt å miste en datamaskin,
3955 når en tar tap av arbeidstid, fortrolige dokumenter,
3956 personopplysninger og alt annet det innebærer. Det er ingen tvil om
3957 at det er en kostbar affære å miste sin datamaskin, og det er årsaken
3958 til at jeg har kryptert harddisken på både kontormaskinen og min
3959 bærbare. Begge inneholder personopplysninger jeg ikke ønsker skal
3960 komme på avveie, den første informasjon relatert til jobben min ved
3961 Universitetet i Oslo, og den andre relatert til blant annet
3962 foreningsarbeide. Kryptering av diskene gjør at det er lite
3963 sannsynlig at dophoder som kan finne på å rappe maskinene får noe ut
3964 av dem. Maskinene låses automatisk etter noen minutter uten bruk,
3965 og en reboot vil gjøre at de ber om passord før de vil starte opp.
3966 Jeg bruker Debian på begge maskinene, og installasjonssystemet der
3967 gjør det trivielt å sette opp krypterte disker. Jeg har LVM på toppen
3968 av krypterte partisjoner, slik at alt av datapartisjoner er kryptert.
3969 Jeg anbefaler alle å kryptere diskene på sine bærbare. Kostnaden når
3970 det er gjort slik jeg gjør det er minimale, og gevinstene er
3971 betydelige. En bør dog passe på passordet. Hvis det går tapt, må
3972 maskinen reinstalleres og alt er tapt.&lt;/p&gt;
3973
3974 &lt;p&gt;Krypteringen vil ikke stoppe kompetente angripere som f.eks. kjøler
3975 ned minnebrikkene før maskinen rebootes med programvare for å hente ut
3976 krypteringsnøklene. Kostnaden med å forsvare seg mot slike angripere
3977 er for min del høyere enn gevinsten. Jeg tror oddsene for at
3978 f.eks. etteretningsorganisasjoner har glede av å titte på mine
3979 maskiner er minimale, og ulempene jeg ville oppnå ved å forsøke å
3980 gjøre det vanskeligere for angripere med kompetanse og ressurser er
3981 betydelige.&lt;/p&gt;
3982 </description>
3983 </item>
3984
3985 <item>
3986 <title>Two projects that have improved the quality of free software a lot</title>
3987 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Two_projects_that_have_improved_the_quality_of_free_software_a_lot.html</link>
3988 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Two_projects_that_have_improved_the_quality_of_free_software_a_lot.html</guid>
3989 <pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2009 15:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
3990 <description>&lt;p&gt;There are two software projects that have had huge influence on the
3991 quality of free software, and I wanted to mention both in case someone
3992 do not yet know them.&lt;/p&gt;
3993
3994 &lt;p&gt;The first one is &lt;a href=&quot;http://valgrind.org/&quot;&gt;valgrind&lt;/a&gt;, a
3995 tool to detect and expose errors in the memory handling of programs.
3996 It is easy to use, all one need to do is to run &#39;valgrind program&#39;,
3997 and it will report any problems on stdout. It is even better if the
3998 program include debug information. With debug information, it is able
3999 to report the source file name and line number where the problem
4000 occurs. It can report things like &#39;reading past memory block in file
4001 X line N, the memory block was allocated in file Y, line M&#39;, and
4002 &#39;using uninitialised value in control logic&#39;. This tool has made it
4003 trivial to investigate reproducible crash bugs in programs, and have
4004 reduced the number of this kind of bugs in free software a lot.
4005
4006 &lt;p&gt;The second one is
4007 &lt;a href=&quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coverity&quot;&gt;Coverity&lt;/a&gt; which is
4008 a source code checker. It is able to process the source of a program
4009 and find problems in the logic without running the program. It
4010 started out as the Stanford Checker and became well known when it was
4011 used to find bugs in the Linux kernel. It is now a commercial tool
4012 and the company behind it is running
4013 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.scan.coverity.com/&quot;&gt;a community service&lt;/a&gt; for the
4014 free software community, where a lot of free software projects get
4015 their source checked for free. Several thousand defects have been
4016 found and fixed so far. It can find errors like &#39;lock L taken in file
4017 X line N is never released if exiting in line M&#39;, or &#39;the code in file
4018 Y lines O to P can never be executed&#39;. The projects included in the
4019 community service project have managed to get rid of a lot of
4020 reliability problems thanks to Coverity.&lt;/p&gt;
4021
4022 &lt;p&gt;I believe tools like this, that are able to automatically find
4023 errors in the source, are vital to improve the quality of software and
4024 make sure we can get rid of the crashing and failing software we are
4025 surrounded by today.&lt;/p&gt;
4026 </description>
4027 </item>
4028
4029 <item>
4030 <title>No patch is not better than a useless patch</title>
4031 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/No_patch_is_not_better_than_a_useless_patch.html</link>
4032 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/No_patch_is_not_better_than_a_useless_patch.html</guid>
4033 <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2009 09:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
4034 <description>&lt;p&gt;Julien Blache
4035 &lt;a href=&quot;http://blog.technologeek.org/2009/04/12/214&quot;&gt;claim that no
4036 patch is better than a useless patch&lt;/a&gt;. I completely disagree, as a
4037 patch allow one to discuss a concrete and proposed solution, and also
4038 prove that the issue at hand is important enough for someone to spent
4039 time on fixing it. No patch do not provide any of these positive
4040 properties.&lt;/p&gt;
4041 </description>
4042 </item>
4043
4044 <item>
4045 <title>Standardize on protocols and formats, not vendors and applications</title>
4046 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Standardize_on_protocols_and_formats__not_vendors_and_applications.html</link>
4047 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Standardize_on_protocols_and_formats__not_vendors_and_applications.html</guid>
4048 <pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2009 11:50:00 +0200</pubDate>
4049 <description>&lt;p&gt;Where I work at the University of Oslo, one decision stand out as a
4050 very good one to form a long lived computer infrastructure. It is the
4051 simple one, lost by many in todays computer industry: Standardize on
4052 open network protocols and open exchange/storage formats, not applications.
4053 Applications come and go, while protocols and files tend to stay, and
4054 thus one want to make it easy to change application and vendor, while
4055 avoiding conversion costs and locking users to a specific platform or
4056 application.&lt;/p&gt;
4057
4058 &lt;p&gt;This approach make it possible to replace the client applications
4059 independently of the server applications. One can even allow users to
4060 use several different applications as long as they handle the selected
4061 protocol and format. In the normal case, only one client application
4062 is recommended and users only get help if they choose to use this
4063 application, but those that want to deviate from the easy path are not
4064 blocked from doing so.&lt;/p&gt;
4065
4066 &lt;p&gt;It also allow us to replace the server side without forcing the
4067 users to replace their applications, and thus allow us to select the
4068 best server implementation at any moment, when scale and resouce
4069 requirements change.&lt;/p&gt;
4070
4071 &lt;p&gt;I strongly recommend standardizing - on open network protocols and
4072 open formats, but I would never recommend standardizing on a single
4073 application that do not use open network protocol or open formats.&lt;/p&gt;
4074 </description>
4075 </item>
4076
4077 <item>
4078 <title>Returning from Skolelinux developer gathering</title>
4079 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Returning_from_Skolelinux_developer_gathering.html</link>
4080 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Returning_from_Skolelinux_developer_gathering.html</guid>
4081 <pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2009 21:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
4082 <description>&lt;p&gt;I&#39;m sitting on the train going home from this weekends Debian
4083 Edu/Skolelinux development gathering. I got a bit done tuning the
4084 desktop, and looked into the dynamic service location protocol
4085 implementation avahi. It look like it could be useful for us. Almost
4086 30 people participated, and I believe it was a great environment to
4087 get to know the Skolelinux system. Walter Bender, involved in the
4088 development of the Sugar educational platform, presented his stuff and
4089 also helped me improve my OLPC installation. He also showed me that
4090 his Turtle Art application can be used in standalone mode, and we
4091 agreed that I would help getting it packaged for Debian. As a
4092 standalone application it would be great for Debian Edu. We also
4093 tried to get the video conferencing working with two OLPCs, but that
4094 proved to be too hard for us. The application seem to need more work
4095 before it is ready for me. I look forward to getting home and relax
4096 now. :)&lt;/p&gt;
4097 </description>
4098 </item>
4099
4100 <item>
4101 <title>Time for new LDAP schemas replacing RFC 2307?</title>
4102 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Time_for_new__LDAP_schemas_replacing_RFC_2307_.html</link>
4103 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Time_for_new__LDAP_schemas_replacing_RFC_2307_.html</guid>
4104 <pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2009 20:30:00 +0200</pubDate>
4105 <description>&lt;p&gt;The state of standardized LDAP schemas on Linux is far from
4106 optimal. There is RFC 2307 documenting one way to store NIS maps in
4107 LDAP, and a modified version of this normally called RFC 2307bis, with
4108 some modifications to be compatible with Active Directory. The RFC
4109 specification handle the content of a lot of system databases, but do
4110 not handle DNS zones and DHCP configuration.&lt;/p&gt;
4111
4112 &lt;p&gt;In &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Debian Edu/Skolelinux&lt;/a&gt;,
4113 we would like to store information about users, SMB clients/hosts,
4114 filegroups, netgroups (users and hosts), DHCP and DNS configuration,
4115 and LTSP configuration in LDAP. These objects have a lot in common,
4116 but with the current LDAP schemas it is not possible to have one
4117 object per entity. For example, one need to have at least three LDAP
4118 objects for a given computer, one with the SMB related stuff, one with
4119 DNS information and another with DHCP information. The schemas
4120 provided for DNS and DHCP are impossible to combine into one LDAP
4121 object. In addition, it is impossible to implement quick queries for
4122 netgroup membership, because of the way NIS triples are implemented.
4123 It just do not scale. I believe it is time for a few RFC
4124 specifications to cleam up this mess.&lt;/p&gt;
4125
4126 &lt;p&gt;I would like to have one LDAP object representing each computer in
4127 the network, and this object can then keep the SMB (ie host key), DHCP
4128 (mac address/name) and DNS (name/IP address) settings in one place.
4129 It need to be efficently stored to make sure it scale well.&lt;/p&gt;
4130
4131 &lt;p&gt;I would also like to have a quick way to map from a user or
4132 computer and to the net group this user or computer is a member.&lt;/p&gt;
4133
4134 &lt;p&gt;Active Directory have done a better job than unix heads like myself
4135 in this regard, and the unix side need to catch up. Time to start a
4136 new IETF work group?&lt;/p&gt;
4137 </description>
4138 </item>
4139
4140 <item>
4141 <title>Endelig er Debian Lenny gitt ut</title>
4142 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Endelig_er_Debian_Lenny_gitt_ut.html</link>
4143 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Endelig_er_Debian_Lenny_gitt_ut.html</guid>
4144 <pubDate>Sun, 15 Feb 2009 11:50:00 +0100</pubDate>
4145 <description>&lt;p&gt;Endelig er &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.debian.org/&quot;&gt;Debian&lt;/a&gt;
4146 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.debian.org/News/2009/20090214&quot;&gt;Lenny&lt;/a&gt; gitt ut.
4147 Et langt steg videre for Debian-prosjektet, og en rekke nye
4148 programpakker blir nå tilgjengelig for de av oss som bruker den
4149 stabile utgaven av Debian. Neste steg er nå å få
4150 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.skolelinux.org/&quot;&gt;Skolelinux&lt;/a&gt; /
4151 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/DebianEdu/&quot;&gt;Debian Edu&lt;/a&gt; ferdig
4152 oppdatert for den nye utgaven, slik at en oppdatert versjon kan
4153 slippes løs på skolene. Takk til alle debian-utviklerne som har
4154 gjort dette mulig. Endelig er f.eks. fungerende avhengighetsstyrt
4155 bootsekvens tilgjengelig i stabil utgave, vha pakken
4156 &lt;tt&gt;insserv&lt;/tt&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
4157 </description>
4158 </item>
4159
4160 <item>
4161 <title>Devcamp brought us closer to the Lenny based Debian Edu release</title>
4162 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Devcamp_brought_us_closer_to_the_Lenny_based_Debian_Edu_release.html</link>
4163 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/Devcamp_brought_us_closer_to_the_Lenny_based_Debian_Edu_release.html</guid>
4164 <pubDate>Sun, 7 Dec 2008 12:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
4165 <description>&lt;p&gt;This weekend we had a small developer gathering for Debian Edu in
4166 Oslo. Most of Saturday was used for the general assemly for the
4167 member organization, but the rest of the weekend I used to tune the
4168 LTSP installation. LTSP now work out of the box on the 10-network.
4169 Acer Aspire One proved to be a very nice thin client, with both
4170 screen, mouse and keybard in a small box. Was working on getting the
4171 diskless workstation setup configured out of the box, but did not
4172 finish it before the weekend was up.&lt;/p&gt;
4173
4174 &lt;p&gt;Did not find time to look at the 4 VGA cards in one box we got from
4175 the Brazilian group, so that will have to wait for the next
4176 development gathering. Would love to have the Debian Edu installer
4177 automatically detect and configure a multiseat setup when it find one
4178 of these cards.&lt;/p&gt;
4179 </description>
4180 </item>
4181
4182 <item>
4183 <title>The sorry state of multimedia browser plugins in Debian</title>
4184 <link>http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/The_sorry_state_of_multimedia_browser_plugins_in_Debian.html</link>
4185 <guid isPermaLink="true">http://people.skolelinux.org/pere/blog/The_sorry_state_of_multimedia_browser_plugins_in_Debian.html</guid>
4186 <pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 00:10:00 +0100</pubDate>
4187 <description>&lt;p&gt;Recently I have spent some time evaluating the multimedia browser
4188 plugins available in Debian Lenny, to see which one we should use by
4189 default in Debian Edu. We need an embedded video playing plugin with
4190 control buttons to pause or stop the video, and capable of streaming
4191 all the multimedia content available on the web. The test results and
4192 notes are available on
4193 &lt;a href=&quot;http://wiki.debian.org/DebianEdu/BrowserMultimedia&quot;&gt;the
4194 Debian wiki&lt;/a&gt;. I was surprised how few of the plugins are able to
4195 fill this need. My personal video player favorite, VLC, has a really
4196 bad plugin which fail on a lot of the test pages. A lot of the MIME
4197 types I would expect to work with any free software player (like
4198 video/ogg), just do not work. And simple formats like the
4199 audio/x-mplegurl format (m3u playlists), just isn&#39;t supported by the
4200 totem and vlc plugins. I hope the situation will improve soon. No
4201 wonder sites use the proprietary Adobe flash to play video.&lt;/p&gt;
4202
4203 &lt;p&gt;For Lenny, we seem to end up with the mplayer plugin. It seem to
4204 be the only one fitting our needs. :/&lt;/p&gt;
4205 </description>
4206 </item>
4207
4208 </channel>
4209 </rss>