Open Source @ Consolidated Braincells Inc.
This is a weblog I'm keeping about my work on Debian and any other useful Debian related info I come across. It is not meant to compete with other news sources like Debian Weekly News or Debian Planet. Mostly it is just a way for me to classify and remember all the random bits of information that I have floating around me. I thought maybe by using a blog it could be of some use to others too. Btw. "I" refers to Jaldhar H. Vyas, Debian developer for over 8 years. If you want to know more about me, my home page is here.
The name? Debain is a very common misspelling of Debian and la salle de bains means bathroom in French.
If you have a comment to make on something you read here, feel free to write to me at jaldhar@debian.org.
You can get an rss 0.91 feed of the blog here.
New pine .debs are available from the Open Source Page .
New pine .debs are available from the Open Source Page . The woody backport of uw-imap has also been updated to the latest version from sid.
Slashdot has a story about Debian being on the verge of declaring the GFDL non-free.
OsNews has an interesting series about one mans effort to get his friends to use Debian. It turn out surprisingly well. Here are part 1 and part 2.
Wow it looks like Andrew Suffield went through with his list of maintainers with excessive old release-critical bugs . Although there may be some false positives this is an important first step in getting rid of some of the cruft (human and package) in Debian which we desperately need to do if we ever hope to release sarge anytime soon.
As there are no better ideas, today I'm going to split up the dovecot package into 4 pieces. Here is the background. Dovecot is an IMAP server that like all IMAP servers listens on port 143 (or 993 for IMAP over SSL.) This means in Debian package dependency terms that dovecot must 'Provide:' the virtual package imap-server. It also needs to 'Conflict:' with imap-server because only one daemon can have the port. Now it has gained a POP3 server component. So it also has to provide and conflict with pop3-server for the same reason. The thing is it is possible that a user may want the IMAP server but turn off the POP3 server and use, say, qpopper instead. But he can't install qpopper because it also provides pop3-server which conflicts with dovecot. The only solution is to split it into dovecot-imap and dovecot-pop3 with dovecot-common for the shared bits. The fourth package called dovecot is simply a dummy which installs dovecot-imap to allow smooth upgrades. This is one area where Gentoo has us beat at the moment. I don't know if there is an ebuild for dovecot but theoretically they can specify "give me just the IMAP piece not the POP3" in some configuration somewhere. It will be interesting to see if Debian can come up with some solution to this. Having lots of little packages around is icky. The dummy package could be avoided by having dpkg use a field called 'Replacement-for:' or similiar (not 'Replaces:' which is something else.) IIRC, this idea was suggested before but no one ever implemented it.
I've finally got around to updating the pine .debs. They are compiled against the latest libc-client and should hopefully fix the problems some people are having with S/MIME and SMTP auth.
Debian now has its' own sourceforge type site. alioth.debian.org.
What does the name mean?
it's the capital system for the Alliance of Independent Systems in the
Frontier First Encounters game.
The yearly vote for DPL was concluded today and Martin Michelmayr won. He starts his term of office on April 9th. Martins' platform can be found here.
For the record, I continued my losing streak :-) Usually I vote for Branden Robinson. This time I gave him and current DPL Bdale Garbee joint first choice, Martin second, and Moshe Zadka third choice.
Some programs in the windows world such as Nero store CD images as a big .bin file and a smaller .cue file. To convert these files into an .iso suitable for burning with e.g. xcdroast, apt-get install bchunk and read its' man page.
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