LWN featured content
[$] Tasting the Ice Cream Sandwich
[Front] Posted May 15, 2012 20:46 UTC (Tue) by corbet
Owners of Android handsets can be forgiven for feeling frustration over how
long it took to get an update from the 2.3 "gingerbread" release. Google's
flat-out effort to improve tablet support led to a 3.0 ("honeycomb")
release that was not deemed suitable for handset use—or for open-source
release. It was only with the 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich" cycle that all that
new code became available for handsets—sort of. Six months after the 4.0
release, your editor finally got his hands on a device that can run it;
what follows is a review of sorts.
Full Story (comments: 93)
[$] Highlights from the PostgreSQL 9.2 beta
[Front] Posted May 14, 2012 23:08 UTC (Mon) by jake
The PostgreSQL project has just released a beta of its next major version,
9.2. As usual with its annual release, this version includes many
new features, most of which are targeted at improving database performance. The
developers have been hard at work improving response times, increasing multicore
scalability, and providing for more efficient queries on large data. They also found
time to include some other major features, so let's explore a few of the
things 9.2 beta has to offer.
Guest author Josh Berkus does just that in
the full article from this week's edition.
Full Story (comments: 13)
[$] A bcache update
[Kernel] Posted May 14, 2012 19:36 UTC (Mon) by corbet
Bcache is a mechanism for using a solid-state drive as a fast cache for one
or more slower drives.
LWN last looked at bcache almost two years
ago. Since then, the project has been relatively quiet, but development
has continued. Click below (subscribers only) for an update on bcache from
this week's Kernel Page.
Full Story (comments: 33)
Accounting systems: a rant and a quest
[Front] Posted May 8, 2012 20:10 UTC (Tue) by corbet
Attentive long-time readers of LWN may remember that this business is based
entirely on free software with one distressing exception: our business
accounting is still done using the proprietary "QuickBooks Pro" package.
QuickBooks does not lack for aggravations, but the task of replacing it has
never quite attained a high enough priority for something to actually
happen. Good replacements in the free software community are hard to come
by, accounting is boring, our accountant deals easily (and cheaply) with
QuickBooks files, and the existing solution, for the most part, simply
works. Or, at least, it used to simply work.
Full Story (comments: 68)
A report from the Linux Audio Conference
[Front] Posted May 2, 2012 17:47 UTC (Wed) by corbet
LWN is pleased to post the first article from our latest guest author: Dave
Phillips. Dave writes:
"My jet lag is gone, I've finally come back to ground, and at last I can
start to sort out my experiences at the 10th annual Linux Audio Conference, held
this year at CCRMA, the Center For Computer Research In Music And Acoustics at
Stanford University in Palo Alto, California USA. It was the first time the
event had been held in the States, and the organizers obviously intended to
make a good impression. I'll cut to the spoiler right now to let you know
that they succeeded, with honors." Click below (subscribers only)
for the full report.
Full Story (comments: 7)
Fixing the unfixable autofs ABI
[Kernel] Posted Apr 30, 2012 16:34 UTC (Mon) by corbet
One of the few hard rules of kernel development is that breaking the
user-space binary interface is not acceptable. If there is user-space code
that depends on specific behavior, that behavior must be maintained
regardless of how inconvenient that may be. But what is to be done if two
different programs depend on mutually-incompatible behaviors, so that it is
seemingly impossible to keep them both working? The answer may be to
violate another rule by putting an ugly hack into the kernel—or to do
something rather more tricky.
Click below (subscribers only) for the full
article from this week's Kernel Page.
Full Story (comments: 57)
GCC and static analysis
[Front] Posted Apr 21, 2012 16:36 UTC (Sat) by corbet
Concurrency tends to make programming hard. Kernel development obviously
involves dealing with a lot of concurrency, but there is also a lot of
multi-threaded user-space development that suffers from the same issues.
It would be nice if the computer could help developers avoid race
conditions and other problems that arise in concurrent environments. Some
developers at Google have been working on just such a project for some
time, but they have just relocated the project from GCC to the LLVM Clang
compiler, saying that GCC is not suited to the work they want to do. The
result has been a sort of wake-up call for GCC developers. Is the GCC
compiler suite not well suited to the creation of static analysis tools?
Full Story (comments: 75)
LFCS 2012: The future of GLIBC
[Front] Posted Apr 18, 2012 15:59 UTC (Wed) by jake
The core library that sits between user space and the kernel, the GNU C
library (or GLIBC), has undergone some changes recently in its governance, at least
partly to make it a more inclusive project. On the last day of the Linux
Foundation Collaboration Summit, Carlos O'Donell gave an update on the
project, the way it will be governed moving forward, and its plans for the
future. GLIBC founder Roland McGrath was on hand to contribute his thoughts
as well. Click below (subscribers only) for the full report.
Full Story (comments: 8)
Toward more reliable logging
[Kernel] Posted Apr 13, 2012 20:06 UTC (Fri) by corbet
Messages from the kernel are created by humans, usually using one of the
many variants of the printk() function. But, increasingly, those
messages are read by machines in the form of log file parsers, automated
management systems, and so on. The machines have, for some time, struggled
to make sense out of those human-created messages which, often as not, are
unpredictable in their organization, lacking important information, and
subject to change. So it is not surprising that there has been ongoing
interest in adding some structure to kernel log messages; the subject was
recently raised by the audience at the Collaboration Summit kernel panel.
At about the same time, a new attempt to improve kernel logging was posted
to the linux-kernel mailing list; click below (subscribers only) for a
report from next week's Kernel Page.
Full Story (comments: 68)
LFCS 2012: X and Wayland
[Development] Posted Apr 11, 2012 19:18 UTC (Wed) by jake
Keith Packard has been working on the X window system since the early days,
but more recently has been doing lots of work to enable its replacement. X
has long held the position as the way that graphics is done on Linux (and
other Unix) systems, but that is changing. He came to the Linux Foundation
Collaboration Summit, which was held April 3-5 in San Francisco, to talk
about the Wayland protocol and the Weston server, and how they could
interoperate with X. Wayland
looks to be an interesting change for desktop
graphics on Linux.
Full Story (comments: 180)
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Current news
The problem with nerd politics (The Guardian)
[Security] Posted May 17, 2012 20:00 UTC (Thu) by jake
Over at the Guardian, Cory Doctorow writes about two problems that govern the relationship between politics and technically oriented folks ("nerds" in Doctorow-speak): "nerd determinism" and "nerd fatalism". "But, while it's true that geeks can get around this sort of thing – and other bad network policies, such as network-level censorship, or vendor locks on our tablets, phones, consoles, and computers – this isn't enough to protect us, let alone the world. It doesn't matter how good your email provider is, or how secure your messages are, if 95% of the people you correspond with use a free webmail service with a lawful interception backdoor, and if none of those people can figure out how to use crypto, then nearly all your email will be within reach of spooks and control-freaks and cops on fishing expeditions."
Comments (none posted)
Security advisories for Thursday
[Security] Posted May 17, 2012 18:26 UTC (Thu) by jake
Debian has updated openoffice.org
(code execution) and ikiwiki (cross-site
scripting).
Mandriva has updated imagemagick (2010.1, ES 5.0; 2011.: multiple vulnerabilities).
SUSE has updated openssl (SLE 11:
two vulnerabilities).
Ubuntu has updated sudo (privilege
escalation).
Comments (none posted)
Security vulnerability in sudo's netmask function patched (The H)
[Security] Posted May 17, 2012 17:33 UTC (Thu) by jake
The H reports on a vulnerability in sudo when it is configured for IP-based restrictions on users (typically only for centrally managed sudoers files). "When the developers added IPv6 support, they inadvertently made the matching routine used for IPv4 networks call the IPv6 matching routines when no IPv4 match was found. Because the IPv6 fields would be uninitialised, it was possible for the system to think it had found a match where there wasn't one. Finding a match would, in turn, mean permission would be granted for whatever command the rule was controlling, even when the system was on a different network."
Comments (none posted)
Lotus Symphony code for OpenOffice coming soon
[Development] Posted May 16, 2012 18:21 UTC (Wed) by corbet
IBM has announced that the paperwork has been signed and that the
contribution of the Lotus Symphony code to OpenOffice will happen shortly.
"The successful delivery of Apache OpenOffice 3.4 has enabled us to
finalize our grant with the the Apache Software Foundation and initiate
this new phase of effort within the community. This is about envisioning a
future for Apache OpenOffice that builds on the best code we can offer
together with the best developers who have mastered it." For those
wondering about what this code offers, there is a
Symphony Contribution wiki page describing the most interesting
features.
Full Story (comments: 40)
Security advisories for Wednesday
[Security] Posted May 16, 2012 18:00 UTC (Wed) by ris
CentOS has updated C6: kernel
(denial of service).
Debian has updated gridengine
(privilege escalation).
Fedora has updated bind-dyndb-ldap (F16; F15:
denial of service), F16: samba4 (remote
code execution), F15: kernel (unfiltered
netdev rio_ioctl access by users), and F15:
expat (denial of service).
Gentoo has updated connman (code
execution).
Red Hat has updated RHEL6: kernel
(denial of service) and MRG2.1: kernel-rt
(multiple vulnerabilities).
Comments (none posted)
Tuesday's security updates
[Security] Posted May 15, 2012 17:24 UTC (Tue) by ris
Gentoo has updated chromium
(multiple vulnerabilities).
Mandriva has updated ffmpeg (ES5.0; 2010.1;
2011.0: multiple vulnerabilities).
openSUSE has updated gnutls (denial
of service) and coreutils (command
injection).
Ubuntu has updated quagga (multiple
vulnerabilities).
Comments (1 posted)
Kdenlive 0.9 released
[Development] Posted May 15, 2012 13:44 UTC (Tue) by corbet
Version 0.9 of the Kdenlive video editor has been released.
Improvements in this release include the ability to align multiple video
tracks using the audio stream, a rewritten effects subsystem, improved
importing of online media, and a number of usability enhancements.
Comments (none posted)
OrientDB 1.0 released
[Development] Posted May 15, 2012 13:41 UTC (Tue) by corbet
The OrientDB "NoSQL
graph-document database management system" project has produced its 1.0
release. New features include a new multi-master replication scheme, a
new object database interface, an undo mechanism, server-side scripting,
and more.
Comments (17 posted)
Security updates for Monday
[Security] Posted May 14, 2012 17:41 UTC (Mon) by ris
Debian has updated wordpress
(multiple vulnerabilities), ffmpeg
(multiple vulnerabilities), and icedove,
iceweasel (fixes a regression in previous update).
Fedora has updated F16: kernel
(unfiltered netdev rio_ioctl access by users) and F16: postgresql-pgpoolAdmin (multiple
vulnerabilities).
openSUSE has updated chromium
(multiple vulnerabilities), taglib (denial
of service), mysql-cluster (multiple
unspecified vulnerabilities), mysql-community-server (multiple unspecified
vulnerabilities), and mariadb (multiple
unspecified vulnerabilities).
SUSE has updated kernel (multiple
vulnerabilities).
Comments (none posted)
Kernels 3.4-rc7 and 3.3.6
[Kernel] Posted May 13, 2012 14:43 UTC (Sun) by corbet
Linus has sent out the 3.4-rc7 prepatch,
saying: "This is almost certainly the last -rc in this series -
things really have calmed down, and I even considered just cutting 3.4 this
weekend, but felt that another week wouldn't hurt." Expect a 3.4
final release in the near future.
Meanwhile, on the stable front, 3.3.6 is
out with another set of important fixes.
Comments (2 posted)
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