LWN featured content
[$] Three short stories, all about Android
[Front] Posted Feb 5, 2010 21:27 UTC (Fri) by corbet
Occasionally, your editor will be struck by a series of topics all
associated with a common theme. The recent fuss about Android's presence
(or the lack thereof) in the mainline kernel ties in well with a couple of
other items of notice: the Nexus One phone and the role of free software on
the Android platform in general.
Click below (subscribers only) for a discussion of Android from three
different points of view.
Full Story (comments: 37)
[$] Samba with Active Directory: getting closer
[Front] Posted Feb 3, 2010 17:47 UTC (Wed) by jake
From one point of view, Samba is open source high
drama at its finest: an early adopter of version 3
of the GNU General Public License, and the recipient
of an unprecedented release of formerly proprietary
Microsoft documentation, thanks to a high-profile
anti-trust case. Meanwhile, though, it's the
low-profile software that implements the Server Message Block (SMB)
file-sharing protocol, sometimes known as CIFS. Samba powers every inexpensive
NAS device in the computer store—without even a
mention on the box—and comes with all the common
Linux distributions and with Apple's Mac OS X Server.
Today, as Samba comes closer to implementing a
key Microsoft directory protocol, the two aspects are
being forced together. Click below, subscribers only, for a look at
Samba's status from guest author Don Marti.
Full Story (comments: 26)
[$] Security in the 20-teens
[Security] Posted Feb 1, 2010 17:47 UTC (Mon) by corbet
Recently, Google announced that its operations in China (and beyond) had
been subject to sophisticated attacks, some of which were successful; a
number of other companies have been attacked as well. The source of these
attacks may never be proved, but it is widely assumed that they were
carried out by government agencies. There are also allegations
that the East Anglia email leak was a government-sponsored operation.
Incidents like these demonstrate that the security game has changed in
significant ways, with implications that the community can ignore only at
its peril.
Full Story (comments: 78)
An LCA 2010 overview
[Front] Posted Jan 26, 2010 16:37 UTC (Tue) by corbet
The 2010 edition of linux.conf.au was held on January 18 to 22 in
Wellington, New Zealand. A number of the talks from this event have been
covered elsewhere on LWN, with more to come; this article will talk about
several other sessions and your editor's impressions of the conference as a
whole. In brief: it was a highly successful event which easily lived up to
the high standards set by LCA.
Full Story (comments: 16)
LCA: Static analysis with GCC plugins
[Front] Posted Jan 22, 2010 20:47 UTC (Fri) by corbet
Taras Glek works for Mozilla, but he is not a browser hacker; instead, he
works on GCC and other tools aimed at making the browser development
process better. It is, he says, a good job. While carrying out his
duties, Taras has been able to put a new GCC feature to work in ways which
may prove to be useful well beyond Mozilla.
Click below (subscribers only) for the full report from linux.conf.au
2010.
Full Story (comments: 52)
LCA: Cooperative management of package copyright and licensing data
[Distributions] Posted Jan 20, 2010 14:47 UTC (Wed) by corbet
Kate Stewart is the manager of the PowerPC team at Freescale. As such, she
has a basic customer service problem to solve: people who buy a board from
Freescale would like to have some sort of operating system to run on it.
That system, of course, will be Linux; satisfying this requirement means
that Freescale must operate as a sort of Linux distributor. At her
linux.conf.au talk, Kate talked about a new initiative aimed at helping
distributors to ensure that they are compliant with the licenses of the
software they are shipping. Click below (subscribers only) for this report
from LCA.
Full Story (comments: 10)
LCA: How to destroy your community
[Front] Posted Jan 18, 2010 14:45 UTC (Mon) by corbet
Josh Berkus is well known as a PostgreSQL hacker, but, as it happens, he
also picked up some valuable experience during his stint at "The
Laboratory for the Destruction of Communities," otherwise known as Sun
Microsystems. That experience has been distilled into a "patented
ten-step method" on how to free a project of unwelcome community
involvement. Josh's energetic linux.conf.au presentation on this topic was
the first talk in the "business of open source" miniconf; it was
well received by an enthusiastic crowd.
Click below (subscribers only) for
the full report.
Full Story (comments: 56)
RawTherapee: the newest open source raw photo editor
[Front] Posted Jan 13, 2010 19:04 UTC (Wed) by jake
Gábor Horváth has been developing the raw photo converter
RawTherapee single-handedly, on
Linux and Windows, since 2006. The application has been freeware the
entire time, with Horváth accepting Paypal donations through the
project's web site. Consequently, although there are significant changes
in the 3.0 alpha release announced on
January 4th, it was arguably bigger news that the project was switching to
the GPLv3. Click below (subscribers only) for the full story.
Full Story (comments: 37)
Speculating on page faults
[Kernel] Posted Jan 12, 2010 23:21 UTC (Tue) by corbet
Improving the performance of the kernel is generally a good thing to do;
that is why many of our best developers have put considerable amounts of
time into optimization work. One area which has recently seen some
attention is in the handling of soft page faults. As the course of this
work shows, though, performance problems are not always where one thinks
they might be; sometimes it's necessary to take a step back and reevaluate
the situation, possibly dumping a lot of code in the process. Click below
(subscribers only) for a technical article from this week's Kernel Page.
Full Story (comments: 6)
The Grumpy Editor's Tomato review
[Front] Posted Jan 11, 2010 21:17 UTC (Mon) by corbet
Your editor has just completed an important transition: moving his Internet
connectivity from one evil branch of the local telecom duopoly to the
other, equally
evil branch. This change required the acquisition of a new router; that,
in turn, provided the opportunity to play with Linux-based router
software, and Tomato in
particular. Read on (subscribers only) for your editor's impressions of
this impressive bit of (mostly) free software.
Full Story (comments: 49)
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Current news
openSUSE Survey 2010
[Distributions] Posted Feb 8, 2010 23:54 UTC (Mon) by jake
openSUSE is looking for information from its users about the distribution by way of a survey, which runs through the end of February. The survey is meant to "give feedback to the openSUSE
project about the distribution, the openSUSE tools environment and the project
in general. Let us know where things are in good shape and areas where
improvement is needed." Click below for the full announcement.
Full Story (comments: none)
Linux Storage and Filesystems Summit cfp
[Announcements] Posted Feb 8, 2010 22:32 UTC (Mon) by jake
James Bottomley has announced this year's Linux Storage and Filesystems Summit, which will be held just prior to LinuxCon in Boston on August 8 and 9. It will be held in conjunction with the Virtual Memory (VM) summit, so there will be three tracks (storage, filesystems, VM) as well as joint meetings for all participants. Proposals for discussion topics and requests for invitations are being solicited; click below for the full announcement. "Presentations are allowed to guide discussion, but are strongly
discouraged. There will be no recording or audio bridge, however
written minutes will be published as in previous years."
Full Story (comments: none)
Security updates for Monday
[Security] Posted Feb 8, 2010 21:16 UTC (Mon) by jake
Fedora has updated chrony (F11, F12:
denial of service) and ocsinventory (F11, F12:
multiple vulnerabilities).
Mandriva has updated squid (denial
of service) and kernel (multiple
vulnerabilities).
SUSE has updated kernel (multiple
vulnerabilities).
Comments (none posted)
GNOME accessibility developers concerned about Oracle's commitment
[Development] Posted Feb 8, 2010 16:26 UTC (Mon) by jake
There are concerns in the GNOME accessibility development community about what the Oracle takeover of Sun means for the efforts led by Sun's Accessibility Project Office (APO). Orca project lead Willie Walker has been laid off and is looking for work, possibly in areas that will not allow him to continue contributing to Orca. In addition, assistive technology specialist Joanmarie Diggs has published an open letter to Oracle concerning the future of the APO and its work. "Last week, Oracle laid off two more members of Sun's already-decimated APO. One of those let go happened to be both the Orca project lead and the GNOME Accessibility project lead, Willie Walker. I truly hope this was an oversight on Oracle's part, and one that will be rectified very soon. Because if it is not, and if no other company steps forward to continue this work, the accessibility of the GNOME desktop will become the open source equivalent of an unfunded mandate, doomed ultimately to fail."
Comments (11 posted)
Linux Conf raises $33,000 for charity (ComputerWorld)
[Announcements] Posted Feb 8, 2010 15:53 UTC (Mon) by jake
ComputerWorld reports on the outcome of the charity auction at linux.conf.au. "A $12,750 donation from Linux Australia on the night brought the total funds raised for the air rescue service to more than $33,000. [...] 'Free open source software is founded on generosity and these supporters have certainly taken that value to heart,' Life Flight Trust CEO David Irving said in a statement. 'The funds raised will enable 13 people to receive emergency flights, which is a great outcome for the community.'"
Comments (3 posted)
Kernel prepatch 2.6.33-rc7
[Kernel] Posted Feb 6, 2010 22:54 UTC (Sat) by corbet
Linus has taken some time off from playing
with his new phone to release the 2.6.33-rc7prepatch. "I have to admit
that I wish we had way fewer regressions listed by this time... But we've
certainly fixed a few things, and it's been a week, so here's -rc7. I wish
I could say that it's the last -rc, but I strongly doubt that, and we'll
almost certainly have at least one more." See the
full changelog for the details.
Comments (none posted)
New GNOME Journal articles
[Development] Posted Feb 6, 2010 20:31 UTC (Sat) by corbet
The GNOME Journal has posted a new set of articles, including an
interview with Jonathan Thomas (OpenShot video editor creator), a Banshee
update, a summary
of the 2009 Boston Summit, an overview of PiTiVi,
and a look at writing
multimedia applications with Vala.
Comments (15 posted)
Linux Foundation Announces 2010 "We're Linux" Video Contest
[Announcements] Posted Feb 5, 2010 19:48 UTC (Fri) by ris
The Linux Foundation has announced
the 2010 edition of the "We're Linux" video contest. "The contest is calling all community members and amateur filmmakers to share with the public what a 30-60 second Linux-focused spot for the Super Bowl might look like. This theme is not a requirement for entry; however, videos that can demonstrate the benefits of Linux to the general public are likely to receive more community votes. The submissions should aim to inspire people to use Linux, create conversations among the public, and convey the power and ideals of Linux."
Comments (none posted)
Hands-on: new single-window mode makes GIMP less gimpy (ars technica)
[Development] Posted Feb 5, 2010 19:02 UTC (Fri) by ris
Ryan Paul takes
a look GIMP 2.8. "The venerable GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP) is undergoing a significant transformation. The next major release, version 2.8, will introduce an improved user interface with an optional single-window mode. Although this update is still under heavy development, users can get an early look by compiling the latest source code of the development version from the GIMP's version control repository."
Comments (23 posted)
Security advisories for Friday
[Security] Posted Feb 5, 2010 18:41 UTC (Fri) by ris
Fedora has updated gmime22 (F11, F12:
arbitrary code execution), ejabberd (F11, F12:
remote denial of service), dokuwiki (F11, F12: cross-site request forgeries),
kernel (F11: multiple
vulnerabilities), and nss (F12:
man-in-the-middle/SSL injection).
SUSE has updated kernel (multiple
vulnerabilities).
Ubuntu has updated kernel (multiple
vulnerabilities).
Comments (none posted)
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