Debian Project News - July 12th, 2012
Welcome to this year's fourteenth issue of DPN, the newsletter for the Debian community. Topics covered in this issue include:
- New artwork for
Wheezy
- Reports from DebCamp
- Bits from the DPL
- Debian Maintainer Dashboard, a new UDD frontend
- Interviews
- New Debian Contributors
- Release-Critical bugs statistics for the upcoming release
- Important Debian Security Advisories
- New and noteworthy packages
- Work-needing packages
- Want to continue reading DPN?
New artwork for Wheezy
The Joy
theme has been
selected
as the default artwork for Debian systems for the upcoming release of Debian 7.0 (Wheezy).
The theme is intended to appeal by being efficient with a light and simple theme.
There is also a fancier variant called Joy Inksplat
available in the
desktop-base package for those who prefer a more fun desktop. For the release
after Wheezy, there are early thoughts about introducing multiple themes, more
fine-grained theme packages and metapackages for selecting among them.
Reports from DebCamp
DebCamp took place last week at the Universidad Centroamericana in Managua,
Nicaragua. This week has been very productive,
as can be seen from people's reports: Christian Perrier
described on his blog
his work on internationalisation, localisation and Samba packaging; Joey Hess
mentioned his progress on
git-annex
assistant and
Debian
CDs; Gregor Herrmann wrote about
his work
within the Debian Perl Group;
Steve McIntyre wrote about his preparations
for the six sessions he is running; and Gunnar Wolf reported that
DebCamp
has officially started.
DebCamp is followed this week by DebConf12, the conference for Debian
developers, which started with the Debian
Day, an open event for enthusiasts, users, developers and anyone interested
in finding out more about Debian and Free Software. The whole of DebConf is
covered on video (which makes many
people happy).
The schedule of the
conference and the relevant links for the video streaming are available on the
dedicated DebConf page.
Bits from the DPL
Stefano Zacchiroli sent his monthly report on DPL activities from DebConf12. During this month, Debian joined the FSF campaign on secure boot, and DuckDuckGo sent the first report of a donation after the agreement on revenue sharing. Stefano also mentions some interesting discussions for project evolution, in particular the proposals to change the way DM permissions are handled and to change the policy ruling the debian.net domain.
Stefano Zacchiroli delivered his final
Bits from the DPL
talk on the first day of DebConf12. In his talk
(slides) he
spoke about the early history of Debian, where we are today, how our place in the wider
free software community has evolved, and our principles; he summed up by stating that
we play a fundamental role in Free Software
. He then explored the challenges
that we face in meeting our responsibility to live up to our role in the Free Software community,
including keeping contribution levels healthy, increasing the diversity of our community,
being on time with releases, keeping release freezes short, collective code ownership,
low company involvement and how the DPL
role might need to evolve in the future.
Debian Maintainer Dashboard, a new UDD frontend
Lucas Nussbaum announced on his blog
the creation of the Debian Maintainer Dashboard, a service
relying on UDD to
expose as much useful information as possible about a maintainer’s packages.
The Debian Maintainer Dashboard is in its early days and is waiting for contributors.
In related news, UDD has been
migrated to
ullmann,
one of the new machines recently set up by DSA.
Interviews
There have been
Debian
Edu interviews
with
George
Bredberg (in English),
José
Luis Redrejo Rodríguez (in English) and
Markus
Gamenius (in Norwegian), who all describe, among other things, how
they got involved in Debian Edu and their views about it.
New Debian Contributors
Fifteen people have started to maintain packages since the previous issue of the Debian Project News. Please welcome Miguel Telleria de Esteban, Miroslav Suchý, Georgios M. Zarkadas, Julian Wollrath, Malcolm Locke, Shawn Landden, Colin King, David Suarez, Chris Johnston, Klas Lindfors, Alexander Inyukhin, Nikolai Lusan, Adrien Grellier, Ioan Rogers, and Eric Maeker into our project!
Release-Critical bugs statistics for the upcoming release
According to the Bugs Search interface of the Ultimate Debian Database, the upcoming release, Debian Wheezy
, is currently affected by 484 Release-Critical bugs. Ignoring bugs which are easily solved or on the way to being solved, roughly speaking, about 325 Release-Critical bugs remain to be solved for the release to happen.
There are also some hints on how to interpret these numbers.
Important Debian Security Advisories
Debian's Security Team recently released advisories for these packages (among others): bcfg2, libspring-2.5-java, zendframework, libapache-mod-security, openjdk-6, and pidgin. Please read them carefully and take the proper measures.
Please note that these are a selection of the more important security advisories of the last weeks. If you need to be kept up to date about security advisories released by the Debian Security Team, please subscribe to the security mailing list (and the separate backports list, and stable updates list) for announcements.
New and noteworthy packages
492 packages were added to the unstable Debian archive recently. Among many others are:
- dunst — minimalistic notification daemon
- freefoam — programs for Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
- git-extras — extra commands for Git
- jekyll — simple, blog aware, static site generator
- kde-telepathy — metapackage for installing all the KDE Telepathy components
- kiwix — Wikipedia offline reader
- mountall — filesystem mounting tool
- powerstat — laptop power measuring tool
- scratch — easy to use programming environment for ages 8 and up
- task-spooler — personal job scheduler
- udj-desktop-client — social music player
- wordwarvi — retro-styled side-scrolling shoot'em up arcade game
Work-needing packages
Currently 464 packages are orphaned and 147 packages are up for adoption: please visit the complete list of packages which need your help.
Want to continue reading DPN?
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This issue of Debian Project News was edited by Cédric Boutillier, David Prévot, Justin B Rye and Paul Wise.