Happy 20th birthday Debian!
On Fri 16 August 2013 with tags birthdayWritten by Ana Guerrero Lopez and Francesca Ciceri
Today is Debian's 20 anniversary. This anniversary would have been impossible without a strong community of users and developers. That's why for its commemoration, we asked the Debian community what Debian meant to them. Below you have a selection of the answers we got.
First:
Since I run Debian on my computers, I do not play anymore to 3D shooting games, not because of the lack of Free 3D drivers, but because developing Debian is more fun and addictive.
Second:
Debian is a truly community based distro which is devoted to FOSS ideas and standards. It perfectly works on high variety of hardware. Users from all over the world have been using Debian and contributing to it during 20 years. And I am proud to be one of them. Happy Birthday, Debian!
Third:
When I considered switching to Linux I asked friends which distribution to choose. I was told skip other distributions that were considered more newbie-friendly at the time and go straight to Debian instead. It might be more work initially, they said, but it would save me the hassle of switching to Debian later on, which I would inevitably do. Turns out they were right. I started my Linux experience more than ten years ago with Debian and have yet to see a better Linux distribution.
Fourth:
[...] You are a worldwide community of volunteers working together for 20 years now. To me this is an encouraging example and, given the sorry state of the world we live in, more important than the technical quality of the operating system. I wish you another successful twenty years and to stay as independent as you are.
Fifth:
I initially started in Debian as it was an interesting technical challenge. Over the years the community and having good standards around what Free Software is has become more important.
Sixth:
As a user of Debian for 14 years, and a former Debian Developer for 10, I would like to wish a happy birthday to the best project on the internet, and the best Linux distribution ever. Thanks for all of your support over the years!
Seventh:
"Rock Solid Stability and Absolute Freedom" Thats what Debian means to me.
Eighth:
Debian gives me a feeling that I am using the best linux has to offer. You know your machine is in safe hands.
Ninth:
As a long time Debian user and sometimes supporter [...] I wish Debian all the best for next 20 years and beyond! Debian is the universal operating system. And it's free (and not just as in beer ;-)
Tenth:
Debian is an awesome combination of obsessive high quality software and software freedom. It's a pleasure to be able to use and contribute to this project. Thanks to all for their excellent work! Cheers to 2**20 years more!
Eleventh:
[...] I am so very thankful to all of the people who have contributed to and continue to contribute to such a wonderful ecosystem of tools. I love the commitment to the long term goals of security, freedom and transparency with respect to the computer systems that we all use and rely upon and the information that we store on them.
Twelfth:
Debian is the operating system that makes me free.
Thirteenth:
Debian is a family gathered around great idea. Its pure love.
Martin Michlmayr gets the O'Reilly Open Source Award
On Tue 30 July 2013 with tags announce awardWritten by Ana Guerrero Lopez
Longtime Debian Developer Martin Michlmayr was named as one of 6 winners of the 2013 O’Reilly Open Source Awards. This Award recognize individual contributors who have demonstrated exceptional leadership, creativity, and collaboration in the development of Open Source Software.
Martin received the award for his investment in Debian where he served as Debian Project Leader for two terms between 2003 and 2005.
Congratulations tbm!
all Debian source are belong to us
On Tue 02 July 2013 with tags debian mirrors announce infrastructure technical sourcesWritten by Ana Guerrero
This is a verbatim repost from Stefano Zacchiroli's post
TL;DR: go to http://sources.debian.net and enjoy.
Debsources is a new toy I've been working on at IRILL together with Matthieu Caneill. In essence, debsources is a simple web application that allows to publish an unpacked Debian source mirror on the Web.
You can deploy Debsources where you please, but there is a main instance at
http://sources.debian.net (sources.d.n
for short) that you will
probably find interesting. sources.d.n
follows closely the Debian archive in
two ways:
- it is updated 4 times a day to reflect the content of the Debian archive
- it contains sources coming from official Debian suites: the usual ones
(from oldstable to experimental),
*-updates
(ex volatile),*-proposed-updates
, and*-backports
(from Wheezy on)
Via sources.d.n
you can therefore browse the content of Debian source
packages with usual code viewing features like syntax highlighting. More
interestingly, you can search through the source code (of unstable only,
though) via integration with http://codesearch.debian.net. You can also use
sources.d.n
programmatically to
query available versions or
link to specific lines, with the
possibility of adding contextual pop-up messages
(example).
In fact, you might have stumbled upon sources.d.n
already in the past few
days, via other popular Debian services where it has already been integrated.
In particular: codesearch.d.n
now defaults to show results via sources.d.n
,
and the PTS has grown new "browse source
code" hyperlinks that point to it. If you've ideas of other Debian services
where sources.d.n
should be integrated, please let me know.
I find Debsources and sources.d.n
already quite useful but, as it often
happens, there is still a lot
TODO.
Obviously, it is all Free Software (released under GNU AGPLv3). Do not hesitate
to report new bugs and, better, to submit patches for the outstanding ones.
Acknowledgements
- Matthieu Caneill is the main developer of
Debsources web front-end;
sources.d.n
wouldn't exist without him. - others have already contributed patches to integrate
sources.d.n
with other services, in particular:- many thanks to Michael Stapelberg (for
codesearch.d.n
integration), and - Paul Wise (for PTS integration).
- many thanks to Michael Stapelberg (for
- a full list of contributors is available and eagerly waiting for new additions
- IRILL has kindly provided sponsoring for Matthieu's
initial development work on Debsources, and offered both the server and
hosting facilities that power
sources.d.n
PS in case you were wondering: at present sources.d.n
requires ~381
GB of disk space to hold all uncompressed source packages, plus ~83 GB for
the local (compressed) source mirror
Remove unofficial debian-multimedia.org repository from your sources
On Fri 14 June 2013 with tags announceWritten by Publicity team
The unofficial third party repository Debian Multimedia stopped using the domain debian-multimedia.org some months ago. The domain expired and it is now registered again by someone unknown to Debian. (If we're wrong on this point, please sent us an email so we can take over the domain! ;) )
This means that the repository is no longer safe to use, and you should remove the related entries from your sources.list file.
After all, the need of an external repository for multimedia related packages has been greatly reduced with the release of Wheezy, which features many new and updated codecs and multimedia players.
Not sure if you're using the debian-multimedia repository? You can easily check it by running:
grep -i debian-multimedia.org /etc/apt/sources.list /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*
If you can see debian-multimedia.org line in output, you should remove all the lines including it.
Debian welcomes its 2013 crop of GSoC students!
On Mon 27 May 2013 with tags gsoc google announce development diversity software code projectsWritten by Nicolas Dandrimont
We are proud to announce that 16 students have been accepted to work on improving Debian this summer through the Google Summer of Code! This is great news, following our 15 accepted students in 2012, and 9 accepted students in 2011.
Here is the list of accepted students and projects:
- Aarsh Shah: Improvements to Debian Search and the Search Interface
- Aron Xu: ZFS on Linux integration
- Boris Bobrov: Debian Metrics Portal
- Catalin Usurelu: Enabling free multimedia real-time communications (RTC) with Debian
- Eleanor Chen: MIPS N32/N64 ABI Port
- Emmanouil Kiagias: Redesign metapackage creation for Debian Blends
- Eugenio Cano-Manuel: Leiningen & Clojure packaging
- Fabian Grünbichler: Add CROTP support to oath-toolkit and dynalogin
- Gustavo Alkmim: Bootstrappable Debian
- Justus Winter: Debian GNU/Hurd Debianish initialization
- Lei Wang: OpenRC init system in Debian
- Léo Cavaillé: scan-build on the Debian archive
- Marko Lalic: PTS rewrite in Django
- Pawel Sarbinowski: Debian Android Application
- Shuxiong Ye: OpenJDK and Debian
- Simon Chopin: Implementation of message passing in the Debian infrastructure
If you're interested in one of the projects, please follow the links and talk directly to the students or the mentors, or come hang out with us on IRC.
Welcome everyone, and let's make sure we all have an amazing summer!