Kirjoittaja Aihe: openSUSE news  (Luettu 187028 kertaa)

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« Vastaus #80 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
openSUSE participates in GSoC 2014
4 March 2014, 9:01 pm

GSoC 2014: First Steps openSUSE is part of yet another Google Summer of Code. After a rocking ride in last year’s edition, our Geeko’s are gearing up for another awesome program. This year promises to be more special, as Google is celebrating its 10th anniversary of the program.

About the Program: Google Summer of Code (commonly called as GSoC) is an annual program conducted by Google which pays students code to write code for open source organizations. It is one of the most best ways for organizations such as openSUSE to get some quality work done, and gain long term contributors. In the last edition, we had 10 students complete their projects and gain recognition within the community.

openSUSE and GSoC: Last year, we collaborated with ownCloud, Balabit(makers of syslog-ng) and Hedgewars under a common umbrella. It worked very well for all of us. This year, we are collaborating with ownCloud, Zorp(a Gateway technology by Balabit) and the MATE desktop along with the bucket load of awesome projects from openSUSE itself. Our mentors are quite enthusiastic, and recognize the role played by GSoC in moving the community forward.

For Students: If you are a student who wants to participate under openSUSE, and ‘have a lot of fun’, do check out our ideas page and guidelines. As always, the key is to start early and to interact with mentors and the community at large. Fixing bugs and working on Proof of Concepts is a good way to start.

Student application period opens on 10th March, and continues till March 21.

Contact: You can find out all about our GSoC programme on the wiki or contact the GSoC team for further questions

Manu Gupta

Saurabh Sood

You can reach the community at our Mailing List and on #opensuse-project on IRC (Freenode).

This article has been contributed by Saurabh Sood

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #81 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
oSC14 Keynote Confirmed, More Awesome Coming
5 March 2014, 7:10 pm

oSC14 Logo_FinalWe are very pleased to announce Michael Meeks as our keynote speaker for the Saturday opening session at oSC14, held in Dubrovnik April 25th – 28th, 2014. Besides Michael Meeks, the openSUSE board will talk, opening the event on Friday and over 20 of the 60 currently submitted talks have already been accepted. Last but not least, we’d like to tell you that the deadline for the Call for Papers has been extended until the end of this month.

Deadline extended! While Program Committee is putting the puzzle pieces together to create another great content packed conference we are happy to announce that the deadline for talk proposals has been extended to the end of March (March 31st). This will give those with great ideas that have not yet submitted their proposal the chance to do so over the next 3 weeks. We expect to have the final schedule available shortly after the March 31st close of the submission period.

If you have not yet submitted your talk proposal we encourage you to do so. The program committee will continue to accept proposals through out the extended submission deadline and if you wait until the end you may be out of luck as the schedule may be full.

What kind of proposals? click to submit a talk!

You’re wondering what kind of sessions we are looking for, and from whom? This year’s theme is “The Strength to Change“, as with all that’s going on in Free Software, change is a constant for us. Session proposals that connect in a meaningful way with change and strength would be appreciated!

As explained in the CfP announcement, we have four main themes this year:

  • End user track (Geeko Enthusiast)
  • Business track (Geeko for suits)
  • Community and Project (Geekos around the world)
  • Technology & Development (Geeko tech)
Sessions should fit in one of those, either as short (30 minutes) or long (60 minutes) talk, Lightning Talk (15 min) or workshop (2-4 hours). Find more details about what we’re looking for in the CfP announcement.

You can submit proposals on this page.

Michael Meeks Keynoting 400px-Michael_MeeksMichael Meeks has been contributing to open source software for a long time, primarily focusing on GNOME, OpenOffice and now LibreOffice. Michael was one of the leaders in the formation of the Document Foundation and serves on the Engineering Steering Committee of the foundation. The Document Foundation’s primary purpose is to further the development of LibreOffice, the premiere open source office suite.

Since the fork of LibreOffice from the OpenOffice code base and the formation of the Document Foundation the LibreOffice code base has made great strides with the addition of many features and many bugs being fixed. This is in no small part attributable to Michael’s dedication and leadership. The countless improvements in LibreOffice have benefited Linux distributions by allowing us to offer a first grade office suite that is second to none as part of our effort.

In a recent transition Michael moved from SUSE to Collabora where Michael has the opportunity to continue to focus his attention on the development of LibreOffice and the exploration of new ideas for LibreOffice, such as a mobile version or a Cloud based version. Michael will gives us an overview on how the Document Foundation and LibreOffice were able to emerge from the corporate control of OpenOffice to become the great and vibrant community that has formed around the code base today. We will also here some anecdotes about dealing with such a large code base from a technical perspective.

We are very excited to have Michael speak at oSC14.

Jan & kittens

First talks accepted and scheduled! The oSC14 Program Committee has already accepted over 20 of the 60 session proposals submitted to date. The event will be kicked off on Friday by the board, discussing the state of the openSUSE community in their opening keynote. Saturday, Michael Meeks will open the day.

In addition to the traditional Live Project Meeting, led by the openSUSE Board, we have a number of technically focused talks such as a presentation focused on Bcache that allows the combination of SSDs with spinning hard drives that provide higher capacities at a lower cost and a workshop for Ruby on Rails beginners. There are a number of confirmed talks about the technical infrastructure of openSUSE, from tools that help with packaging, to post build checks in OBS, and introduction to openSUSE initiated projects such as openQA.

The influence of the Cloud architecture on software development has not passed us either and thus we have a number of talks focusing on the Cloud topic. For those more interested in community activities that are less technical there will be the presentation of the new openSUSE Booth Box kit. The material included in a box is available for everyone to touch and see. There will also be a presentation about the location for oSC15 and a number of other talks relating to openSUSE marketing and promoting our project.

Come and join the fun! written by Robert Schweikert, CfP committee

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #82 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
Sneak Preview of oSC14 Sessions
11 March 2014, 11:00 am

oSC14 Logo_FinalAt the openSUSE Conference 2014 in Dubrovnik hundreds of Geekos are expected to meet, discuss and attend the talks and workshops. The openSUSE Conference Paper Committee is hard at work selecting the best proposals from the submissions. There must be something for everybody: beginners and professionals, technical or more socially oriented. The three simultaneous sessions during three days give over 80 slots. What kind of content can you expect? This article gives you a sneak preview by going over a number of proposals which have already been accepted.

Themes We shared with you last week that Michael Meeks would be keynote speaker, today we go into the presentations and workshops. The sessions are organized around this year’s theme, which is “The Strength to Change“. With all that’s going on in Free Software, change is a constant for us.

As explained in the CfP announcement, we have four main tracks this year:

  • End user track (Geeko Enthusiast)
  • Business track (Geeko for suits)
  • Community and Project (Geekos around the world)
  • Technology & Development (Geeko tech)
End user track For end users, the openSUSE Conference features a series of interesting talks. For starters, ownCloud fans will enjoy the talk by Jos Poortvliet about ownCloud at home and the cloud features in more talks with sessions on databases (MySQL) and groupware tools. Desktop users will appreciate an update on what is going on in and to be expected from the KDE community (also Jos Poortvliet), the Jolla phone by Michal Hrušecký and more is coming.

Business track The business track has only one talk confirmed: OpenStack, by Vincent Untz. We’re looking for more sessions interesting for businesses! If you have an interesting subject, send in a proposal.

Still empty conference roomWill you sit here? Community and Project In the community sessions you will find talks about the openSUSE community, like a scientific analysis of our collaboration patterns in OBS and bugzilla by Ilias R., information about the openSUSE Travel Support Program from Izabel Valverde and the presentation of our conference location for 2015 by the board. A second subject are sessions around communities in general, with talks about giving presentations and running booths at events by Jos.

Technology & Development openSUSE development is a central subject for oSC14. Release manager Stephan Kulow will talk about the introduction of staging projects, rings and openQA following the new workflow proposal from last year. Alberto Planas will be giving a long talk on the subject of writing plugins for osc, the Open Build Service command line client.

openQA, the automated operating system testing tool of openSUSE, is poised to be given a greater role in development. At the openSUSE conference you will find a workshop for creating openQA tests as well as a short talk on becoming a contributor to openQA development, both done by Alberto. In other testing news and improvements news, the tools rpmlint and speccleaner will get their share of attention by respectively Ludwig Nussel and Michal Hrušecký.

Not only openSUSE development tools are build – we do more than package. Several talks on openSUSE infrastructure, including our Travel Support Program tool and login infrastructure (Ancor Gonzales Sosa, are in the plan.

Several openSUSE tools for end users will be presented as well. The development of YaST modules will be subject of a workshop and a lightning talk by Josef Reidinger and from Arvin Schnell you can learn how LVM, next-gen filesystem btrfs and file-system snapshot tool snapper fit together.

click to submit a talk!

Kernel hacker Oliver Neukum will give a less openSUSE-specific talk about Bcache, a kernel feature to create a transparent SSD based cache for spinning rust. For developers a workshop Ruby for Beginners by Camila Ayresis confirmed and several other programming related sessions are being discussed.

More and more Above are the sessions currently confirmed – more are submitted and the CfP committee is going over them and making decisions. There is still time to get your session in. But you will have to be quick: sessions come in and are confirmed every day and we’ll run out of slots soon!

If you’re not sure about the subject, how to bring it or your own skills, consider reading our speaker guidelines article as it has plenty of tips on giving presentations and workshops. Also, community manager Jos Poortvliet will give a session about presenting at the first day of the conference.

Last but not least – if you plan on visiting oSC, go and register yourself! If travel costs are an issue, consider applying for travel support.

We want you there!

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #83 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
oSC14 Organized Accomodation Deadline Tomorrow!
14 March 2014, 6:56 pm

As you can see on the website, affordable accommodation deals have been prepared for all the Geekos visiting the openSUSE conference 2014. To get those low prices, bookings should be done through the supporting company Dalmatia Aeterna. You can contact Dalmatia Aeterna through email or through their website contact form. Be sure to specify type of accommodation you want to book, arrival and departure date, for how many guests you are making a reservation. And of course, don’t forget to mention the code: “openSUSE”!

The deadline to book rooms with discounted rate is tomorrow March 15th, 2014. After that date bookings are available “on request” basis only. That means that after the deadline we can’t guarantee the rates listed on the site!

The options Take a look at the offerings, and choose something that suites you. Note that there is an additional tourist tax 1 EUR per person daily and a 20€ booking fee per person that will be charged. Prices are per person.

accommodation

There are also private accommodations available, they are all over town. See the website for details.

Register Whether you want to give a talk at oSC14, or just visit, don’t forget to register for the conference as soon as you make your bookings so we can prepare the welcome packages and organize other activities accordingly. Registration is available through the conference website.

Support the conference Going to oSC14 is free, but if you choose to support our event and the Travel Support Program, you can do so by purchasing supporter or professional tickets! See here.

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #84 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
rsync.opensuse.org down, take two
17 March 2014, 6:22 pm

After the outage 1 month ago, it seems rsync.opensuse.org has similar hardware problems again.

Server

Again we did not see any output on the serial console any more and even a power cycle did not reanimate the system.

As the hardware is located in the data center of our sponsor IP Exchange, we apologize for the delay it will take to fix the problem: we just need a field worker at the location who has the appropriate permissions and skills.

During the downtime (and maybe also a good tip afterward), please check on http://mirrors.opensuse.org/ for the closest mirror nearby your location that also offers rsync for you.

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #85 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
Development for 13.2 Kicks Off
19 March 2014, 3:33 pm

openSUSE Factory development is going steady and our venerable release manager has made a first milestone available. No development schedule has yet been determined, although it has been decided that we will aim for a release in November of this year. Major changes include X, Y and Z.

oSC14 banner

Release Plans Our normal 8-month release cycle would warrant a release in July, but the openSUSE team has proposed to change the schedule due to the work they are doing on our tooling and infrastructure. In the discussions on our mailing list it became clear a November release has much support. This is now the tentative plan and we will decide the specific schedule as well as who’s gonna do what and where at the upcoming openSUSE Conference in Dubrovnik.

Meanwhile, the openSUSE team is asking for feedback, bug hunting and fixing of the new-and-improved openQA and Staging tools for the Open Build Service.

Changes in the first milestone Although we’re just at the start of our release cycle, this milestone already introduces a number of significant changes. Plans on what exactly will be included will be created at oSC14 next month.

  • The btrfs filesystem is default (and comes with btrfsprogs 3.12), as is the wicked network management tool (replacing ifup) and the dracut initrd replacement
  • YaST sports a new look and its Qt front-end is ported to Qt5
  • Zypper is at the 1.10.x branch for the next release, introducing a number of bug fixes and minor improvements
  • KDE Frameworks 5 packages are included, as well as the latest Application and Platform releases in the 4.x series
  • Our infrastructure is updated: rpm 4.11.2 introduces weak dependencies, PackageKit 0.8.16 comes with a new appdata format and there are binutils .24, Bluez 5.15, systemd 210, pulseaudio at 5.0 and the latest 3.14RC kernel
  • In the graphics area we now have packages for wayland 1.4, freetype 2.5.2 (changing font weights) and Mesa 10.1
  • Cloud and databases bring xen 4.4, virtualbox 4.3.8 and postgresql 9.3.
  • For developers we’ve included GCC 4.9 (default still 4.8.2), make 4.0, llvm 3.4, cmake 3.0(rc), gdb 7.7, git 1.9.0 and subversion 1.8.8
  • In the language area, we’ve now got ruby 2.1, php5 5.5.9 and python 2.7.6 and 3.4.0(rc)
Getting and playing You can get the milestone as usual on software.opensuse.org/developer. You can get involved in development discussions on the factory mailing list (subscribe).

Have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #86 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
Help Promote oSC14!
21 March 2014, 1:22 pm



oSC14 bannerclick to download banners! Every year we hear from people who did not know when or where the openSUSE Conference took place. This is a problem in urgent need of fixing. We need you to help us tell them! Everybody can help promote our conference. There are great banners and other graphics you can put on blogs, twitter, facebook and many other places. Be a part of oSC14, help us tell everybody about oSC14!

Logo and stuff We’ve got some great promotional images for the openSUSE conference. On the right is a website banner, and you can find plenty of different shapes and sizes by clicking on it. Below we have a folding tux – very cool. The PDF you get by clicking on it (has a white background) can be printed, ideally on A3 and a bit stronger-than-normal paper. You then cut it out following the lines, fold it – and you have your own tuxy promoting oSC14!

Folding Tux

Of course we have our awesome logo, I’m sure you have seen it before. We also have a really nice poster, great for hanging up at events you are going to.

poster, click to see downloadsClick to download posters Sponsors We would also appreciate it if you could help us find sponsors! If you know somebody who might want to support oSC14, consider giving them the sponsorship brochure.

Help us We do what we can to make the openSUSE conference 2014 awesome. And we will succeed at that. But you can help us do even better!

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #87 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
openSUSE Conference 2014 Location Sneak Peek
24 March 2014, 11:57 am

Building

Less than two months from the awesome openSUSE Conference will kick off. The location of oSC14 is the beautiful and historic city of Dubrovnik, located on the Dalmatian coast in Croatia. A warm and sunny weather at the beautiful Adritic sea and sandy beaches should welcome geekos from 24th to 28th of April.

About Dubrovnik Dubrovnik is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the Mediterranean. It is also known as „Pearl of the Adriatic“, and since a few years as „King’s Landing“ from the popular TV show that is filmed in Dubrovnik. Since 1979 the city of Dubrovnik is on the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites. The Old Town of Dubrovnik is surrounded by city walls, medieval fortresses, Rector’s Palace and churches from different periods. It is beautiful and is Dubrovnik’s main tourist attraction, one that you don’t want to miss if you visit the city.

LectureHall

The venue The conference venue, also known as the Campus of the University of Dubrovnik, is located just a 5 minutes walk from the Old Town of Dubrovnik. The University of Dubrovnik is the youngest university in Croatia established in 2003, but it has very long tradition in higher education that goes back to the 17th century. The venue was first built as a hospital, but in 2012 it was renewed and re-purposed for the requirements of the University of Dubrovnik. The stone walls of the Campus on the outside are following Dubrovnik’s historical architecture, but inside you will encounter very modern technology.

BoFRoom

There will be a main area with booths from various Free Software projects and some place for people to hang and hack, while the main and secondary lecture hall will host the main talks. Then there are smaller rooms, the largest of which will be mostly used for workshops while other is available for BoF sessions.

Near the venue you can find all kinds of food for during lunch and dinner. The Sesame Tavern (which is where the welcoming party will be hosted) is very close and the 5 minute walk to the Old Town gets you to the large variety of restaurants and pizzerias Dubrovnik offers. You will have plenty of opportunity to enjoy the many fresh fish and other seafood specialties as well as the famous Dubrovnik orange cake!

WorkshopRoom

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #88 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
FreeDesktop Summit about to start
27 March 2014, 6:54 pm

Next week, from Monday the 31st of March to the 4th of April, developers from the major Linux Desktops (GNOME, KDE, Unity and RazorQt) will meet again in Nuremberg for the second FreeDesktop Summit.

The summit is a joint technical meeting from developers working on ‘desktop infrastructure’ on the major Free Desktop projects and the event aims to improve collaboration between the projects by discussing specifications and the sharing of platform-level components.

Like last year, the event is supported by SUSE, which is offering the venue, the hotels and some help with organization.

Check the report from last year to get an idea of what this event is about.

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #89 : 03.04.2014 - klo:19:00 »
Bodega, app stores and the Open Build Service
3 April 2014, 4:00 pm



Welcome to the Bodega store! Bodega is a project making use of the Open Build Service. Aside from that, there are many other connections between the Bodega team and openSUSE – time to find out more! We spoke with Aaron Seigo, and discussed Bodega, Appstream, zypper, ymp and the beauty of Free Software.

What is Bodega? First off, let’s find out what Bodega is all about. Aaron explains:

Bodega is a store for digital stuff. In fancy words: it creates a catalog of metadata which represents digital assets.
The most important thing is of course the ‘digital asset’ term. That can be anything. For example, applications. Applications can be self contained – think how android does its APK files. Of course, things on Linux are often more complicated. Apache isn’t exactly a self-contained thing. And look further – perl, php, ruby, they all have their own addons like gems that need managing. Generalizing further, there are manuals. And books in general. Music, movies, pictures, you can go on.



Setting up a Bodega account Of course, the competition has these too – look at Apple or Google.

And how about Linux… Linux does not have a store where you can get such a wide variety of things. For a game, you can use Appstream, get it from Apper or GNOME’s software center. They all give a view on applications. Unfortunately, that is only useful for desktops and can handle things barely above the level of Angry Birds. If you want a python module as developers – these fancy tools won’t help you. Nor are they useful on servers. For those you have to rely on command line tools or even do things completely by hand. And it is all different between distributions.

Going further, where do you get documentation? For openSUSE, that’s activedoc or the forums or our support database on the wiki. Not from zypper. Music – you can get that from Magnatune and so on.

What if you can have one place where you can get a book, game, applications, isn’t that nice? That is what Bodega is.


The main screen of the store How is Bodega different? So, Bodega offers a digital store which can handle a wider variety of things than our current solutions. But what sets it apart from proprietary technologies like the Playstore and of course Canonical’s store solution? Aaron:

Most Linux solutions like Appstream assume their audience are users who play Angry Birds and use spreadsheets. Fair enough. Bodega takes a different approach and is far more ambitious.
Bodega has all the meta data in one place and offers ‘stores’ which are views on that data. That means you can have a software developer store, for example listing all languages and their addons separate; and a server section etc. And a separate UI for the angry-bird-and-spreadsheet crowd. All from the same bodega system, filtered by tags (not static categories!).

Talking about Appstream, Bodega can of course benefit from the metadata gathered for Appstream. And GNOME’s Software Center could be reworked to be a front-end to Bodega, adding books, music and lots of other digital data to its store. This is not meant to be a rewrite of what is there, or an isolated effort!



An application in the store And why would you build on Bodega? Bodega is open: everybody can quite easily add their own stores; or their own data sources; and add content and even sell it through their channels. It is not a closed system, on the contrary.

Open is a must, especially for Linux:

Take the 440.000 users of openSUSE. That would be a minimal amount of sales… The top-10 of paid apps in ubuntu makes less than a $100 per month of sales. Not really worth the effort. But if we could aggregate the sales between distributions, it would become relevant for third-party developers. Bodega as a cross-distribution is important!
And Bodega is useful for people outside of Linux. You can have your store on your own website so it is realistically possible for a independent author to sell their books in a bodega instance on their own website and never even SEE Linux. Yet the openSUSE users can get the books and benefit from the larger ecosystem…

The beauty of it is that it is all Free and Open Source Software, front and back. You can self-host all you want.
How do Bodega and OBS relate?

Preview of a wallpaper Bodega and openSUSE have something in common: the Open Build Service. Not only is OBS used by the Bodega developers and do they run openSUSE on their servers, Bodega supports ymp files!

Bodega is well integrated with the Open Build Service. If you create an app from OBS in Bodega, you just have to take the yaml file and fill in the missing details, adding screen shots for example. Bodega will not pull the package from OBS and store it somewhere. Instead it simply uses the one-click-install and when a user clicks on the install button, it sends the one-click-install file through. It thus does not interfere with updates, but it can show users that a new version is available and let them update from Bodega if they want.

Packagers still have to add their apps to the store but we could kickstart Bodega with the apps already shipped in openSUSE, using the Appstream metadata. Non-official repos can then be added and so on. It would be quite easy to import all of the openSUSE packages. Same with the and documentation and drivers (it can show “developer: nvidia” so users know to trust it). And if there is a new revision of the documentation, Bodega can take care of that, just like it handles software updates (through zypper of course).

This is where you can come in: the team is looking for help in this area and if you are interested in making this happen, come talk to the Bodega folks! You can find them on the active mailing list or the #plasma active channel on Freenode.

Done

Famous books included! You might be eager to find out what is there, today. Well, if you’ve seen the screenshots to the side, you know there is an app to access the store. It is build for touch screens but works just fine and you can get it in openSUSE through software.opensuse.org. Once installed, you can fire it up typing “active-addons” in a run command dialog.

Shawn Dunn (of cloverleaf fame) is putting together a more traditional desktop UI, while maintaining these packages as well. You will be able to have a conversation with him as he’s going to be at the openSUSE Conference in Dubrovnik this month where he will present a session about Bodega! He is known as SFaulken online and pretty much always hangs in the #opensuse-kde channel on Freenode where you can ask how to get things running or how to help him break stuff anytime. He’s also yelling at the world on google plus.

Bodega now contains the entire book set of Project Gutenberg (thousands of awesome, free books) as well as a number of wallpapers and applications. Aaron:

There is work to be done to include all openSUSE Software in Bodega. The store can use a little work too, but is based on QML which makes it very easy to improve. If you’re interested in helping out, let us know!
You can contact Aaron on IRC as aseigo in the #plasma active channel on Freenode, ping him on Google+ or shoot him a mail on aseigo on the KDE.org servers.

Source: openSUSE News


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« Vastaus #90 : 04.04.2014 - klo:19:01 »
The new generation of openQA hits the production server
4 April 2014, 4:30 pm

Bad news for the bugs: the new version of openQA is ready for prime time. Everybody following the blog of the openSUSE Team @ SUSE or the Factory mailing list during the last months, should be aware of the ongoing work to improve openQA and to promote it into a key component of the openSUSE integration process. Finally the new openQA is ready for public production environments, so thanks to the collaboration between the openSUSE Team and the original developers of openQA -Bernhard M. Wiedemann and Dominik Heidler- it’s finally deployed and accessible at openqa.opensuse.org

This new version brings a lot of changes at many levels, but probably the most relevant difference is the approach for tests execution: instead of running every step sequentially and comparing the needles at the end, the new version evaluates the status several times per test, deciding what to do next based on that status or aborting the whole tests as soon as a critical error is found. This approach enables both a better usage of the resources and more precise results.

This enhanced control of the execution and the results, alongside other improvements, makes possible to extend the scope of openQA. Tests of Factory isos are still there and running. But apart from them, you can see test results for the so called "staging projects", used to merge potentially dangerous packages. Generally speaking, you can just browse the test results and see what state is Factory in and how dramatic changes are about to happen.

Fuzzy matching in action: ignoring the floppy icon

Another main new feature is the use of fuzzy area matching for interpreting test results. That means much less false positives. Tests do not break that often and that easily. There is also a nice interface to figure out what failed. Try going to some failed test, selecting a needle and dragging the vertical yellow line. Pretty neat, isn’t it? You can also check how the test is written and what is it looking for. Feel free to play with it, enhance the current tests and needles and submit them via GitHub ;-)

There are even more changes, not directed towards users, but improvements in the interface that service operators use to set things up, including users management, job control or a new REST-like API. These will not affect most of you directly, just indirectly by making operators job easier.

So go ahead, play with it and if you want to help, sources are on github and we even have some easy hacks in progress.o.o to ease you into the development ;-)

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #91 : 04.04.2014 - klo:19:01 »
What’s up on KDE repositories
4 April 2014, 4:36 pm

Dear KDE Users,

Maybe you have heard already about it from another openSUSE mailing list, a blog post or through our openSUSE community page on Google+, but the KDE repositories have been changed since last Tuesday. Below you will find the changes that were done based on the release of KDE 4.12.4.

Why was this changes needed

Based on a small discussion in the opensuse-kde mailinglist and feedback on our survey, we concluded that the majority is in favor of creating a single repository where we track the current KDE release.

Where are my old KDE repositories

The name for this repository will be KDE:Current and will initially be build for oS 12.3 and oS 13.1.

After the release of the KDE:Current repo, the repositories KDE:Release:XY have been cleaned and removed. Initially KDE:Current will be delivered with 4.12.4 as that the KDE 4.13 release is scheduled for mid April.

Also the repository KDE:Extra and KDE:Unstable:Extra will change as that some of the building targets (KDE:Release:XY) are disappearing and be replaced with KDE:Current.

Where should I find the new KDE repositories

The KDE Repository page KDE repositories has been updated to reflect the changes. We would like to ask those that have been working on the localization of this page in other languages, to

update their pages as well.

Regards,

Raymond

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #92 : 25.04.2014 - klo:20:51 »
News from your openSUSE admins
12 April 2014, 6:49 pm

Heartbleed and openSUSE infrastructureHeartbleed Logo As people started to ask, we checked all openSUSE servers and can confirm that none of them is affected by the heartbleed bug.

For those users running openSUSE 12.2 and 13.1, we can just repeat what we always pray: please install the latest official updates provided by our glorious maintenance team.

RSYNC and rsync.opensuse.org The server behind rsync.opensuse.org is re-installed now and already providing packages via HTTP again.

But we faced an issue with the automation that creates the content of the “hotstuff” rsync modules: normally a script analyzes the log files of download.opensuse.org and arranges the content of these special rsync modules to provide always the most requested files, so our users have a good chance to find a very close mirror for their packages. But currently the script is not producing what we expect: it empties all those hotstuff modules. As the core developer behind this script comes back from vacation on Monday, we hope he can quickly fix the problem. For now we disabled the “hotstuff” modules (means on rsync.opensuse.org: we disabled rsync completely for now) to avoid problems.

If you want to sync packages to your local machine(s) via rsync: please pick a mirror from our page at mirrors.opensuse.org providing public rsync.

New hardware

All the racks of the OBS reference serverAll the racks of the OBS reference server You may have noticed already that the openSUSE team installed a new version of openQA on the production server. An additional news item might be that this new version has seen also new hardware to run faster than ever.

But not only openQA, also the database cluster behind download.opensuse.org has seen a hardware upgrade. The new servers allow to run the database servers as virtual machines, able to have the whole database structure stored in RAM (you hopefully benefit from the faster response times on download.opensuse.org already). And the servers still have enough capacity left, so we can now also visualize the web servers providing the download.opensuse.org interface. We are currently thinking about the detailed setup of the new download.opensuse.org system (maybe using ha-proxy here again? maybe running mirrorbrain in the “no local storage” mode? …) – so this migration might take some more time, but we want to provide the best possible solution to you.

Admins on openSUSE Conference These year, three of our main European openSUSE administrators are able to attend to the openSUSE Conference in Dubrovnik:Geekocamp

  • Markus Rückert
  • Martin Caj
  • Robert Wawrig
And they will not only participate: instead they are providing talks and help with the infrastructure and video recording of the venue. So whenever you see them: time to spend them a drink or two :-)

 

 

 

 

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #93 : 25.04.2014 - klo:20:51 »
Make Room on the Runway: openSUSE Conference 2014 Program Ready
18 April 2014, 7:48 pm

Register now!We are happy to announce that at long last the schedule for oSC14 has landed and you can find the details of the once again jam packed conference here. We already published a extended sneak peek as well as information on the keynote by Michael Meeks.

Kicking off In a week from today, on Thursday the 24th of April the conference kicks offwith a welcome get together at the Sesame Tavern which is just 200 meters away from the venue. Standing with your back to the venue you will turn to your right walking slightly down hill toward the old town of Dubrovnik. Approximately 200 meters down the street you will see the Sesame sign on your right. The tavern is located at Branitelja Dubrovnika 23, 20000 Dubrovnik. We will start at 6:00 P.M. and hope to see you there!

Dubrovnik

The sessions We are very excited about the excellent talks and workshops that have been submitted and that we were able to select to make up this year’s conference program. Registration opens on Friday the 25th of April at 8:30 in the  morning and registration will open each day thereafter at 9:00 A.M. The program kicks off with the Opening Keynote by the openSUSE board on Friday moring at 10 and should keep you busy until we end the conference around lunch time on Monday the 28th. Between the start of the schedule on Friday and the close on Monday the speakers will deliver close to 70 hours worth of content in various formats in 60 sessions. There is also room for on the spot hack sessions and BoF meetings for those that need a bit more than just standing in the hallway.

Party time

Relaxation With all the material being presented we will not loose sight that a bit of relaxation is needed as well. The conference party on Sunday evening starts at 7:00 P.M. (19:00) at the EastWest Pub, which is located right at the beach at Frana Supila 4. The pub is just south of the old town and it takes about 15 to 20 minutes to walk there from the venue. On the way you will pass Sesame where everything starts on Thursday evening.

Beginnings and endings On Monday around noon we will start to pack up and say goodbye for another year at oSC15 in …… for this you will need to wait until the keynote on Friday.

Check out the schedule here, find more details on the conference website and plan your participation. We will see you in Dubrovnic next week!

The Program Team

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #94 : 25.04.2014 - klo:20:51 »
Sometimes you need some luck (was: build.opensuse.org downtime)
24 April 2014, 4:33 pm

A morning you love as admin: starting with one single disk in your storage array failing, ending up in a whole array crashing.

 

The storage array running behind the backend servers of build.opensuse.org detected the broken disk and started reconstruction of the affected virtual disk named vd02. During the reconstruction, the used target disk (a previous spare) started throwing errors in a high rate leading to the storage controllers crashing. The originally failed disk was 2.0 (disk number 0 in enclosure 2).

Starting at 12:32 PM local time OBS backends were not able to access their storage anymore.

The array has actually two controllers running as failover. The controller owning the virtual disk would try reconstruction, crash, then the other controller would take over, start reconstruction as well and crash in the same way.

Time for another storage and the backup (which btw. does not cover the home:* repositories, so be warned and do not trust us to backup your built binaries of your project), which needs some time for restore…

But after consulting our vendor and L3 Support of the manufacturer, we removed disk 2.1 (disk number 1 in enclosure 2). As result of this, virtual disk vd02 is currently offline. The good side is that vd02 actually contains no data – sometimes you need some luck.

The drives containing the data for openSUSE (backend-opensuse and back-home-opensuse) in virtual disk 01 are not affected and the downtime were a result of the crashed storage controllers.

With vd02 offline, the array is now solid again. The support of the manufacturer is currently examining all details of our logfiles and have requested the disk 2.1 for a closer look. Further the firmware levels of all disk drives are examined. Development has already added code to their firmware source repository to avoid these crashes and these fixes will be part of a future binary firmware release.

Storage was accessible again at 18:16 local time and after verifying with L3 that the broken virtual disk would be left unchanged in the current state for now, we started to get the filesystems back online.

Due to the numerous reboots of the disk array we have lost some cache data, so the xfs filesystems on the two OBS backend machines had suffered a little, but a xfs_repair job on both machines was run twice and the parts moved to lost+found have been checked and cleaned up.

The usual resulting 0-byte files have been searched and removed (this is complete on backend-opensuse and in progress on back-home-opensuse).

All backend processes are up and running again, on backend-opensuse the cold-start is already complete and on back-home-opensuse the scheduler cold-start should soon be complete.

The webserver for the OBS api was started again, which made OBS alive again, and for software.opensuse.org the webserver and memcached were restarted (the latter was needed to cure a 120minute negative cache for the list of distributions).

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #95 : 25.04.2014 - klo:20:51 »
oSC has started – follow us remotely!
25 April 2014, 12:01 pm



board in Action by SveborThe Board in Action

The openSUSE Conference 2014 in Dubrovnik was kicked off just an hour ago by the board, sharing some practical information with us, a call for help as well as a number of announcements. There is streaming of the talks available during the event, make sure you check it out!

The board brought up the state of openSUSE, including the release cycle (what comes after 13.1 is not clear yet), the changes to our processes (staging projects, openQA testing integration) and so on. This conference is a great time and place to discuss these things.

Announcements
  • The openSUSE Conference 2015 will take place in The Hague, Netherlands!
    • Under leadership of Hans de Raadt a local team will take care of us in the international city of peace and justice. More details on Sunday!
  • Reimbursement of production of local materials is back!
    • A process is being set up, led by a committee under Jim Henderson. More info will follow soon!
And the Board urged everybody to have fun and learn a lot!

Streaming The sessions at the conference are streamed live. You can find the feeds on bambuser.

Practical For those at the event: don’t forget to return the food card and pay so you get something to eat today, tomorrow and on Sunday!

And a reminder: the conference party on Sunday evening starts at 7:00 P.M. (19:00) at the EastWest Pub, which is located right at the beach at Frana Supila 4. The pub is just south of the old town and it takes about 15 to 20 minutes to walk there from the venue. On the way you will pass Sesame where everything starts on Thursday evening.

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #96 : 26.04.2014 - klo:13:00 »
oSC 2014 1st day
25 April 2014, 8:43 pm

The openSUSE Conference 2014 is being held in Dubrovnik, on the Dalmatian coast in Croatia. The conference venue, also known as the Campus of the University of Dubrovnik is set and ready to accommodate all the Geekos that will visit the conference from around the world. Everyone is happy and delighted about this conference.

Read more about this awesome first day!

#oSC14 begins! oSC14 registration desk    

 

All volunteers arrived on time at the venue and prepared everything and did some last time checks. People start coming and in a glance of the eye registration desk was crowded and Geekos had overwhelmed the place. Every visitor receives an openSUSE branded usb stick and a beautiful name-tag.

 

 

 

 

people at venuePresentations started on time with the board welcoming the community to the event. They also shared some practical information with us, a call for help as well as a number of announcements. You can read in details here. People got excited and presentations of all kinds from community based to highly technical started.

 

 

 

Last but not least, Gnome, KDE and Oracle booths are there too! Geekos can ask and talk about anything they want to know about, not to mention take some flyers, stickers and t-shirts!

#oSC14 Info! Follow @openSUSEConf on twitter, or search for the hashtag #oSC14. If you missed the chance to be here with us and have fun you can attend the conference and all the fun online from the live streaming that is set up in the venue.



Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #97 : 27.04.2014 - klo:01:01 »
oSC 2014 1st Day
25 April 2014, 8:43 pm

The openSUSE Conference 2014 is being held in Dubrovnik, on the Dalmatian coast in Croatia. The conference venue, also known as the Campus of the University of Dubrovnik is set and ready to accommodate all the Geekos that will visit the conference from around the world. Everyone is happy and delighted about this conference.

Read more about this awesome first day!

#oSC14 begins! oSC14 registration desk    

 

Volunteers arrived on time at the venue, prepared everything, and did some last time checks. People started coming and in just a moment, our registration desk was crowded with Geekos who filled the place. Every visitor receives an openSUSE branded USB stick and a beautiful name-tag.

 

 

 

 

people at venuePresentations started on time with the board welcoming the community to the event. They also shared some practical information with us, a call for help as well as a number of announcements. You can read in details here. People got excited and presentations of all kinds from community based to highly technical started.

 

 

 

Last but not least, Gnome, KDE and Oracle booths are there too! Geekos can ask and talk about anything they want to know about, not to mention take some flyers, stickers and t-shirts!

#oSC14 Info! Follow @openSUSEConf on twitter, or search for the hashtag #oSC14. If you missed the chance to be here with us and have fun you can attend the conference and all the fun online from the live streaming that is set up in the venue.



Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #98 : 27.04.2014 - klo:13:00 »
oSC 2014 2nd Day
27 April 2014, 3:21 am

This year’s openSUSE Conference is being help in the beautiful city of Dubrovnik in Croatia. This year’s conference organization team has taken care of its attendees with a special pass in order to have the chance to go sightseeing at the beautiful old city of Dubrovnik, to see the port and walk on the walls. But what happened at the venue today…

Day twoLibre Office Everyone arrived just in time for the awesome keynote presentation of Michael Meeks about “The Document Foundation and LibreOffice”. He talked about all the work that has been done improving LibreOffice in all aspects.

 

 

 

KDE

 

After that Jos Poortvliet took the lead of the main hall and he presented “Where KDE is and where it is going”. He talked about the improvements that are done in KDE 4 and presented to everyone the workflow and some of the changes in KDE 5. He also presented for the first time Plasma 2 changes, Frameworks 5 and how a Qt developer can get involved with KDE.

Other presentations An awesome presentation about an awesome tool called “Bcache” took place from Oliver Neukum. He explained how this tool works on openSUSE and how openSUSE users can benefit from using it on their SSD drives and boost their computer’s performance.

Of course we cannot miss the interesting “Ruby on Rails” for beginners workshop from Camilla Ayres. Lots of geekos joined and hacked on Ruby on Rails for almost 2 hours. Camilla presented how awesome of a programming language it is and did a hands on of some easy to-do things for everyone.

IMG_20140426_154151Stephan Kulow with “A ring of Fire live on Stagings” shared with all the geekos who attended his presentation how his team worked on to improve the development process of openSUSE:Factory to get higher quality for openSUSE. He explained all the difficulties that he faces on his everyday workflow and how this can be changed and all the process that is done before we have a testing live cd in our hands.

In general the whole second day of the openSUSE Conference here in Dubrovnik was excellent. Everyone that attended the presentations were delighted. Booths were crowded too with people asking about KDE, Gnome, MySQL and Jolla!

#oSC14 Info! Follow @openSUSEConf on twitter, or search for the hashtag #oSC14. If you missed the chance to be here with us and have fun you can attend the conference and all the fun online from the live streaming that is set up in the venue.

DSC_0027

 

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #99 : 29.04.2014 - klo:07:01 »
oSC 2014 3rd – 4th Day
29 April 2014, 1:13 am

oSC14 Group photoGeekos gathered at beautiful Dubrovnik in Croatia for their annual meetup. They drunk the spoke and they shared knowledge and progrees of the project. They had fun! The openSUSE Conference’s final day and reporting is now detailed below. “The strength to change” was the moto of this conference and it served well it’s purpose. Many people found their strength and enthusiasm and start contributing to the project. We encourage you to participate. We welcome everyone interested in contributing to an awesome project.

Day 3 Perhaps one of the most interesting days. ARM, OpenStack, GNOME based presentations took place with most interest. Interesting workshops like “Developing for SailfishOS”, “How to write openQA tests” were most crowded with people learning useful and interesting things.

Other Talks Izabel Valverde and TSP team on the Travel Support Program

tspIzabel Valverde, Marcel Kühlhorn and Efstathios Iosifidis who are responsible about TSP program shared their views on the new application of the Travel Support Program and explained how the program works and how successful was on it’s two years of being online. The program helps our openSUSE members to attend conferences and events around the world and is currently sponsored by SUSE.

Geekos were really interested in TSP program and started asking lots of questions about how this works and how is decided how much money the team reimburse to everyone. Izabel answered all the questions with some help from Kostas Koudaras who was there too, so Geekos were fully informed about one of the most popular community projects.

There were also many technical questions about TSP application and how it works! Hopefully there was a presentation afterward from Ancor the man behind TSP’s web application.

Ancor González Sosa on Travel Support Program Howto

We all knDSC_0182ow Ancor. If you do not know him from FOSDEM 2014 or another conference he was on this openSUSE Conference 2014 in Dubrovnik! Ancor was recruited by the openSUSE Team at SUSE Linux as a web developer! As an openSUSE lover he was there when the project needed him! He is the man behind the development of Travel Support Program!

He presented the technology used behind this application and explained how you can use your existing Connect account to submit new events, to ask for travel support for a given event and to get your money reimbursed once your travel is over. You can also add your own event and if the TSP team accept it this will be added to the TSP supported events!

Visit and explore the official Travel Support Program application. You can find and contribute to TSP’s web application here. You are all welcome!

Day 4 Last day of conference was dedicated to workshops. Three workshops took place “Packaging Workshop” by Darix, “Building images with KIWI” by Robert and “High Availability Clustering on openSUSE” by Richard Brown. All three were very interesting and those who attended learnt lots of interesting things about those powerful tools of openSUSE.

As the last day of the conference, after the workshops were over, everyone helped in the volunteers to pack everything in their boxes.

Party DSC_0267Dubrovnik is one of the most beautiful cities in Balkans. Mountains combined with a wonderful view at the sea, old city and great walls for city visitors to walk are some of the sights you can’t miss. This year’s organization decided to combine sea, beach and the history of Dubrovnik in order to make an unforgettable  party. This conference party was held at a hotel’s beach bar near the walls of the old city of Dubrovnik. Geekos enjoyed the sand and sea combined with beers and food there. Everyone went at this party and started socializing. Some geekos even jumped in the sea and swam.

A group photo was taken at the beach and was dedicated to Hans who has some medical issues and couldn’t attend this year’s conference. We love you Hans!

DSC_0227

Source: openSUSE News