Bug#543434: ITA: filtergen

2010-02-01 Thread Matthew Palmer
retitle 543434 ITA: filtergen
owner 543434 mpal...@debian.org
tag pending
thanks

I plan on adopting filtergen.  I maintain an internal updated package
anyway, and have several updates and modifications involved.



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Bug#537206: ITP: ctcs -- hardware testing/burnin suite

2009-07-15 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Matthew Palmer mpal...@debian.org

* Package name: ctcs
  Version : 1.3.1pre1
  Upstream Author : Jason T. Collins jcoll...@valinux.com
* URL : http://sourceforge.net/projects/va-ctcs/
* License : GPL
  Programming Lang: C
  Description : hardware testing/burnin suite

The Cerberus Test Control System is is a test suite for use by developers
and others to test hardware. It includes a modular test system that allows
you to build and integrate your own tests.



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Bug#405011: Intent to hijack ITP for ledger

2008-06-09 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, Jun 09, 2008 at 03:41:29PM +1000, Trent W. Buck wrote:
 On Mon, Jun 09, 2008 at 02:36:14PM +1000, Matthew Palmer wrote:
  As I really want to see ledger in Debian, I am going to start
  working on a package of ledger of my own shortly.  Trent, if you are
  still interested in being the maintainer of ledger, please contact
  me ASAP.
 
 Hi, please do take over this ITP.

Okie dokie.

 I've lost interest in ledger for personal use, but I believe the
 licensing issues were fixed in a later release.  However, note that
 development activity seems to have moved to cl-ledger, a separate
 project (also by John W).

From commentary in the forums, it looks like cl-ledger may or may not take
over the role of the C++ version of ledger.

 Finally, I seem to have lost my local packages; they may be sitting on
 my backup server at home.  Do you want me to dig them out and forward
 them (the .dsc and .diff.gz) to you?

If you've got them easily available, they'd help me make a start, but it's a
fairly straightforward package so don't spend much time digging them out, I
should be OK.

Thanks,
- Matt



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Bug#405011: Intent to hijack ITP for ledger

2008-06-08 Thread Matthew Palmer
Hi,

I've noticed that nothing further appears to have been done to this ITP
since the licence problem was mentioned in July last year.  As I mentioned
in January, I do not believe that the issue is a showstopper for inclusion
in Debian, and I offered upload sponsorship if required.

As I really want to see ledger in Debian, I am going to start working on a
package of ledger of my own shortly.  Trent, if you are still interested in
being the maintainer of ledger, please contact me ASAP.

- Matt



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Bug#405011: ledger: command-line accounting program

2008-01-15 Thread Matthew Palmer
Trent,

Personally, I think d-legal is being a little over-paranoid in this case --
I can't find any files licenced contrarily to the clearly labeled LICENSE
file in the root of the distribution.  If you've got packages ready to
upload, I say go for it and let ftpmasters reject it if they think it's
risky.  Let me know if you need an upload sponsored.

- Matt



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Bug#455546: O: guml

2007-12-10 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: normal

I haven't done anything with UML in ages, and I've given up trying to work
out WTF is going on with the Python policy.  Someone else can have the
entertainment.  You'll be taking over upstream as well.

- Matt



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Bug#453359: O: puppet: centralised configuration management

2007-11-28 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: normal

I no longer wish to maintain this package.

- Matt



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Bug#407360: O: libapache-mod-auth-mysql

2007-01-17 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp,libapache-mod-auth-mysql
Severity: normal

I don't run any Apache servers any more, and I'm sick of the whole Apache
module mess.  Note to any potential adopters: you're upstream as well,
you've got a mess of a codebase, and the Apache2 module is supposedly being
replaced with something native to Apache 2.2.

- Matt


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Bug#380468: ITP: phpunit2 -- Unit testing suite for PHP5

2006-07-30 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Jul 30, 2006 at 02:40:47PM +0200, Bart Martens wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Severity: wishlist
 Owner: Bart Martens [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 * Package name: phpunit2

*cough*330301*cough*

- Matt


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Bug#374425: O: phpreports -- XML-based report generator for PHP

2006-06-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp,phpreports
Version: 0.4.6-1

I am no longer developing anything in PHP, so I'm orphaning my PHP-related
packages.  I'm available for sponsoring them if an NM applicant is
interested.

- Matt


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Bug#374424: O: php4-sqlite -- PHP4 bindings to SQLite, a file-based SQL engine

2006-06-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp,php4-sqlite
Version: 1.0.2-7ubuntu1

I am no longer developing anything in PHP, so I'm orphaning my PHP-related  
packages.  I'm available for sponsoring them if an NM is interested.   

- Matt


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Bug#361253: ITP: zenoss -- Zenoss is a powerful, integrated, easy-to-use IT infrastructure monitoring software product.

2006-04-07 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Fri, Apr 07, 2006 at 03:01:28PM +0200, Wolfgang Lonien wrote:
 * Package name: zenoss
   Version : x.y.z

I doubt it.

   Description : Zenoss is a powerful, integrated, easy-to-use IT 
 infrastructure monitoring software product.

1) Repeats the package name
2) Way too long
3) Spends most of it's time blowing it's own trumpet instead of telling us
what it actually is

Description: infrastructure monitoring tool

would be far better.

 Zenoss provides a compelling alternative to:
 * low-end commerical monitoring tools that provide limited 
 functionality and scaleability (e.g What's Up Gold...)
 * high-end commercial packages that are notoriously expensive and 
 complicated (e.g. IBM Tivoli, BMC Patrol, HP OpenView...)
 * building an integrated, scalable open source solution yourself by 
 pulling together many component projects

Instead of dumping on the competition, why not tell us what makes zenoss so
good?

- Matt


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Bug#282561: Should we remove printbill?

2006-01-14 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sat, Jan 14, 2006 at 05:45:59PM +0100, Thomas Huriaux wrote:
 printbill seems to be dead upstream, RFA-bug (#282561) open more than
 one year ago, last maintainer upload 3 years ago (1 NMU to fix 1 RC-bug
 since this upload), only 1 popcon vote.
 
 Any objections for its removal from unstable?

Toss it.  It was pretty innovative for it's time, but it's been superceded
by newer and shinier things since then.

- Matt
(who sponsored Daniel's printbill uploads when he was making them, and was a
long time benefactor of it's existence back in the day)


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Bug#344081: ITP: xen-debiantools -- Tools to manage debian XEN virtual servers

2005-12-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, Dec 19, 2005 at 11:54:26PM +0200, Radu Spineanu wrote:
 * Package name: xen-debiantools
   Version : 0.2
   Upstream Author : Steve Kemp [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Considering the upstream author, have you discussed your plans to upload
this with Steve?

- Matt


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Bug#338026: ITP: gnormalize -- gnormalize is a front-end to normalize, an audio converter, encoder, ripper, meta data (tag) editor and audio cd player

2005-11-07 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, Nov 07, 2005 at 01:27:06PM -0800, Michael Stilkerich wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Severity: wishlist
 Owner: Michael Stilkerich [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 * Package name: gnormalize
   Version : 0.46
   Upstream Author : Claudio Fernandes de Souza Rodrigues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://gnormalize.sourceforge.net/
 * License : GPL
   Description : gnormalize is a front-end to normalize, an audio 
 converter, encoder, ripper, meta data (tag) editor and audio cd player

That's a *very* long short description.  Common practice is to keep it
under about 60 characters.  How about this:

Graphical audio ripper, encoder, converter, player and tag editor

Although I'll be the first to agree that is a thoroughly ugly sentence
construction.  A more general form:

Graphical music file creation and manipulation tool

Or perhaps:

Music file creation and manipulation tool for GNOME

(That is, assuming that the 'g' in gnormalize is a GNOME 'g' and not some
other 'g')

Although this short form doesn't list all of the specific capabilities of
the tool, it should be enough to give people enough info to decide whether
they want to look at the long description.  You could then use the short
description you originally provided as the first paragraph of the long
description, which is a good introduction to the tool.

- Matt


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Bug#326604: ITP: gnunet-gtk -- GTK frontend to GNUnet

2005-09-17 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sat, Sep 17, 2005 at 01:03:01PM +0200, Arnaud Kyheng wrote:
 What about adding the gnunet package description ?
 
 A GTK based frontend to GNUnet to allow, an alternative to using the
 command line tools provided by the gnunet package.
 
 GNUnet is a peer-to-peer framework which focuses on providing security.
 All link-to-link messages in the network are confidential and authenticated.
 The framework provides a transport abstraction layer and can currently
 encapsulate the peer-to-peer traffic in UDP, TCP, or SMTP messages.
 
 
 Or part of the official description ?
 
 GNUnet is a framework for secure peer-to-peer networking that does not
 use any centralized or otherwise trusted services. A first service
 implemented on top of the networking layer allows anonymous
 censorship-resistant file-sharing

I like the second description better, but either one would be a big help for
people deciding whether to look at the package further.

- Matt


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Bug#326604: ITP: gnunet-gtk -- GTK frontend to GNUnet

2005-09-04 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Sep 04, 2005 at 02:39:09PM +0200, Arnaud wrote:
 * Package name: gnunet-gtk
   Version : 0.7.0
   Upstream Author : Christian Grothoff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://www.gnunet.org/
 * License : GPL v2
   Description : GTK frontend to GNUnet
 
 A GTK based frontend to gnunet to allow, an alternative to using the
 command line tools provided by the gnunet package.

Might I suggest a quick blurb describing what GNUnet is in the long
description?

- Matt


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Bug#320855: RFA: cyrus-imapd

2005-08-01 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: normal

(Note that this is the obsolete 1.5.x series of cyrus-imapd, not the current
2.1 cyrus packages!)

As I'm transitioning all servers under my care away from cyrus-imapd 1.5, I
have little to no further interest in maintaining these packages.  I would
only recommend someone maintaining them if they're in the position I was in
when I took over maintainership: they have servers running cyrus-imapd 1.5
that they can't easily transition to another mail system.  Note that
maintenance of this package should include keeping a bit of an eye on
security reports from cyrus-imapd 2.1 and checking if they're applicable to
1.5.

If nobody actively adopts[1] this package, I will ask for it's removal from
unstable in a few weeks, which is my preferred option anyway.

- Matt

[1] That is, they let me know they're willing to maintain it, *and* make an
upload with themselves as maintainer.


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Bug#318204: ITP: php-simpletest -- Unit testing and web testing framework for PHP

2005-07-14 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Wed, Jul 13, 2005 at 08:48:44PM -0400, Charles Fry wrote:
 * License : The Open Group Test Suite License

I'm not optimistic about this licence being DFSG-free.

- Matt


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Bug#302283: ITP: sleepshell -- Sleep dummy shell

2005-03-30 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Wed, Mar 30, 2005 at 10:19:12PM -0300, Leonardo Serra wrote:
  You can use it to create SSH accounts for users who will
 only use them for SSH-tunneling; to create an encrypted
 tunnel to your servers.

Or you can use the -N option to OpenSSH.

- Matt


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Bug#299146: RFA: phpwiki: An informal collaborative website manager

2005-03-11 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp,phpwiki
Version: 1.3.7-3
Severity: wishlist

I no longer use PHPWiki myself, and don't have time to do the necessary work
to keep PHPWiki as sharp as it needs to be.  Personally, I don't think it's
suitable for release as-is, so anyone who wants to see PHPWiki in Sarge
should probably take the package over and re-assess it's release candidacy.

- Matt


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Bug#294990: ITP: bontmia -- backup over network to multiple incremental archives

2005-02-13 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Feb 13, 2005 at 03:49:45PM +0100, Reto Schuettel wrote:
 On Sun, Feb 13, 2005 at 09:25:15AM +1100, Matthew Palmer wrote:
   bontmia creates incremental snapshots of a list of given directories
   over the network by using rsync over ssh and hard links. Every snapshot
   looks for the user like a complete copy of all the files, but as a result
   of using hard links every unchanged copy of a file is stored only once on
   the hard disk.
  
  What advantages does this package have over, say, dirvish or backuppc?
 
 I never used dirvish nor backuppc, so I can't really say what the
 difference are. But it seems like bontmia is simpler than both
 (especially backuppc).

Simpler in terms of features available, or simpler in terms of configuration
for the same level of features?

 I can't really say if that's a reason for creating a new package, I
 personally would like it, because it's already running on several of my
 machines, but beside of that, it wouldn't be a big problem for me to close
 my ITP.
 
 What do you think?

It's a tricky one.  I'm a firm believer in not duplicating effort, and with
the existence of at least two other packages which appear to do a similar
job, I'm just worried that we'll end up with a lot of packages doing the
same thing, which does nothing except dissipate effort and fragment the user
base of all of the alternatives.  However, at the end of the day, you're the
one expending the effort, so if you think it's worthwhile, I've got no
reason to stop you.

- Matt


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Bug#294990: ITP: bontmia -- backup over network to multiple incremental archives

2005-02-12 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sat, Feb 12, 2005 at 10:07:10PM +0100, Reto Schuettel wrote:
   Description : backup over network to multiple incremental archives
 
 bontmia creates incremental snapshots of a list of given directories
 over the network by using rsync over ssh and hard links. Every snapshot
 looks for the user like a complete copy of all the files, but as a result
 of using hard links every unchanged copy of a file is stored only once on
 the hard disk.

What advantages does this package have over, say, dirvish or backuppc?

- Matt


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Bug#291223: ITP: libphp-clam -- PHP bindings for libclamav

2005-01-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Wed, Jan 19, 2005 at 01:57:36PM +, Neil McGovern wrote:
   Package name: libphp-clam
   Version : 0.3.0
   Upstream Author : Gareth Ardron [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   URL : http://freshmeat.net/projects/php-clam/

That URL isn't particularly useful -- it gets you a tarball and a link to a
page which makes no mention of php-clam.  Is there a better project page
somewhere for this?

 A small module that implements a limited subset of the libclamav API in
 order to scan buffers and files from within PHP.

Since this package is a C module, it should probably be named php4-clam (or
php4-clamav, more accurately) so that a php5-clamav can be made later. 
libphp-foo is typically reserved for library packages written in and for
PHP.

- Matt


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Bug#291223: ITP: libphp-clam -- PHP bindings for libclamav

2005-01-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Wed, Jan 19, 2005 at 01:57:36PM +, Neil McGovern wrote:
   Package name: libphp-clam
   Version : 0.3.0
   Upstream Author : Gareth Ardron [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   URL : http://freshmeat.net/projects/php-clam/

That URL isn't particularly useful -- it gets you a tarball and a link to a
page which makes no mention of php-clam.  Is there a better project page
somewhere for this?

 A small module that implements a limited subset of the libclamav API in
 order to scan buffers and files from within PHP.

Since this package is a C module, it should probably be named php4-clam (or
php4-clamav, more accurately) so that a php5-clamav can be made later. 
libphp-foo is typically reserved for library packages written in and for
PHP.

- Matt


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Bug#291223: ITP: libphp-clam -- PHP bindings for libclamav

2005-01-19 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Jan 20, 2005 at 12:28:27AM +, Neil McGovern wrote:
 Apologies,
 http://software.fotopic.net will (I have been assured) contain more
 information about this package.

Sometime in the future, presumably.  They only mention php-imlib2 (which is
a weird typo for php-clam... grin)

   A small module that implements a limited subset of the libclamav API in
   order to scan buffers and files from within PHP.
  
  Since this package is a C module, it should probably be named php4-clam (or
  php4-clamav, more accurately) so that a php5-clamav can be made later. 
  libphp-foo is typically reserved for library packages written in and for
  PHP.
 
 However, thsi package is verified in working on both php4 and php5.

Is the same binary suitable for use on PHP4 and PHP5?  I'm no PHP extension
guru, but I thought the ABIs were fairly different.

 What would be the best option in this case? php-clam/php-clamav?

For the source package, php-clamav would be suitable.  If the same binary
works on both PHP4 and PHP5, I'd say php-clamav would be suitable for the
binary package as well, otherwise php4-clamav and php5-clamav should be
appropriate.

- Matt


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Bug#288854: ITP: phptal -- phptal is an implementation of Zope Page Templates (ZPT) for PHP.

2005-01-05 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Jan 06, 2005 at 12:16:33AM +0100, damien clochard wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Severity: wishlist
 
 * Package name: phptal
   Version : 0.7.0
   Upstream Author : Laurent Bedubourg [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://phptal.sf.net
 * License : GPL
   Description : phptal is an implementation of Zope Page Templates (ZPT) 
 for PHP.

Drop the package's name from the beginning of the short desc, to be an
implementation of   And since you don't use the acronym ZPT anywhere in
the short (or even long) description, it's probably not worth leaving the
(ZPT) in there, either.

- Matt
(Package Description Ogre in Training)


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Bug#285207: ITP: kwirelessmonitor -- KWirelessMonitor is a small KDE application that docks into the system tray and monitors the wireless network interface

2004-12-11 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sat, Dec 11, 2004 at 05:39:37PM +0100, Marcin Orlowski wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Severity: wishlist
 
 * Package name: kwirelessmonitor
   Version : x.y.z
   Upstream Author : Name [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://www.example.org/
 * License : (GPL, LGPL, BSD, MIT/X, etc.)

Missing a few bits.

   Description : KWirelessMonitor is a small KDE application that docks 
 into the system tray and monitors the wireless network interface

Short description is way too long and includes the name of the package (as
the first word, even).

 KWirelessMonitor is a small KDE application that docks into the system
 tray and monitors the wireless network interface
   .
 The systray icon shows the signal quality and the bit rate using a
 bar graph and a pie chart, respectively.
 In the configuration dialog, you can change the bit rate and power
 management settings of the wireless interface.
 It is also able to automatically enable power management when using
 battery power and/or automatically disable power
 management during data transfer. By default, KWirelessMonitor
 tries to automatically detect the wireless interface

You're missing a few full-stops there, too.

- Matt


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Bug#283994: ITP: glastree -- builds live backup trees, with branches for each day

2004-12-03 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Fri, Dec 03, 2004 at 07:17:45PM -0500, Anthony DeRobertis wrote:
 Matthew Palmer wrote:
 
 The advantage of using glastree over pdumpfs is that it is implemented
 in Perl rather than Ruby (this is in fact the reason that I encountered
 it in the first place).
 
 
 How is that an advantage of use?
 
 We're talking about free software. Modifying it to fit your needs is a 
 perfectly valid, indeed encouraged use. Personally, I know perl, but not 
 ruby.

Sounds like you need to expand your repertoire a bit.  I learnt Perl for
exactly this reason -- I wanted to modify debconf, so I learnt (enough of)
the language to do so.  I didn't feel a need to reimplement it in a language
I was familiar with first just so I could make my modifications.

Can you imagine a world in which your argument was taken at face value? 
There would be a reimplementation of basically everything in every language
under the sun, just so that some random person could avoid learning a new
language.  Ghods what a hideous mess that would be.

- Matt


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Bug#283994: ITP: glastree -- builds live backup trees, with branches for each day

2004-12-02 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Dec 02, 2004 at 03:04:15PM -0500, Charles Fry wrote:
 The poor man's daily snapshot, glastree builds live backup trees, with
 branches for each day. Users directly browse the past to recover older
 documents or retrieve lost files. Hard links serve to compress out
 unchanged files, while modified ones are copied verbatim. A prune
 utility effects a constant, sliding window. Similar to pdumpfs; inspired
 by Plan9.

In what ways is this package different to, say, dirvish, which I use in a
manner which is, AFAICS, identical to the way this package operates?

- Matt


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Bug#283994: ITP: glastree -- builds live backup trees, with branches for each day

2004-12-02 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Dec 02, 2004 at 05:59:09PM -0500, Charles Fry wrote:
  In what ways is this package different to, say, dirvish, which I use
  in a manner which is, AFAICS, identical to the way this package
  operates?
 
 glastree provides a subset of the functionality of dirvish. It is
 actually most closely related pdumpfs. Like pdumpfs, glastree works
 locally and not (explicitely) remotely.

Is there any benefit to using glastree over dirvish or pdumpfs?  

- Matt


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Bug#283994: ITP: glastree -- builds live backup trees, with branches for each day

2004-12-02 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Dec 02, 2004 at 07:58:17PM -0500, Charles Fry wrote:
  On Thu, Dec 02, 2004 at 05:59:09PM -0500, Charles Fry wrote:
In what ways is this package different to, say, dirvish, which I use
in a manner which is, AFAICS, identical to the way this package
operates?
   
   glastree provides a subset of the functionality of dirvish. It is
   actually most closely related pdumpfs. Like pdumpfs, glastree works
   locally and not (explicitely) remotely.
  
  Is there any benefit to using glastree over dirvish or pdumpfs?  
 
 The advantage of using glastree over pdumpfs is that it is implemented
 in Perl rather than Ruby (this is in fact the reason that I encountered
 it in the first place).

How is that an advantage of use?

- Matt


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Bug#283994: ITP: glastree -- builds live backup trees, with branches for each day

2004-12-02 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Dec 02, 2004 at 10:30:05PM -0500, Charles Fry wrote:
Is there any benefit to using glastree over dirvish or pdumpfs?  
   
   The advantage of using glastree over pdumpfs is that it is implemented
   in Perl rather than Ruby (this is in fact the reason that I encountered
   it in the first place).
  
  How is that an advantage of use?
 
 Well, if one had a small system and desired not to install ruby, it
 would still be possible to obtain pdumpfs' functionality. Of course that
 could be called an installation issue rather than a usability issue.

3314kB, including pdumpfs itself.  I'll donate a 32MB USB key to store it
all on for anyone that is *truly* that starved of space.  Meanwhile, what's
the total installed space for glastree if you're not a Perl lover?

- Matt


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Bug#278128: ITP: tomboy -- Tomboy is a desktop note-taking application for Linux and Unix.

2004-11-26 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Nov 25, 2004 at 11:11:25PM -0800, Eric Gaumer wrote:
 On Mon, 2004-10-25 at 10:37 +1000, Matthew Palmer wrote:
  That's not a bad description, but I (as a potential user) would like to know
  what this thing is going to do for me beyond what (say) knotes does
  (post-its for your desktop, in case you were wondering).
 
 Well I use the stickynotes applet quite a bit and I assume this is
 similar to knotes (I prefer GNOME over KDE). Stickynotes is also a
 post-it type application.

Yup, same thing, different prefix.  g

 Tomboy is really a different beast. What would happen is I would get so
 many post-its on my desktop that it became hard to organize them. I
 would have phone numbers, or reminders, or even just mini how-to's on
 things I didn't do daily.
 
 What Tomboy brings to the table is a way to organize this info. It does
 this by creating links to other notes. I can write a quick 5 line
 summary of say how to correctly submit an ITP. But I can go a step
 further and highlight the word ITP and cause this to link to a new note
 where I list any ITPs I may have submitted. From the new note I could
 highlight a specific ITP and link to another new note containing
 specific info on that particular ITP.
 
 If you get a whole lot of notes like I do (over 50) then Tomboy has a
 search feature. I can enter ITP in the search field and it will show
 links to any note that has ITP in it.

See, now *that* is a good description.  Maybe not verbatim, but I now have
enough information to be able to decide whether I want this or not.

- Matt


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Bug#278128: ITP: tomboy -- Tomboy is a desktop note-taking application for Linux and Unix.

2004-11-25 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Oct 24, 2004 at 04:41:45PM -0700, Eric Gaumer wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Severity: wishlist
 
 
 * Package name: tomboy
   Version : 0.2.2
   Upstream Author : beatniksoftware [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://www.beatniksoftware.com/tomboy/
 * License : LGPL
   Description : Tomboy is a desktop note-taking application for Linux and 
 Unix. 

Short description should not repeat the package name, certainly not as the
first word, and I don't think that for Linux and Unix is necessary,
considering this is the Debian package.  Remember also to try and keep the
short description below about 60 characters, because anything beyond that
often gets chopped by frontends.

   Simple and easy to use, but with potential to help you organize the
   ideas and information you deal with every day.

That's not a bad description, but I (as a potential user) would like to know
what this thing is going to do for me beyond what (say) knotes does
(post-its for your desktop, in case you were wondering).

- Matt


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Bug#281416: ITP: debian-br-team-tools -- Tools for the Debian Brasil Packaging Team

2004-11-15 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, Nov 15, 2004 at 03:46:30PM -0200, Gustavo Noronha Silva wrote:
   Version : 0.1
   Upstream Author : Name [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Erm...

 * URL : http://alioth.debian.org/projects/debian-br-team/
 * License : GPL
   Description : Tools for the Debian Brasil Packaging Team
 
  This packages contains some useful metainfo and tools for the Debian 
  Brasil Packaging Team including:
* documentation
* list of team members

Would this...

  Homepage: http://alioth.debian.org/projects/debian-br-team/

Be better left here?  Honestly, we have a huge Packages file already, and
keeping the stuff you propose to stash in the package up-to-date (especially
in a stable release, should this ever end up in one) is going to be an
absolute pest.  It would be much easier just to leave it on the team
website, and point people at that.

If there are programs in the package, consider whether they might be of use
to others if they were generalised.  Packaging scripts might be helpful to
others, and translation stuff could probably be handy for other languages'
translation teams.  Consider submitting the scripts for inclusion in the
relevant script bundle package, or if there is nothing appropriate, then
make a package with a useful description to carry all of these tools.

Please, think of the archive.

- Matt


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Bug#280209: ITP: codeville -- More anarchic revision control system

2004-11-08 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Nov 07, 2004 at 09:13:23PM -0600, Michael Janssen wrote:
 * Package name: codeville
   Version : 0.1.9
   Upstream Author : Ross Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://www.codeville.org
 * License : Open Software License 2.0

I presume that this is going in non-free, as the OSL 2.0 appears to have
DFSG problems.

http://lists.debian.org/debian-legal/2004/05/msg00118.html

- Matt


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Bug#273649: ITP: phpunit -- A Unit Testing framework for PHP

2004-09-27 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist

* Package name: phpunit
  Version : 1.0.2
  Upstream Author : Sebastion Bergmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* URL : http://pear.php.net/package/PHPUnit
* License : The PHP License 2.02
(http://www.php.net/license/2_02.txt)
  Description : A Unit Testing framework for PHP

Unit testing is a means of providing extra confidence in your software
system by writing small snippets of code which test various parts of your
program.  By running these tests regularly, you can assure yourself that
your new features or bugfixes haven't inadvertantly broken some other part
of the system.  Unit testing is a superset of regression testing, and a
subset of functional testing.

This package provides a framework for unit testing your PHP programs, based
on the Smalltalk Testing Pattern by Kent Beck, described at
http://www.xprogramming.com/testfram.htm.

- Matt



Bug#268494: ITP: varkon -- VARKON is a parametric 2D/3D CAD

2004-08-29 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Fri, Aug 27, 2004 at 09:27:51PM -0400, B Thomas wrote:
 Package: wnpp
 Version: N/A; reported 2004-08-27
 Severity: wishlist
 
 * Package name: varkon
   Version : 1.17D
   Upstream Author : The CAD Research Group
 * URL : http://www.tech.oru.se/cad/varkon/
 * License : GPL
   Description : VARKON is a parametric 2D/3D CAD

Poor short description.  Don't mention the package name, and parametric
2D/3D CAD doesn't mean much to me (although, admittedly, it may spark
recognition in it's intended audience).

- Matt


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Bug#263893: RFH: irm: upstream patch triage

2004-08-06 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: normal

[For those who don't know, IRM is a web-based asset tracker and trouble
ticketing system written in PHP]

IRM is comatose upstream -- they still exist, but are working on a
Python-based replacement (IRM 2).  I think there's life left in IRM 1.4, so
I'd like to go through all of the patches in the SourceForge patch tracker
for IRM and apply whatever's appropriate.

See the list of upstream patches at
http://sf.net/tracker/?group_id=14522atid=314522

The process I want to follow is:

for each patch:
identify functionality
determine if it's applies cleanly, messily, or not at all
test good patches for functionality, vet for security
report bad patches as being useless
rof

for each functionality group:
pick the best applicable patch
apply patch
rof

My intent is to get a report on *every* patch in the sf.net patch manager to
send upstream, (to get the sf.net patch tracker cleaned up), and have as
much useful functionality as possible in Debian's version of IRM.

I'll put a patch-list into the IRM source distribution and on the web
somewhere for coordination purposes once I've got some patch reports to put
in there.  In the meantime, if anyone wants to submit patch / functionality
reports to me, I'd be most appreciative.

- Matt



Bug#255517: ITP: kickpim -- KickPIM is a panel applet for quickly editing and accessing the KDE addressbook or sending emails to your contacts. It shows also a list of upcoming birthdays and waiting emails of multiple email-accounts.

2004-06-21 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 05:07:22PM +0200, Pierre Habouzit wrote:
 * Package name: kickpim
   Version : x.y.z

Hmm...

   Upstream Author : Name [EMAIL PROTECTED]

HMM...

 * URL : http://www.example.org/

Errr

 * License : (GPL, LGPL, BSD, MIT/X, etc.)

Ahem.

- Matt



Bug#251439: ITP: ydpdict -- Interface for the English-Polish Collins dictionary

2004-05-28 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Fri, May 28, 2004 at 03:33:04PM +0200, Marcin Owsiany wrote:
  This is an ncurses interface to the English-Polish/Polish-English Collins
  dictionary distributed by Young Digital Poland. It can also play the
  pronunciation samples if the CD is available.
  .
  This package is only the interface, it does not contain the dictionary files
  itself. To use it, you need a copy of the dictionary from YDP.

Does this program have any purpose without the dictionary data (which I
presume can't be packaged for Debian)?  If not, I don't think the package
should be in main - it effectively depends on non-free material in order to
function, hence it should be in contrib.

- Matt



Bug#248415: ITP: libapache2-mod-auth-mysql

2004-05-10 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist

This is not a normal ITP, but rather a placeholder.  I'm planning on
updating libapache-mod-auth-mysql to also build an apache2-specific version
of the module.  This will not introduce a new source package, just a new
binary one.

- Matt



Bug#247493: ITP: hearts -- KDE card game for four persons

2004-05-05 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Wed, May 05, 2004 at 03:16:08PM +0200, Frederik Dannemare wrote:
 * Package name: hearts
   Version : 1.98
   Upstream Author : Luis Pedro Coelho [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://hearts.luispedro.org
 * License : GPL
   Description : KDE card game for four persons
 
 Hearts is similar to the hearts game that comes
 with Microsoft Windows, allowing four persons
 to participate in a game.

I'd describe it in it's own right, as people who are familiar with the
Windows game of the same name will recognise it, and others will want to
know what it is independently.

Hearts is a trick-taking, point-accumulating card game for four players,
where certain cards have a points value.  The object of the game is to
obtain the fewest points.

Hearts has beta support for network play, to allow multiple humans to play
against other.  You can also play against computer opponents to make up the
numbers.

- Matt



Bug#243906: ITP: php-db -- PEAR DB modules for PHP

2004-04-15 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Thu, Apr 15, 2004 at 10:02:40AM -0400, Chris Anderson wrote:
 * Package name: php-db

Any chance of changing that package name slightly?  Most PHP libraries have
taken the libphp-foo path, rather than just php-foo.  I think this is a
good naming convention to follow, personally.

 * URL : http://pear.php.net/

You can get a little more explicit than that:
http://pear.php.net/package/DB.

 * License : PHP
   Description : PEAR DB modules for PHP

Perhaps Database abstraction module for PHP?  Then put the stuff about it
being the PEAR standard as the beginning of the long description?

And I've got a SQLRelay abstractor for you, as well, which upstream rejected
because SQLRelay is an abstraction layer of it's own, if you want it.

Thanks for packaging this, BTW.  Now I can make dependencies on this package
instead of hacking 'pear install' commands (blech!)...

- Matt



Bug#235543: ITP: jaws -- JAWS is a simple framework designed to easily create websites. It comes with gadgets to create a personal web site (such a blog).

2004-02-29 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Sun, Feb 29, 2004 at 05:52:36PM -0600, David Moreno Garza wrote:
 * Package name: jaws
   Version : 0.2
   Upstream Author : Jonathan Hernadez [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 * URL : http://jaws-project.sf.net/
 * License : GPL
   Description : JAWS is a simple framework designed to easily create 
 websites. It comes with gadgets to create a personal web site (such a blog).
 
 JAWS is an eye-candy blog.

It may just be me, but I think you've got the short and long descriptions
around the wrong way.  And you're not really supposed to mention the package
name over and over again - we know what the package is, because it's in the
Package: field.

- Matt



Bug#213520: ITP: phpreports -- A report generation system written in PHP

2003-09-30 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Version: N/A; reported 2003-10-01
Severity: wishlist

* Package name: phpreports
  Version : 0.1.5
  Upstream Author : Eustaquio Rangel de Oliveira J [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* URL : http://phpreports.sf.net/
* License : GPL
  Description : A report generation system written in PHP

PHPReports takes report definitions written in a custom XML DTD format and
turns them into a complete set of PHP code, which can be run to produce a
HTML formatted report in the format you specified.

Currently only HTML reports can be produced, in a fairly straightforward
table-oriented style, however work is underway to allow the generation of
PDF, plain text, and other formatting styles, for those that want them.





Bug#154592: Are you still intending to adopt PFE?

2003-07-24 Thread Matthew Palmer
Just doing some bug cleaning, and noticed you had an old ITA on PFE.  Is
that still in the works?  If you are, you'll probably want to adopt xm-tool,
too, since that's a build-depends for PFE.

- Matt



Bug#201359: ITA: cyrus-imapd -- CMU Cyrus mail system

2003-07-16 Thread Matthew Palmer
retitle 201359 ITA: cyrus-imapd -- CMU cyrus mail system
thanks

I'm planning on adopting cyrus if nobody else more qualified[1] steps up to
the plate.  It's too good a piece of software to let wallow like so many
others.

I'm well aware of Cyrus 1.5's age and upstream death.  My intention is not
to make cyrus 1.5 live on forever, but rather to keep it in a neat and tidy
manner, free of bugs, for those who want to use it, and provide a stable
upgrade path to Cyrus 2 for those people who want to move on.

I'm happy to discuss others maintaining, co-maintaining, or whatever else,
if there are other DDs interested in cyrus 1.5 as well.

[1] As in, works with Cyrus more than me, is a DD, and has the time to
maintain it.

- Matt


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Bug#199612: ITP: minido -- A simple, generic, multi-user, database free todo list manager / tracking system written in GTK2

2003-07-01 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Tue, 1 Jul 2003, francesco levorato wrote:

 Package: wnpp
 Version: unavailable; reported 2003-07-01
 Severity: wishlist
 
  Package name: minido
  Version : 0.3-1
  Upstream Author : Michael Opdenacker [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  URL : http://michaelo.free.fr/minido/
  License : GPL
  Description : A simple, generic, multi-user, database free todo list
  manager / tracking system written in GTK2
  A simple, generic, multi-user, database free todo list manager/tracking
  system written in GTK2. Though Minido is still very young, it already
  give a key competitive advantage to major industry players like Texas
  Instruments... Like TI, leverage this new paradigm to proactively
  re-engineer your core processes and drive cross functional empowerment!

Two things with your description: the long should not start with the short
again, and the rest of the long description is effectively marketese
bullshit which doesn't tell the person thinking of installing it anything
useful.  Tell people what features it has, not who else is using it.

Oh, and I'm pretty sure Texas Instruments is a trademark.  They may not like
you using their name in apparent support for another product...


-- 
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Matthew Palmer, Geek In Residence
http://ieee.uow.edu.au/~mjp16





Bug#198957: ITP: email -- Send email from command line, either via MTA or SMTP, with optional encryption

2003-06-30 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Mon, 30 Jun 2003, Millis Miller wrote:

 I've already spoken to the upstream author, and he does not see mwilling
 to convert to a DFSG license. Probably the only thing I can do is to make
 it suitable for the non-free section for the time being. Can you indicate
 to me how the license shoudl be changed to be suitable for the non-free
 section?

I think the only thing needed would be to get an OK for Debian to distribute
the program, in modified form.  That'd get it into non-free.


-- 
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Matthew Palmer, Geek In Residence
http://ieee.uow.edu.au/~mjp16





Bug#198957: ITP: email -- Send email from command line, either via MTA or SMTP, with optional encryption

2003-06-29 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Fri, 27 Jun 2003, Luca - De Whiskey's - De Vitis wrote:

 On Fri, Jun 27, 2003 at 12:32:59AM +0100, Millis Miller wrote:
  * License : Custom
 
 Its license is non-free, not Custom:
 
  * Copyright (C) 2001 email by Dean Jones
  * 
  * This source and program come as is, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY and/or 
  * WITHOUT ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY.
  * 
  * Users of said software should realize that they cannot and will not
  * Hold Cleancode.org reliable or responsible for any purpose WHAT SO EVER.
  * Please read all documentation and use said software responsibly.
  *
  * ANY COMMERCIAL REDISTRIBUTION OR ANY PROPRIETARY REDISTRIBUTION OF THIS
  * OR ANY SOURCE FROM CLEANCODE.ORG IS PROHIBITED UNDER CERTAIN CONDITIONS 
 AND 
  * SHALL NOT BE RE-SOLD OR REDISTRIBUTED WITHOUT PRIOR AGREEMENTS WITH
  * CLEANCODE.ORG
  *
  * I can be reached by electronic mail if there are any questions or concerns
  * about this or any other software that was written/distributed by
  * Cleancode.org
  * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  *
  * Software supplied and written by http://www.cleancode.org
 
 I'm not sure (i'm not good with legalese), but i suppose that you (we) shold
 ask cleancode.org the agreement about redistribution of 'email' to
 cleancode.org: i'm Cc-ing -legal to get some advise.

For what it's worth, I believe this licence is *way* non-free.  It
doesn't allow redistribution at all, it doesn't allow modification, it
discriminates against fields of endeavour (commercial interests), and if we
asked for a prior agreement we'd get around most of the above issues but
it would specific to Debian.

I also have issues with the definition of commercial redistribution or
proprietary redistribution - I get the feeling that would be a hairy one to
argue in court (proprietary, especially).  

Also, unless http://www.cleancode.org is a legally registered entity, how
can it have supplied and written the software in question?  Sounds like an
assertion of copyright to me, but I don't think a simple website can hold
copyright (unless it's a registered legal entity, of course).

So, we've violated DFSG 1, 2, 3, 5/6, and 8.  Not bad for one licence which
someone thought was DFSG free.  I'd recommend going to upstream, showing
them the DFSG, and asking if they'd mind relicencing it in some half-ways
decent (or at least, unambiguous) manner, preferably a standard licence that
fits their needs (it's not as though there aren't enough of them to choose
from), and clarify the ownership of the code.


-- 
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Matthew Palmer, Geek In Residence
http://ieee.uow.edu.au/~mjp16





Bug#193612: ITP: fbpanel -- A lightwight X11 desktop panel

2003-05-16 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Version: N/A; reported 2003-05-17
Severity: wishlist

* Package name: fbpanel
  Version : 1.0
  Upstream Author : Anatoly Asviyan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* URL : http://fbpanel.sf.net/
* License : BSD
  Description : A lightweight X11 desktop panel
 FBPanel is a spinoff of the fspanel (f***ing small
 panel) with more eye candy.  It provides a taskbar
 (list of all opened windows), desktop switcher,
 launchbar, clock, is EWMH/NETWM compliant, and has
 modest resource usage.





Bug#161979: ITP: phpwiki -- An informal collaborative website manager

2002-09-22 Thread Matthew Palmer
Package: wnpp
Version: N/A; reported 2002-09-23
Severity: wishlist

* Package name: phpwiki
  Version : 1.3.3
  Upstream Author : The PHPWiki Programming Team
* URL : http://phpwiki.sourceforge.net
* License : GPL
  Description : An informal collaborative website manager
 A Wiki is a dynamic website which can be edited by anyone at any time.
 Over time bad information is naturally filtered out, since the barrier to
 modification is very low.  Malicious or accidental destruction is obviated
 by the keeping of backup versions of all pages.
 .
 Installed as part of this package is introductory material to the Wiki
 concept, which can be viewed via the Wiki interface when the package has
 been installed.