Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-05-03 Thread Silviu Marin-Caea
On Apr 27, 2006 09:59 PM, Christoph Thiel wrote:


So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special
feature in the distribution, speak up now!

A web interface for YaST, ie do stuff in YaST from a web-browser.

Is this feasible?




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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-30 Thread Richard Bos
Op vrijdag 28 april 2006 10:43, schreef Christoph Thiel:
  We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE
  and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the
  period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our
  proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.
 
  So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special
  feature in the distribution, speak up now!

 I know quite some people are using the SMART Package Manager these days:
 So, I'm going to propose some extensions to SMART to handle the new
 rpm-md+ based update channels for SUSE Linux, including deltarpm support,
 etc. Maybe a QT GUI for SMART would be a nice feature as well, eh? Is
 there anything else that you are missing in SMART that could be addressed
 by a SoC project?

What about a repodata enabled _repository_  I really mean repository and not a 
bunch of directories scattered around a server, like it is now.  Have a look at 
my 
apt (repodata enabled) sources.list file:

repomd ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/misc/kolab suse-10.1
repomd ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/distribution/SL-OSS-factory/inst-source/ 
suse
repomd ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/suse/update 10.1
repomd ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/suse/install/10.1/SUSE-Linux10.1-RC2-Extra suse
repomd ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/misc/apt4rpm rpmkeys

It's a big mess.  It's not the apt way of doing with all components in 1 place, 
like e.g:
rpm ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/suse/apt/ SuSE/10.1-i386 packman usr-local-bin 

When will there be a centralized package repository for suse (including 3rd 
party
contributred packages).  The repository should provide a list of all packages 
and files
in the repository (including on the not subscribed channels/components).

-- 
Richard Bos
Without a home the journey is endless

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-30 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, James Ogley wrote:

  How about a YaST-module for configuring/setting up Xgl?
 
 That would seem to make more sense integrated into SaX2 rather than
 YaST...

Well, it' actually there already -- have you guys tried 
gnome-xgl-settings from the latests compiz package? I just found it by 
accident while preparing my laptop for LinuxTag and I have to admit, I 
liked it a lot!


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-30 Thread Jerry Westrick
On Thursday 27 April 2006 20:59, Christoph Thiel wrote:
 Hi everyone,

 openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!

snip

 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the
 period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our
 proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.

 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special
 feature in the distribution, speak up now!

 Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006 shortly.


 Regards
   Christoph

Late Proposal

I propose SUSE Firewall 3.

The purpose of this module would be to allow an advanced user to move 
onto a more advanced firewall system with out having to resort to iptables 
directly.

This module will work with the SUSE FW2 definitions,  But offer an additional 
GUI to define advanced (to professional) firewall configuration settings.

My proposal is that to incorporate www.FWBuilder.org to do this.
FWBuilder has one of the best gui's for building firewall available.
It is often compared to SyncPoint (Mega $ closed source system,
defacto standard).

Additionally, FWBuilder has a momentum, (ie. a large group of Firewall
/ security experts who are constantly improving and checking the Rule
generators).

I've mentioned this in the FWBuilder developer lists, (as a prove of concept).  
 
They seam to approve of the Idea, and immediately started thinking about 
changes to FWBuilder that would make it work better for the  project.

Here the jist of our discusions:

Proposal build a interface between YAST fw definitions and FWBuilder:
 Can you use all FWBuilder functions via the API?

 No.
 ...
 You can also look at the fwbedit utility in the fwbuilder 2.1, we've
 added ability to create objects in it so one could do this just by
 calling this simple command line tool. You need to check the latest
 code out of cvs to look at 2.1 code.

 fwbedit sounds like just what I need...

 but you still need to add rules ...  Fwbedit does not do that, it was
 intended as a simple command-line tool to manage objects. There were
 requests from users for a way to add objects in bulk, say, from a
 spreadsheet or some configuration file they could parse.

 Okay, but I think I can get around that as follows:

 The firewall will be pre-configured with rules. The configuration  
 is done by
 using the pre-defined rules based the following service groups:

 Service Group Description
   Ext2Srv Services (ports) Allowed From Internet 
to Server
   Ext2Lcl Services (ports) allowed from Internet 
to Local Network
   Lcl2Ext Services (ports) allowed from Local 
network to Internet
   Lcl2Srv Services (ports) allowed from Local 
Network to Server
   Client2Srv  Serives (ports) allowed from Client Pc's to 
Server
   Srv2Ext Services (ports) allowed from Server 
to Internet
   Srv2Lcl Services (ports) allowed from Server 
to Local Network


 Then with fwbedit I can just need to add the ports to the correct  
 predefined
 group, and recompile...

 Does this sound feasible?




 yes, absolutely. Good idea.
 do not forget about an option Ignore empty groups. The thing is, if  
 any of these groups becomes empty, you do not want the rule to treat  
 it as any.

 Note: This is not meant to replace the fwbuilder gui, but as a  
 method of 
 transition from the SUSE firewall definitions to fwbuilder...

 I still ain't figured out how SUSE yast will work with fwbuilder  
 after the
 transition, but, one step at a time...



 may be yast does not have to work with it after all. You can start  
 with preconfigured set of standard rules in the policy and make your  
 code recognize them and put objects in the groups you listed above.  
 The rest of the policy can be managed by fwbuilder GUI outside of  
 yast should user want to expand it. The user will be able to add  
 rules before or after your rules. There is a risk of user deleting  
 rules used by yast, for now you can only put some scary comment and  
 color them red or something to make it clear they are used by yast. I  
 wonder if I should expand the scope of the attribute read-only to  
 rules...

vk


That's my proposal folks...

Jerry

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-30 Thread James Ogley
Ooh, I just thought of one.  Actually, I didn't so much think of it now
as a while ago in my blog[1].  Is it too late to suggest ideas?

A GTK+ frontend to YaST would be very cool.

[1] http://rubberturnip.org.uk/index.cgi/2006/04/22#20060422
-- 
James Ogley
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://usr-local-bin.org
Packages for SUSE: http://usr-local-bin.org/rpms
Help end poverty: http://oxfam.org.uk/imin


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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread Hartmut Meyer
Hi,

On Saturday 29 April 2006 04:44, Trey Sizemore wrote:
 I'd really like to see something like a YaST module that provides a
 graphical way to work with LVM2 and evms (better that evmsgui).

What is missing in the existing (expert) partitioning dialogue of YaST2?


Greetings from Dortmund
hartmut
-- 
Hartmut Meyer, NTS EMEA Partner Relationship Manager 
SUSE LINUX GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, D-90409 Nuernberg
T: +49 421 3064385   -   M: +49 179 2279480
F: +49 421 3064387   -   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.novell.com/open


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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread jdd
Hartmut Meyer wrote:
 Hi,
 
 On Saturday 29 April 2006 04:44, Trey Sizemore wrote:
 I'd really like to see something like a YaST module that provides a
 graphical way to work with LVM2 and evms (better that evmsgui).
 
 What is missing in the existing (expert) partitioning dialogue of YaST2?

a lot of things :-)

the expert dialogue is to be rethought. I erased a drive
with it (happily vmware unimportant one).

not that it lacks something but it's not always clear what
it does.

more on this if necessary
jdd

-- 
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread Alexey Eremenko

For that matter, I'd love to see a YaST module for configuring SUSE Linux
to act as a terminal server (like LTSP, e.g.).


Well - yes it could be interesting. There is FreeNX package that does
it - but no GUI exists - so building a Yast Module will be great !

configuring NX on SUSE 10.0:
http://en.opensuse.org/FreeNX_Server_HOWTO


Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread Bruce A. Mallett
Christoph Thiel wrote:
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE 
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the 
 period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our 
 proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.
   
This is not really SUSE specific, however a GUI VPN setup (in particular
PPTP) that works with Network Manager would be useful.

- Bruce

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread SunSunich
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 13:21:05 +0200 (CEST)
Christoph Thiel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Michael Schroeder wrote:
 
  On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 10:27:40AM +0200, Christoph Thiel wrote:
   On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, SunSunich wrote:
Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot
that such feature already used for online update. May be it
will be not so hard to mirror that feature on System Update.
   
   I like that idea very much -- but it might not be as easy as it
   seems in the first place ;)
  
  Actually we already talked about this a couple of months ago. I
  think it can be implemented by having a transport mechanism
  drpmsync next to nfs, ftp and the like. I don't think it
  would be so hard to implement.
 
 Actually, I'd like to see drpmsync over rsync, drpmsync over ftp
 or drpmsync over http, in order to spur the distribution of
 drpmsync in general ;)
 
 
Is it just a plan for future? Or it will be discussed in the smart
branch? Could it be a project idea for SoC?
I don't have a student status, but a friend of mine has, we could
implement that feature for Yast System Update. All we need is a
maintainer.

Best regards,
SunSunich aka Asa-Doo-Leen Saiid

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006, SunSunich wrote:

 Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot 
 that such feature already used for online update. May be it will 
 be not so hard to mirror that feature on System Update.

I like that idea very much -- but it might not be as easy as it 
seems in the first place ;)
   
   Actually we already talked about this a couple of months ago. I 
   think it can be implemented by having a transport mechanism 
   drpmsync next to nfs, ftp and the like. I don't think it would 
   be so hard to implement.
  
  Actually, I'd like to see drpmsync over rsync, drpmsync over ftp 
  or drpmsync over http, in order to spur the distribution of drpmsync 
  in general ;)
 
 Is it just a plan for future? Or it will be discussed in the smart 
 branch? Could it be a project idea for SoC? I don't have a student 
 status, but a friend of mine has, we could implement that feature for 
 Yast System Update. All we need is a maintainer.

It could be turned into a SoC project -- I'll add it to the page soon, 
amongst the other stuff that has been suggested.


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-29 Thread Christian Boltz
Hello,

Am Donnerstag, 27. April 2006 20:59 schrieb Christoph Thiel:
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around
 openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of
 Code.

What about a better integration of GTK programs into KDE?
I'm dreaming of the possibility to replace _all_ GTK file dialogs [1] 
with KDE dialogs when running GTK applications in KDE...

Maybe GNOME users would like to have it the other way round also (Gnome 
dialogs in KDE applications).


Regards,

Christian Boltz

[1] which are a usability nightmare IMHO - I'm always annoyed when I
have to use them :-/  - another reason for (1) in my random (!) sig.
-- 
(1) ZACKBOING: Geräusch von Stirn auf Monitor-Glasscheibe(2), direkte
Folge von Biosupgrades, selbst kompilierten Kerneln oder dem versehent-
lichen Löschen von 30 Gigabyte Pornofilmen bei einem MySQL-Upgrade.
(2) Deswegen kauft man heute oft Flachbildschirme. Die sind weicher.
[Ratti in suse-linux]

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread SunSunich
On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 20:59:55 +0200 (CEST)
Christoph Thiel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi everyone,
 
 openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!
...
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around
 openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of
 Code. As the period of application for SoC is already very short, we
 need to get our proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the
 latest.
 
 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a
 special feature in the distribution, speak up now!
 
 Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006
 shortly.
 
 
 Regards
   Christoph

Hi all,

I have one idea - its about to union ability of YAST System Update and
drpmsync, so System Update can do update using drpmsync mirrors. In
that case, Yast System Update do not need to download the whole
rpm-package of package A ver. 0.1 to update it to 0.2.1. It only need
to download the delta of that rpms and apply it. It will decrease
bandwidth for all, and decrease cost of update for some users. As i
know, realizing that feature require the modification of the client
subsystem and a server-side infrastructure.

Best regards
SunSunich aka Asa-Doo-Leen Saiid

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Marcus Meissner
 
 I have one idea - its about to union ability of YAST System Update and
 drpmsync, so System Update can do update using drpmsync mirrors. In
 that case, Yast System Update do not need to download the whole
 rpm-package of package A ver. 0.1 to update it to 0.2.1. It only need
 to download the delta of that rpms and apply it. It will decrease
 bandwidth for all, and decrease cost of update for some users. As i
 know, realizing that feature require the modification of the client
 subsystem and a server-side infrastructure.

You mean like the delta RPMs we use for online update in 9.3 and 10.0 
already?

Ciao, Marcus

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Ciaran Farrell
Am Freitag, 28. April 2006 09:45 schrieb SunSunich:
 On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 20:59:55 +0200 (CEST)

 Christoph Thiel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hi everyone,
 
  openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!
 ...
  We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around
  openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of
  Code. As the period of application for SoC is already very short, we
  need to get our proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the
  latest.
 
  So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a
  special feature in the distribution, speak up now!
 
  Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006
  shortly.
 
 
  Regards
  Christoph

I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module 
(either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people (parents, 
schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and e-mail. I'm told 
that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling around with squid-proxy 
and postfix, which makes it (and consequently SUSE) unattractive for at least 
one market segment

Ciaran

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread SunSunich
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 09:48:18 +0200
Marcus Meissner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  
  I have one idea - its about to union ability of YAST System Update
  and drpmsync, so System Update can do update using drpmsync
  mirrors. In that case, Yast System Update do not need to download
  the whole rpm-package of package A ver. 0.1 to update it to 0.2.1.
  It only need to download the delta of that rpms and apply it. It
  will decrease bandwidth for all, and decrease cost of update for
  some users. As i know, realizing that feature require the
  modification of the client subsystem and a server-side
  infrastructure.
 
 You mean like the delta RPMs we use for online update in 9.3 and 10.0 
 already?
 
 Ciao, Marcus

Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot that such
feature already used for online update. May be it will be not so hard
to mirror that feature on System Update.

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Silviu Marin-Caea
On Apr 27, 2006 09:59 PM, Christoph Thiel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a
 special
 feature in the distribution, speak up now!

A better show during installation!

Add the possibility to have sound and video (recorded screen cam
sessions, lizards going around, whathaveyou).

Use that time to whet the user's appetite :-)

It wouldn't hurt to configure network earlier, so perhaps the next video
can be downloaded by bittorrent, during the time the current one is
playing.

The user must be able to turn off the show, mute the sound etc during
the installation and before it, by using an option.




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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, SunSunich wrote:

   I have one idea - its about to union ability of YAST System Update 
   and drpmsync, so System Update can do update using drpmsync mirrors. 
   In that case, Yast System Update do not need to download the whole 
   rpm-package of package A ver. 0.1 to update it to 0.2.1. It only 
   need to download the delta of that rpms and apply it. It will 
   decrease bandwidth for all, and decrease cost of update for some 
   users. As i know, realizing that feature require the modification of 
   the client subsystem and a server-side infrastructure.
  
  You mean like the delta RPMs we use for online update in 9.3 and 10.0 
  already?
 
 Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot that such 
 feature already used for online update. May be it will be not so hard to 
 mirror that feature on System Update.

I like that idea very much -- but it might not be as easy as it seems in 
the first place ;)


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread jdd
Ciaran Farrell wrote:

 I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module 
 (either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people (parents, 
 schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and e-mail. I'm told 
 that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling around with squid-proxy 
 and postfix, which makes it (and consequently SUSE) unattractive for at least 
 one market segment

being a teacher, I have a look at such systems for a long
time now and what I can say is childs laugh at that.

jdd


-- 
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http://dodin.org/galerie_photo_web/expo/index.html
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Ciaran Farrell wrote:

   openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006! 
...
   We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around 
   openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of 
   Code. As the period of application for SoC is already very short, we 
   need to get our proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the 
   latest.
  
   So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a 
   special feature in the distribution, speak up now!
  
   Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006 
   shortly.
 
 I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module 
 (either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people 
 (parents, schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and 
 e-mail. I'm told that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling 
 around with squid-proxy and postfix, which makes it (and consequently 
 SUSE) unattractive for at least one market segment

That seems to make a lot of sense to me. I'll add it to 
http://en.opensuse.org/Summer_of_Code_2006

For that matter, I'd love to see a YaST module for configuring SUSE Linux 
to act as a terminal server (like LTSP, e.g.).


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Ciaran Farrell
Am Freitag, 28. April 2006 10:28 schrieb jdd:
 Ciaran Farrell wrote:
  I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module
  (either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people
  (parents, schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and
  e-mail. I'm told that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling
  around with squid-proxy and postfix, which makes it (and consequently
  SUSE) unattractive for at least one market segment

 being a teacher, I have a look at such systems for a long
 time now and what I can say is childs laugh at that.

I'm sure some children may laugh at the implementation of such features, but 
it is  also worthwhile to look at the necessity of such features as a whole. 
The concept of keeping the Internet safe for children and thus integrating 
the Internet into the learning experience for children is certainly 
important. It is almost certainly _more_ important for teachers and parents 
and indeed anyone trusted with the guidance and upbringing of children to 
invest time in actually helping these children understand the dangers of the 
Internet, rather than simply sheltering them from such dangers. On the other 
hand, I am fairly sure that no school network administrator would argue that 
subjective technical ability to disable filters is an argument for not 
implementing the filters in the first place.

Ciaran
        


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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread jdd
*AFAIK when one asks for an install through internet, he
must go to the ncurse UI, at least it was what I had to do
last time.

make a graphic interface should be nice, this kind of
install have many advantages.

*Yast, specially at install time, is very power (specially
RAM) demanding.

This is specially true when all the harddrive must be
partitionned, for example when it's all new, because there
are no swap space available.

If it would be possible to make smarters libraries?

jdd
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Marcel Hilzinger
Am Donnerstag, 27. April 2006 20:59 schrieb Christoph Thiel:
 Hi everyone,

 openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!
[...]
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the
 period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our
 proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.

 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special
 feature in the distribution, speak up now!
What about a YaST-module for setting up UMTS or GPRS-Connections for mobile 
phones/PDAs via Bluetooth, Serial / USB cable, pccard.

-- 
Üdvözlettel -- Mit freundlichen Grüssen,
Marcel Hilzinger

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Hartmut Meyer wrote:

  I know quite some people are using the SMART Package Manager these 
  days: So, I'm going to propose some extensions to SMART to handle the 
  new rpm-md+ based update channels for SUSE Linux, including deltarpm 
  support, etc. Maybe a QT GUI for SMART would be a nice feature as 
  well, eh?
 
 Why not a YaST2 integration (module)?

I.e. a YaST2 module that uses smart as a backend?


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Marcel Hilzinger wrote:

  We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around 
  openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of 
  Code. As the period of application for SoC is already very short, we 
  need to get our proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the 
  latest.
 
  So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a 
  special feature in the distribution, speak up now!

 What about a YaST-module for setting up UMTS or GPRS-Connections for 
 mobile phones/PDAs via Bluetooth, Serial / USB cable, pccard.

Sounds nice as well!


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Hartmut Meyer
Hi,

On Friday 28 April 2006 12:22, Christoph Thiel wrote:
 On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Hartmut Meyer wrote:
   I know quite some people are using the SMART Package Manager these
   days: So, I'm going to propose some extensions to SMART to handle the
   new rpm-md+ based update channels for SUSE Linux, including deltarpm
   support, etc. Maybe a QT GUI for SMART would be a nice feature as
   well, eh?
 
  Why not a YaST2 integration (module)?

 I.e. a YaST2 module that uses smart as a backend?

Yes. Or does this already exist?


Greetings from Stuhr
hartmut
-- 
Hartmut Meyer, NTS EMEA Partner Relationship Manager 
SUSE LINUX GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, D-90409 Nuernberg
T: +49 421 3064385   -   M: +49 179 2279480
F: +49 421 3064387   -   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.novell.com/open


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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Hartmut Meyer wrote:

I know quite some people are using the SMART Package Manager these 
days: So, I'm going to propose some extensions to SMART to handle 
the new rpm-md+ based update channels for SUSE Linux, including 
deltarpm support, etc. Maybe a QT GUI for SMART would be a nice 
feature as well, eh?
  
   Why not a YaST2 integration (module)?
 
  I.e. a YaST2 module that uses smart as a backend?
 
 Yes. Or does this already exist?

No, but it sounds interesting ;)


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Pascal Bleser
Christoph Thiel wrote:
 On Thu, 27 Apr 2006, Christoph Thiel wrote:
 
 openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!
 ...
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE 
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the 
 period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our 
 proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.

 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special 
 feature in the distribution, speak up now!
 
 I know quite some people are using the SMART Package Manager these days: 
 So, I'm going to propose some extensions to SMART to handle the new 
 rpm-md+ based update channels for SUSE Linux, including deltarpm support, 
 etc. Maybe a QT GUI for SMART would be a nice feature as well, eh? Is 
 there anything else that you are missing in SMART that could be addressed 
 by a SoC project?

I was about to mention that ;)

Maybe a YaST2 module frontend for Smart ? i.e. Software Management
(that works) ? ;P

Smart is 100% Python and well written, I think it should be an
attractive project.

What about a software central application like I mentioned once, in
Python, based on the Smart engine ?
A single view that would display
- new security updates
- new packages from configured channels (including 3rd party, of course)
- updates to installed packages
- single-click installation/upgrade
- possibly even downgrading to older versions from the UI

The Smart engine could be used as an operating core for that, as it
already provides all the operations for managing channels, refreshing
channels, getting potential upgrades, and of course performing
installation/removal/upgrade of packages with an excellent dependency
resolver.

Goals/tasks:

1) coding the UI (either PyGTK or PyQT, or even both.. or... hmm.. a
web interface ? (there are embeddable lightweight webservers for
Python), a YaST2 module ? a Jabber bot ? ;)

2) adding some stuff to Smart itself, i.e. some history management
(e.g. for new packages that have shown up after each channel update:
smart reports that data when you do smart update (= re-fetches and
updates the repository metadata, it does *not* perform a package
upgrade) but doesn't keep history of that information)

3) possibly enhancing rpm-md with even more metadata, e.g. such as
- links to screenshots that would be embedded in the view (à la
http://kde-apps.org),
- quality/stability labels (whether a given release of a package is
stable, testing or experimental, or something similar) and
giving the end-user the choice to install/upgrade to the latest stable
or to the latest bleeding-edge version of a package (and do that per
package or package sets), e.g. I want the latest stable KDE version
but I want the latest bleeding-edge version of GIMP

... endless possibilities (such as push-based package management for
remote nodes) ;)

The advantages of smart:
- pure Python
- already supports a large number of repository formats
- doesn't rely on any dependencies except Python (obviously), and
rpm-python for RPM-based distributions
- already supports mirrors
- has the best dependency resolver of all package management frontends
- is biarch-capable
- works on RPM and Debian/dpkg based distributions (even seems that
Ubuntu will switch to smart)
- the code is pretty clean and well-structured (definitely when
comparing to yum or rpm)
- the maintainer (Gustavo Niemeyer) is very experienced (he was the
maintainer of apt-rpm and implemented a lot of synaptic) and very friendly

As far as business value is concerned and in case you wondered why
should Novell support the development of a cross-distribution killer
application like this that would be better than YaST2, I think that
the added value of YaST2 is not in the package manager, but in the
other configuration modules and in the installer.

cheers
-- 
  -o) Pascal Bleser http://linux01.gwdg.de/~pbleser/
  /\\ [EMAIL PROTECTED]   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 _\_v   FOSDEM 2006 -- 25+26 February 2006 in Brussels



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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Pascal Bleser
Christoph Thiel wrote:
 On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Ciaran Farrell wrote:
 
 openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006! 
 ...
...
 I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module 
 (either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people 
 (parents, schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and 
 e-mail. I'm told that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling 
 around with squid-proxy and postfix, which makes it (and consequently 
 SUSE) unattractive for at least one market segment
 
 That seems to make a lot of sense to me. I'll add it to 
 http://en.opensuse.org/Summer_of_Code_2006

Yep, interesting idea. Wouldn't be that difficult to implement
actually, it would be a configuration frontend for blocking rules in
Squid (+ possibly transparent proxy configuration through
SuSEfirewall2 to enforce HTTP requests to go through Squid).

+ implement a protocol and a sample implementation of a website
blacklisting system (similar to Razor for spam or DenyHosts for SSH)
through a central website or even a P2P architecture

 For that matter, I'd love to see a YaST module for configuring SUSE Linux 
 to act as a terminal server (like LTSP, e.g.).

Good idea as well ;)

-- 
  -o) Pascal Bleser http://linux01.gwdg.de/~pbleser/
  /\\ [EMAIL PROTECTED]   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 _\_v   FOSDEM 2006 -- 25+26 February 2006 in Brussels



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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Michael Schroeder
On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 10:27:40AM +0200, Christoph Thiel wrote:
 On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, SunSunich wrote:
  Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot that such 
  feature already used for online update. May be it will be not so hard to 
  mirror that feature on System Update.
 
 I like that idea very much -- but it might not be as easy as it seems in 
 the first place ;)

Actually we already talked about this a couple of months ago. I
think it can be implemented by having a transport mechanism drpmsync
next to nfs, ftp and the like. I don't think it would be so hard
to implement.

Cheers,
  Michael.

-- 
Michael Schroeder   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
main(_){while(_=~getchar())putchar(~_-1/(~(_|32)/13*2-11)*13);}

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread jdd
Ciaran Farrell wrote:

 I'm sure some children may laugh at the implementation of such features, but 
 it is  also worthwhile to look at the necessity of such features as a whole. 

I have seen many systems built to forgive access to given
sites. I have seen none run as it should. usually this is
like anti-piracy measures, this give problems only to honest
people.

On my school many sites are filtered (I don't know how) and
this gives me problem more than it should, forgiving the
access to usefull sites, when as soon as I turn back I see
porn screens on my students computers.

usually yougers childs dont care about such sites (they
simply don't understand) and others know how to get around.

don't forget there are friends, not so well hiden parents
code and so on. I remember the content of a math VHS tape
my son forget in the VHS reader :-((

 The concept of keeping the Internet safe for children and thus integrating 
 the Internet into the learning experience for children is certainly 
 important. It is almost certainly _more_ important for teachers and parents 
 and indeed anyone trusted with the guidance and upbringing of children to 
 invest time in actually helping these children understand the dangers of the 
 Internet, rather than simply sheltering them from such dangers.

absolutely true

 On the other
 hand, I am fairly sure that no school network administrator would argue that 
 subjective technical ability to disable filters is an argument for not 
 implementing the filters in the first place.

false security is worst than no security at all.

understand me: it should be a good thing if children could
be protected, but protection against TV infos should me
better than from the net.

the greated danger is on the road between the house and the
school :-((

I'm not opposed to a yast children safety module if it
proves it works... (Linux in itself is good as protecting
children)

jdd


-- 
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http://dodin.org/galerie_photo_web/expo/index.html
http://lucien.dodin.net
http://fr.susewiki.org/index.php?title=Gérer_ses_photos

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Christoph Thiel
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Michael Schroeder wrote:

 On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 10:27:40AM +0200, Christoph Thiel wrote:
  On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, SunSunich wrote:
   Yes, like that, but for whole system update. Actualy i forgot that 
   such feature already used for online update. May be it will be not 
   so hard to mirror that feature on System Update.
  
  I like that idea very much -- but it might not be as easy as it seems 
  in the first place ;)
 
 Actually we already talked about this a couple of months ago. I think it 
 can be implemented by having a transport mechanism drpmsync next to 
 nfs, ftp and the like. I don't think it would be so hard to 
 implement.

Actually, I'd like to see drpmsync over rsync, drpmsync over ftp or 
drpmsync over http, in order to spur the distribution of drpmsync in 
general ;)


Regards
Christoph

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Oliver Tennert
Am Freitag, 28. April 2006 13:13 schrieb jdd:
  On the other

  hand, I am fairly sure that no school network administrator would argue
  that subjective technical ability to disable filters is an argument for
  not implementing the filters in the first place.

 false security is worst than no security at all.

 understand me: it should be a good thing if children could
 be protected, but protection against TV infos should me
 better than from the net.
 I'm not opposed to a yast children safety module if it
 proves it works... (Linux in itself is good as protecting
 children)

...and as it cannot be proven that such systems will ever work (it may rather 
be proved that it will never work), let's best drop the whole pointless 
discussion about it. I am wondering if people who from time to time propose 
something like an Internet Safety Filter or whatever it is called ever read 
magazines, read articles, are interested in how such systems work and why 
they don't?

SUSE surely needs some things, which are substantial, but no snake oil like 
Parental Filter for WWW.

I would appreciate a Yast Plugin for setting up a Kerberos KDC, or LUKS 
integration.

Best regards

Oliver

-- 
May a Misguided Platypus lay its Eggs in your Jockey Shorts
--
__
creating IT solutions

Dr. Oliver Tennert
Senior Solutions Engineer
CAx Professional Services
science + computing ag
phone   +49(0)7071 9457-598 Hagellocher Weg 71-75   
fax +49(0)7071 9457-411 D-72070 Tuebingen, Germany
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  www.science-computing.de



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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett
On Friday 28 April 2006 12:58, Pascal Bleser wrote:
 + implement a protocol and a sample implementation of a website
 blacklisting system (similar to Razor for spam or DenyHosts for SSH)
 through a central website or even a P2P architecture

It would be nice if it you could select blacklists from popular ones in the 
net. There are blacklists for adult content, pishing [3], spam [2], sites 
associated with the RIAA [1] , etc.

All this stuff is useful to protect children, but they fit nice as a module in 
the users and security section of yast.

I dont think it is work to create yet another blacklist but better to 
integrate all of them in a easy way. Just like when You go to the NTP module 
and you don't need to know a ntp server, you can chose someone near you.

Here the challenge is:

- to group them by category
- to apply them in the right place. For exaple p2p blacklists are text files 
and should be applied to the firewall, while spam blacklists are dns based 
and should be added to postfix.

Perhap a simple architecture could be designed to update the avilable known 
blacklists. But in any case I think we should implement a new blacklist 
architecture for the internet.

Duncan

[1] http://www.bluetack.co.uk/config/antip2p.txt
[2] http://dsbl.org (agregates various others)
[3] http://rhs.mailpolice.com (includes advertisement, redirect, adult, spam, 
pishing)

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Ciaran Farrell
Am Freitag, 28. April 2006 13:47 schrieb Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett:
 Here the challenge is:

 - to group them by category
 - to apply them in the right place. For exaple p2p blacklists are text
 files and should be applied to the firewall, while spam blacklists are dns
 based and should be added to postfix.

 Perhap a simple architecture could be designed to update the avilable known
 blacklists. But in any case I think we should implement a new blacklist
 architecture for the internet.

Edubuntu is aimed at schools etc. Does anyone know if they have a feature like 
this? Apropos those who think the idea of a child filter is not worth 
spending any effort on, since this morning I  was in contact with two school 
directors about installing SUSE on school networks. With one, the very first 
question was about keeping the Internet safe in school - with the other it 
was the third question. While the idea of 'censoring' might seem absurd to 
developers, schools take this very seriously and I am sure parents do too. 
I've seen how some schools see how filters don't always work and instead the 
implement whitelists.

Duncan is right - there is no need to re-invent the wheel, but rather create a 
frontend to give parents and schools the _choice_ to implement the features.

Ciaran



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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Martin Schlander
On Thursday 27 April 2006 20:59, Christoph Thiel wrote:
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. 

How about a YaST-module for configuring/setting up Xgl?

I haven't really looked into it yet - but seems to involve quite a lot of 
config-file-editing - which many people are scared to do. I think it would be 
great for SUSE to have a YaST module for easy setup.

No clue whether it's feasible or not - I must admit.

cb400f

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread houghi
On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 01:47:37PM +0200, Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett wrote:
 Perhap a simple architecture could be designed to update the avilable known 
 blacklists. But in any case I think we should implement a new blacklist 
 architecture for the internet.

If there is such a list, just use it as an add on to the proxy server.
That said, blacklisting won't work. If you want to protect your children
from seeing things you do not want them to see there is only one thing:
Guidence.
Well, another way of babysitting through technolagy and avoiding your
resposability is tio use whitelisting.

I see these lists like firewalls. A bad firewall closes everything that is
not allowed in. A good firewall opens everything that is allowed in.

houghi
-- 
Nutze die Zeit. Sie ist das Kostbarste, was wir haben, denn es 
ist unwiederbringliche Lebenszeit. Leben ist aber mehr als Werk
und Arbeit,  und das Sein wichtiger als das Tun 
- Johannes Müller-Elmau

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread houghi
On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 01:57:46PM +0200, Ciaran Farrell wrote:
 Duncan is right - there is no need to re-invent the wheel, but rather create 
 a 
 frontend to give parents and schools the _choice_ to implement the features.

There already is such a feature. It is 'sit next to the kid, or pull the
plug'. It is a pity that schools should need such a thing, because it is
not about learning kids what is allowed and what not. It is about avoiding
some stupid My kid saw a female nipple on school and now he is gay
lawsuit.

Either take you resposability, or whitelist.

houghi
-- 
Nutze die Zeit. Sie ist das Kostbarste, was wir haben, denn es 
ist unwiederbringliche Lebenszeit. Leben ist aber mehr als Werk
und Arbeit,  und das Sein wichtiger als das Tun 
- Johannes Müller-Elmau

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett
On Friday 28 April 2006 14:21, houghi wrote:
 If there is such a list, just use it as an add on to the proxy server.
 That said, blacklisting won't work. If you want to protect your children
 from seeing things you do not want them to see there is only one thing:
 Guidence.

we are not talking only about protecting children from seeing things, we are 
talkign about protection in general

spam, fraud, innapropiate (user context), pishing, stupid lawsuits

Nobody is going to refute good guidance is better than a filter in terms of 
adult content / children, but for a school you are not going to do massive 
children guidance for 1.000 kids that have different home education, you just 
want to lower the risk of innapropiate content being displayed during working 
times, and reduce virus, spam, frauds.

Not only for children, people clicking on pishing sites for example is just 
people that is not informed about the problem, high-tech education.

But a nice module to handle all this in a central place will for sure be 
useful for schools, home users, little mail servers that get flooded with 
spamming injecting probes. It will not solve the root of the problem, but it 
will reduce the risk, and at the same time, is a good way to put linux 
security on the hands of normal users, lot of alternative operating system 
(planned for somewhere in 2007) look to do the same.

Duncan

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett
On Friday 28 April 2006 14:26, houghi wrote:
 Either take you resposability, or whitelist.

You are reducing the topic to adult content, which is only part of the topic. 
There is also spam, viruses, ads, pishing, etc.

Duncan

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread cyberorg
Xgl doesnt require any config-file-editing. We just had (my package still
has) nice little Xgl switch to toggle 3D desktop, if you are running
nvidia card that is all is required, once the driver bit is sorted out, it
would be so for others too.

What would be a good idea for xgl-compiz is some useful plugins, we havent
seen any of those since the initial few extras. For plugin ideas one can
have a look at http://compiz.net/viewtopic.php?id=273.

-J
-- 
www.cyberorg.info

 How about a YaST-module for configuring/setting up Xgl?

 I haven't really looked into it yet - but seems to involve quite a lot of
 config-file-editing - which many people are scared to do. I think it
would be
 great for SUSE to have a YaST module for easy setup.

 No clue whether it's feasible or not - I must admit.

 cb400f


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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
Hi,

Oliver Tennert schrieb:
 SUSE surely needs some things, which are substantial, but no snake oil like 
 Parental Filter for WWW.

While I fully agree with you that there can't be any effective filter (except
total disconnect), people still want to spend money on such a filter. If you
explain why it is snake oil and people still want to buy it, why not give
them what they want?

There are many people out there who will pay you to be able to keep their
illusions. Sad but true.

Regards,
Carl-Daniel
-- 
http://www.hailfinger.org/

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread jdd
Ciaran Farrell wrote:
 Am Freitag, 28. April 2006 14:38 schrieb jdd:
 
 spam and children protection are two completely different
 things.
 
 I don't know about that. If you saw some of the spam I get, then I'm sure 
 you'd agree, a child should be protected from it. Or would you like your 
 child to give your bank details to a nigerian bank manager who badly needs 
 these details to transfer the million dollars left to you by your long lost 
 cousin?

does your child have an e-mail or messenger? if yes, you are
stuck. and he receive mail on a server (hotmail), so you can
do nothing.

jdd

-- 
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread James Ogley
 How about a YaST-module for configuring/setting up Xgl?

That would seem to make more sense integrated into SaX2 rather than
YaST...
-- 
James Ogley
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett
On Friday 28 April 2006 16:01, jdd wrote:
 Ciaran Farrell wrote:
 does your child have an e-mail or messenger? if yes, you are
 stuck. and he receive mail on a server (hotmail), so you can
 do nothing.

 jdd

But a school could use suse for a small mailserver, web proxy, workstation 
etc, and provide web browsing and a school mailbox, so you have to consideer 
them too.

Even if they get in hotmail a evil url, clicking it will be less risky if you 
have some protection.

Duncan

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Thomas Hertweck

Christoph Thiel wrote:
 []
 We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE 
 and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the 
 period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our 
 proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.
 
 So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special 
 feature in the distribution, speak up now!
 []

I don't know whether this problem has already been resolved in version
10.1, then please forget about this email. Otherwise, I think it might
be worth considering:
The configuration of HAL, UDEV, etc. is really painful at the moment
(and, by the way, not very well documented). For instance, it might
require editing cryptic XML files. It would be good to simplify this
configuration process by some means (Yast?)...

Cheers,
Th.

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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Trey Sizemore
I'd really like to see something like a YaST module that provides a
graphical way to work with LVM2 and evms (better that evmsgui).

-- 
Cheers,
Trey

 
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Re: [opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-28 Thread Rajko M

Christoph Thiel wrote:

On Fri, 28 Apr 2006, Ciaran Farrell wrote:

openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006! 

...
We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around 
openSUSE and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of 
Code. As the period of application for SoC is already very short, we 
need to get our proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the 
latest.


So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a 
special feature in the distribution, speak up now!


Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006 
shortly.
I'm not sure how easy or difficult this is, but how about a YaST module 
(either a new one, or integrated into firewall etc) to help people 
(parents, schools etc) set up child filters for internet browsing and 
e-mail. I'm told that this currently involves quite a bit of fooling 
around with squid-proxy and postfix, which makes it (and consequently 
SUSE) unattractive for at least one market segment


That seems to make a lot of sense to me. I'll add it to 
http://en.opensuse.org/Summer_of_Code_2006


For that matter, I'd love to see a YaST module for configuring SUSE Linux 
to act as a terminal server (like LTSP, e.g.).



Regards
Christoph



Me too Christoph.
Because that is software project. Protecting kinds from Internet danger 
is project for parents that are sitting next to them and telling this is 
good, this is bad. Yet another filter would not help, as present options 
are not used.


Whoever is talking about them hasn't tried to think what that filters 
should do and how to explain to machine (program) what is appropriate.

Filters should protect kids from exactly what?

Who will define what is appropriate?
If you ask a whole city for an opinion than you can set all as 
forbidden, except phone book, and that after all inappropriate names are 
removed.


Idea to make filter that will replace mom, dad and teacher is pointless, 
 because nobody knows what they would like to be allowed and what not.


Now we can change idea of universal filter to mom/dad configurable.
I would like to see parents in action :-)

Right now you have bunch of applications that allow email and web sites 
filtering, and how many people use that funcianality? If parents and 
teacher have no time to sit next to the kids, when they going to find 
time to learn how to use and program filters. Even if there are some of 
them ready to do that, what would be the point, to make parents busy 
with computer instead of kids.


The Internet is today very similar to normal life. It is easy to get out 
of the home and walk in the forest. The hard part is when you meet a 
hungry wolf how to get rid of him. Now, who's responsibility is keeping 
kids far from a forest until they would be able to defend themselves?
Parents or some company that makes software. If you are responsible 
parent would you let some software company to tell your kids what they 
can look? The problem is not the software, but Internet content, and 
expert for software is not automatically expert for content.


Mom and dad are experts for that.

--
Regards,
Rajko.

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[opensuse] openSUSE @ Google Summer of Code 2006

2006-04-27 Thread Christoph Thiel
Hi everyone,

openSUSE has just been accepted at Google Summer of Code 2006!

Quoting http://code.google.com/soc/studentfaq.html:
--

  1. What is Summer of Code 2006?

 Summer of Code 2006 is a program that offers student developers 
 stipends to create new open source programs or to help currently 
 established projects. Google will be working with a variety of open 
 source, free software, and technology-related groups to identify and 
 fund several hundred projects over a three-month period. The 
 inaugural instance of the program, which took place last summer, 
 brought together 400 students and 40 mentoring organizations from 49 
 countries. We'd like to include even more organizations and 
 participants this year.

 The program's goals are to inspire young developers and provide 
 students in Computer Science and related fields the opportunity to do 
 work related to their academic pursuits during the summer, and to 
 support existing open source projects and organizations. Since we're 
 looking to find developers around the world (many of whom may have 
 considered creating open source software but havent yet taken the 
 plunge), we felt that concentrating on the student population was a 
 good place to focus our efforts. Further, since no single 
 organization could possibly mentor hundreds of students working on 
 disparate projects, we thought it made sense to spread the work 
 throughout the open source and free software community. We also think 
 that the Apache Software Foundation (for instance) knows a lot more 
 about what an Apache project needs than Google does and is more 
 likely to ensure that an applicant gets the right kind of guidance so 
 they can create acceptable code.

  2. When can I apply for Summer of Code 2006?

 You can apply starting on May 1, 2006. 

  [...]

--

We are now looking for ideas, proposals, projects, etc. around openSUSE 
and SUSE Linux, that could be worked on in Google Summer of Code. As the 
period of application for SoC is already very short, we need to get our 
proposals for project online May 1st, 2006, at the latest.

So, for example, if you are missing a certain YaST module, or a special 
feature in the distribution, speak up now!

Our proposals will be publish on http://en.opensuse.org/SoC2006 shortly.


Regards
Christoph

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