Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-23 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia

Mackenzie Morgan ha scritto:
> On Fri, 2008-11-21 at 10:50 +, Alex Cockell wrote:
>> As well as a field-test team, may I suggest that updates are subject to
>> a release-candidate-with-positive-signoff-and-test-battery process?
> 
> All updates go to the -proposed repo.  If any regressions are reported
> against these -proposed updates, they are not released to the main
> archive.
> 
> 

This is certainly not true during alpha and beta testing, which is a 
shame. Please contradict me and tell me that I am wrong :) because it 
seems to me that I reported regressions to -proposed many times, and the 
response time has been so long that the package made it into main and 
then to stable. That was where my thread started.

I would be so happy if it is was sufficient to say "hey! there's a 
regression" to stop a wrong update during testing until the bug report 
has been triaged, that I would install jaunty next week and start happy 
testing again (yes I plan to skip intrepid in any case :) ).

Is there any specific tag that one can use to stop the -proposed update 
go to main during alpha and beta testing?

BTW I finally bought the alternate network card, it works out of the box 
in hardy, but NOT in hardy.1 where it is broken in various poorly 
understandable ways. So this brought out some more tears out of my eyes. 
Then I dried those.

Vincenzo



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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-21 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Fri, 2008-11-21 at 10:50 +, Alex Cockell wrote:
> As well as a field-test team, may I suggest that updates are subject to
> a release-candidate-with-positive-signoff-and-test-battery process?

All updates go to the -proposed repo.  If any regressions are reported
against these -proposed updates, they are not released to the main
archive.

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Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-21 Thread Alex Cockell
Hi folks, 

It's good to see this being discussed; I am your putative new user to
Ubuntu and Linux in general - although I work 2nd line tech support
(corporate IT) - Lotus Notes and Wintel, so I know the problem
resolution/reporting flow from that end.

I also bought my machine preinstalled with 8.04, and accepted updates to
8.04.1.  However, after that time, kernel 2.6.24-21 came out and broke a
lot of users' machines, causing a lot of bad feeling on the forums, and
on Brainstorm.  Being a preinstall user, I do not know what tweaks Linux
Emporium made before they shipped my machine.

As well as a field-test team, may I suggest that updates are subject to
a release-candidate-with-positive-signoff-and-test-battery process?
There are a lot more trusting users out here (Windows refugees) who want
a system that "just works".. especially when it comes to recommended and
critical updates.  And if something does make it to production...
shouldn't it be backed out asap f there is a massive hue and cry over
machines failing on reboot etc?

Just the thoughts of a newish user.

Alex Cockell

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-17 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
Andrew Sayers ha scritto:

>> What I'd like to raise - how does one write such a database, when there
>> is no clear-cut answer on whether this card, with this driver, works?
> 
> Since we're talking about regressions here, one solution would be to
> make downgrading as easy as upgrading, and to request an optional
> hardware profile immediately before a user up/downgrades.  

That you can't do for your life: in feisty, my hardware works (well, 
don't know about the webcam, actually). But at office, I have hardy, and 
I use lyx from there. The version of lyx in feisty will not read the 
files I produce at office. Indeed, there are plenty of bugfixes which 
are not regressions, and I couldn't stick with feisty forever. What I 
can do, is to install feisty and use it when I really need it. But for a 
network card it isn't that simple as you can imagine. The point raised 
by Sarah, how do you organise such a database and how can you be 
"boolean" in saying that something does not work, is an extremely good 
question. I need to think about it and see if I can suggest a solution 
or not. A "quantitative" yet simple answer is that by looking at 
launchpad I can immediately tell that "iwl3945 drivers suck" :) But this 
does not solve the problem of creating a good hardware support database, 
which seems to be quantitative rather than boolean in many cases.

Vincenzo

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-15 Thread Peteris Krisjanis
2008/11/15 (``-_-´´) -- Fernando <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Olá Stephan e a todos.
>
> On Thursday 13 November 2008 12:20:17 Stephan Hermann wrote:
>> This task is not easy. There needs to be input from the users with the
>> non-working hardware. Most likely, that this information can be gathered
>> with some magic commands on CLI, which is also provided by a nice developer.
>
> I've seen this mention a few times, and if anyone looks at brainstorm, I bet 
> its already there:
> Would it be of any interest having a tool (only on devel branches or the all 
> time) that would gather the entire HW listing with FULL detail and upload it 
> to some database?
> Some improved version of hwtest-gtk, mixed with hwinfo and sysinfo (sysinfo 
> as a great user UI and could also teach/report to the user about supported 
> HW).
>
> Maybe hook up hwtest-gtk to system 1st runs and kernel upgrades, and notify 
> the user to run the tests, and send the report.

To addition to this - what we need is user's "field test" team,
something like virtual voluntary hardware test lab. Say, user
registers available computers with their hardware profiles (No need to
have Ubuntu on it, Live CD for testing and getting hardware details
should be fine). It comes into some db on Launchpad/Cannonical, and
say, there is Jaunty with new kernel, which has significant changes on
such and such hardware. Checking db - for example, we have 2 users
with such hardware. Create task list for testing (because it is
clearly not enough to test WiFi with just WPA or WEP), users do tests,
and report back. In fact, this *already* happens in bug reports, but
let's make it more organized. Also this db could contain list of
*known* hardware issues with bug reports and people who you can
contact with to test issue (if they are available and agree to help,
of course).

It would also give huge oversight to Cannonical and community in which
fronts there are issues. Say, wifi still have lot of issues, or sound
cards what causes most of trouble. It would also give Cannonical
availability to print nice "Hardware issues" page so users would know
what to expect.


>> When I upgrade to a new release, I always think (or is it knowing): "Ok,
>> for the next 4 hours I'll sit in front of this computer, and I expect
>> something to break...because it's software made by people". If nothing
>> breaks, then I'm really surprised and happy. But when something breaks,
>> I already expected that. And when I find the cause for the breakage,
>> I'll try to fix it, AND/OR file a bug report about that issue.
>>
>> Therefore, I don't upgrade my production machine without any real
>> testing. But this won't help for everybody, I know.
>
> That's why I start testing in early development versions: so that stuff can 
> be detected and users on a stable release dont find all those many bugs.
> I've already upgraded my laptop to Jaunty. With this I can keep up the 
> development, and help fix stuff before release

There are some issues with that too - for example, my Intel wifi card
was broken by updates only two weeks before final release. I would
even say that those last minute updates are most dangerous, because
they get introduced so close to finish line that it is really hard
task to get update for it in release.

Ubuntu really needs wider release testing window, when any functional
and hardware updates are strictly forbidden unless it is really
needed.

Peter.
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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-15 Thread (``-_-´´) -- Fernando
Olá Mackenzie e a todos.

On Thursday 13 November 2008 19:55:18 Mackenzie Morgan wrote:
> And yes, you're of course right about the issues with not having access
> to the hardware to fix it.  I've overheard someone mutter "well if you'd
> send me some hardware, sure I could make it work..."  I recall that the
> day I met Daniel Chen, he was showing up to an installfest so he could
> fix any sound bugs with actual, physical access to the hardware.

Its not always just hardware...
Just a few weeks ago after several hours of debug over IRC, I ended up creating 
a VPN account on our servers, for asac so he could more rapidly debug nm-pptp.
The next morning i got an email, telling me it was fixed.

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ps. My emails tend to sound authority and aggressive. I'm sorry in advance. 
I'll try to be more assertive as time goes by...


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-15 Thread (``-_-´´) -- Fernando
Olá Stephan e a todos.

On Thursday 13 November 2008 12:20:17 Stephan Hermann wrote:
> This task is not easy. There needs to be input from the users with the
> non-working hardware. Most likely, that this information can be gathered
> with some magic commands on CLI, which is also provided by a nice developer. 

I've seen this mention a few times, and if anyone looks at brainstorm, I bet 
its already there:
Would it be of any interest having a tool (only on devel branches or the all 
time) that would gather the entire HW listing with FULL detail and upload it to 
some database?
Some improved version of hwtest-gtk, mixed with hwinfo and sysinfo (sysinfo as 
a great user UI and could also teach/report to the user about supported HW).

Maybe hook up hwtest-gtk to system 1st runs and kernel upgrades, and notify the 
user to run the tests, and send the report.


> When I upgrade to a new release, I always think (or is it knowing): "Ok,
> for the next 4 hours I'll sit in front of this computer, and I expect
> something to break...because it's software made by people". If nothing
> breaks, then I'm really surprised and happy. But when something breaks,
> I already expected that. And when I find the cause for the breakage,
> I'll try to fix it, AND/OR file a bug report about that issue. 
> 
> Therefore, I don't upgrade my production machine without any real
> testing. But this won't help for everybody, I know.

That's why I start testing in early development versions: so that stuff can be 
detected and users on a stable release dont find all those many bugs.
I've already upgraded my laptop to Jaunty. With this I can keep up the 
development, and help fix stuff before release

-- 
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Linux user #443786GPG key 1024D/A1784EBB
My new micro-blog @ http://BUGabundo.net
ps. My emails tend to sound authority and aggressive. I'm sorry in advance. 
I'll try to be more assertive as time goes by...


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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-14 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
Scott Kitterman ha scritto:
> On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 16:14:31 -0500 Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
> 
>> I haven't bothered trying to use the GUI with my iwl4965 and WEP.  I
>> just expect NM to not work when it comes to WEP.
> 
> I have 4965 and it worked fine for me with KNetworkManager and WEP in 
> Hardy.  I have't had a need for WEP since I upgraded to Intrepid.
> 
> As an aside, if people are truly concerned about privacy/security, they 
> should be on WPA.  WEP is trivial to break.
> 
> Scott K
> 

Scott, if you move often you get what they give you, in my case it is a 
stupid unprotected network...  but the laptop has to work.

Vincenzo


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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Thursday 13 November 2008 22:43, Mackenzie Morgan wrote:
> On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 21:12 -0500, Scott Kitterman wrote:
> > On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 16:14:31 -0500 Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> > wrote:
> > >I haven't bothered trying to use the GUI with my iwl4965 and WEP.  I
> > >just expect NM to not work when it comes to WEP.
> >
> > I have 4965 and it worked fine for me with KNetworkManager and WEP in
> > Hardy.  I have't had a need for WEP since I upgraded to Intrepid.
> >
> > As an aside, if people are truly concerned about privacy/security, they
> > should be on WPA.  WEP is trivial to break.
>
> I know that, but until about two months ago, the network in the computer
> science department at school (yeah, go figure) was WEP, so it was a sort
> of "not-by-choice" thing for me.  And visiting other people's houses,
> WEP is often something you need to deal with.

Right.  It's not always a choice.  I didn't mean to imply it didn't matter if 
WEP worked because people shouldn't use it.  It ought to work.  I know my 
4965 laptop worked with WEP in Hardy because I was working on site at a 
customer for a while and the employee wireless network was WPA and the 
visitor's network was WEP.

Scott K

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 21:12 -0500, Scott Kitterman wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 16:14:31 -0500 Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
> 
> >I haven't bothered trying to use the GUI with my iwl4965 and WEP.  I
> >just expect NM to not work when it comes to WEP.
> 
> I have 4965 and it worked fine for me with KNetworkManager and WEP in 
> Hardy.  I have't had a need for WEP since I upgraded to Intrepid.
> 
> As an aside, if people are truly concerned about privacy/security, they 
> should be on WPA.  WEP is trivial to break.

I know that, but until about two months ago, the network in the computer
science department at school (yeah, go figure) was WEP, so it was a sort
of "not-by-choice" thing for me.  And visiting other people's houses,
WEP is often something you need to deal with.

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 16:14:31 -0500 Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:

>I haven't bothered trying to use the GUI with my iwl4965 and WEP.  I
>just expect NM to not work when it comes to WEP.

I have 4965 and it worked fine for me with KNetworkManager and WEP in 
Hardy.  I have't had a need for WEP since I upgraded to Intrepid.

As an aside, if people are truly concerned about privacy/security, they 
should be on WPA.  WEP is trivial to break.

Scott K

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 21:58 +0100, Nicolas Deschildre wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 8:55 PM, Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 20:36 +1100, Sarah Hobbs wrote:
> >> Take the intel 3945 card, for example.  Vincenzo says it doesn't work
> >> for him, under various modes.  Various users on the forums have also
> >> mentioned that their systems don't work with these cards.
> >>
> >> However, other users on the forums, mailing lists, and a whole lot of
> >> the developers, including myself, have this card, and see that it works
> >> for them.  I personally haven't seen this break since I upgraded to
> >> gutsy back at the UDS in Sevilla, 2007 (ie, pre-alpha 1), and I use WPA,
> >> which seems to be one of the areas of complaint, otherwise without 
> >> problems.
> >
> > In my experience, it does work fine with WPA.  It's WEP that's the
> > issue.  It only works with WEP (properly) using iwconfig.  If you use
> > NetworkManager, the key will *never* be accepted.  And if you use
> > network-admin (gone in Intrepid), the key will be accepted, but it won't
> > get an IP address.
> 
> And yet, my intel 3945 works fine with me with WEP & NetworkManager
> both in Hardy and Intrepid. Don't forget there are multiple
> "sub-models" of a given model.
> Please report your detailled hardware information (lspci -vvnn) on
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/253697 (Intel
> 3945 Wireless in Hardy cannot negotiate WEP or WPA Keys) or/and
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/223174 (Intel
> WLAN, 3945 (a/b/g) - low performance).

Ah, looking again, I'm subscribed to the first, but it's not what I'm
describing.  That one is that both WEP and WPA fail.  In my case, it
just fails with NetworkManager with WEP. WPA is fine.  There's a bug
sitting around for that too, though.

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-ubuntu-modules-2.6.22/+bug/139080

It's filed in Feisty and Gutsy, but it still exists with Hardy and
iwl3945.  With that laptop, WEP went like this:
Dapper + ipw3945 + network-admin = works
Feisty, Gutsy + ipw3945 + NM = fail...WEP key not accepted
Hardy + iwl3945 + NM = fail...WEP key not accepted
Hardy + iwl3945 + network-admin = fail...WEP key accepted, no ip address
Hardy + iwl3945 + iwconfig + dhclient = works

I haven't bothered trying to use the GUI with my iwl4965 and WEP.  I
just expect NM to not work when it comes to WEP.

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 21:58 +0100, Nicolas Deschildre wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 8:55 PM, Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 20:36 +1100, Sarah Hobbs wrote:
> >> Take the intel 3945 card, for example.  Vincenzo says it doesn't work
> >> for him, under various modes.  Various users on the forums have also
> >> mentioned that their systems don't work with these cards.
> >>
> >> However, other users on the forums, mailing lists, and a whole lot of
> >> the developers, including myself, have this card, and see that it works
> >> for them.  I personally haven't seen this break since I upgraded to
> >> gutsy back at the UDS in Sevilla, 2007 (ie, pre-alpha 1), and I use WPA,
> >> which seems to be one of the areas of complaint, otherwise without 
> >> problems.
> >
> > In my experience, it does work fine with WPA.  It's WEP that's the
> > issue.  It only works with WEP (properly) using iwconfig.  If you use
> > NetworkManager, the key will *never* be accepted.  And if you use
> > network-admin (gone in Intrepid), the key will be accepted, but it won't
> > get an IP address.
> 
> And yet, my intel 3945 works fine with me with WEP & NetworkManager
> both in Hardy and Intrepid. Don't forget there are multiple
> "sub-models" of a given model.
> Please report your detailled hardware information (lspci -vvnn) on
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/253697 (Intel
> 3945 Wireless in Hardy cannot negotiate WEP or WPA Keys) or/and
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/223174 (Intel
> WLAN, 3945 (a/b/g) - low performance).

I think I'm already on the first bug, but I'll check again.

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Nicolas Deschildre
On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 8:55 PM, Mackenzie Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 20:36 +1100, Sarah Hobbs wrote:
>> Take the intel 3945 card, for example.  Vincenzo says it doesn't work
>> for him, under various modes.  Various users on the forums have also
>> mentioned that their systems don't work with these cards.
>>
>> However, other users on the forums, mailing lists, and a whole lot of
>> the developers, including myself, have this card, and see that it works
>> for them.  I personally haven't seen this break since I upgraded to
>> gutsy back at the UDS in Sevilla, 2007 (ie, pre-alpha 1), and I use WPA,
>> which seems to be one of the areas of complaint, otherwise without problems.
>
> In my experience, it does work fine with WPA.  It's WEP that's the
> issue.  It only works with WEP (properly) using iwconfig.  If you use
> NetworkManager, the key will *never* be accepted.  And if you use
> network-admin (gone in Intrepid), the key will be accepted, but it won't
> get an IP address.

And yet, my intel 3945 works fine with me with WEP & NetworkManager
both in Hardy and Intrepid. Don't forget there are multiple
"sub-models" of a given model.
Please report your detailled hardware information (lspci -vvnn) on
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/253697 (Intel
3945 Wireless in Hardy cannot negotiate WEP or WPA Keys) or/and
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/223174 (Intel
WLAN, 3945 (a/b/g) - low performance).

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RE: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 20:36 +1100, Sarah Hobbs wrote:
> Take the intel 3945 card, for example.  Vincenzo says it doesn't work
> for him, under various modes.  Various users on the forums have also
> mentioned that their systems don't work with these cards.
> 
> However, other users on the forums, mailing lists, and a whole lot of
> the developers, including myself, have this card, and see that it works
> for them.  I personally haven't seen this break since I upgraded to
> gutsy back at the UDS in Sevilla, 2007 (ie, pre-alpha 1), and I use WPA,
> which seems to be one of the areas of complaint, otherwise without problems.

In my experience, it does work fine with WPA.  It's WEP that's the
issue.  It only works with WEP (properly) using iwconfig.  If you use
NetworkManager, the key will *never* be accepted.  And if you use
network-admin (gone in Intrepid), the key will be accepted, but it won't
get an IP address.

And yes, you're of course right about the issues with not having access
to the hardware to fix it.  I've overheard someone mutter "well if you'd
send me some hardware, sure I could make it work..."  I recall that the
day I met Daniel Chen, he was showing up to an installfest so he could
fix any sound bugs with actual, physical access to the hardware.

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Thursday 13 November 2008 05:13, Andrew Sayers wrote:
> Sarah - this should make sense on its own, but it builds on an idea I
> suggested in
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-discuss/2008-November/006250
>.html
>
> which you might provide a little background to this post.
>
> > 3) There are plenty of other hardware regressions by which I am affected
> > and I feel like these should be a bit more acknowledged by developers.
> > Because I can't be the only one."
> >
> > What I'd like to raise - how does one write such a database, when there
> > is no clear-cut answer on whether this card, with this driver, works?
>
> Since we're talking about regressions here, one solution would be to
> make downgrading as easy as upgrading, and to request an optional
> hardware profile immediately before a user up/downgrades.  Spotting
> problematic hardware then becomes a relatively simple statistical
> problem: when a user gives their hardware profile ready for an upgrade,
> they can be informed "you have , users with  were n%
> more likely than average to downgrade.  Are you sure you want to
> continue?".
>

Downgrading an entire system is never going to be reliable.  It might be 
possible to take a snapshot of the system onto a suitable storage medium that 
one could restore to if needed.

Scott K

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Chris Coulson
2008/11/13 Andrew Sayers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Stephan Hermann wrote:
> >
> > On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 11:56 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
> >>
> >>   - Allow downgrades. This should help narrowing potential causes of
> >> the trouble.
> >
> > This is something I don't understand.
> > When I upgrade to a new release, I always think (or is it knowing): "Ok,
> > for the next 4 hours I'll sit in front of this computer, and I expect
> > something to break...because it's software made by people". If nothing
> > breaks, then I'm really surprised and happy. But when something breaks,
> > I already expected that. And when I find the cause for the breakage,
> > I'll try to fix it, AND/OR file a bug report about that issue.
>
> That's commendable practice, but the problem in Vincenzo's case was a
> hardware regression that would require upstream developer time in order
> to write a fix.  An easy downgrade path would give users in that
> situation the opportunity to use a system that works while they're
> waiting.  It also gives a communication channel to users that aren't
> technical enough to describe hardware problems - if we log hardware
> profiles when users up/downgrade, we can see which profiles correlate
> most strongly with downgrades, and use that to help guess which bug
> reports are one guy with a dodgy graphics card, and which are something
> more general.
>
>- Andrew
>
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Surely trying to make a safe downgrade path risks introducing even more
regressions on top of the original ones, and could be a significant amount
of effort - effort that is better spent on fixing the original regressions.
Creating a downgrade path seems like a lot of work for very little gain IMO.

Regards
Chris
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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Andrew Sayers
Stephan Hermann wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 11:56 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
>>
>>   - Allow downgrades. This should help narrowing potential causes of  
>> the trouble.
> 
> This is something I don't understand.
> When I upgrade to a new release, I always think (or is it knowing): "Ok,
> for the next 4 hours I'll sit in front of this computer, and I expect
> something to break...because it's software made by people". If nothing
> breaks, then I'm really surprised and happy. But when something breaks,
> I already expected that. And when I find the cause for the breakage,
> I'll try to fix it, AND/OR file a bug report about that issue. 

That's commendable practice, but the problem in Vincenzo's case was a
hardware regression that would require upstream developer time in order
to write a fix.  An easy downgrade path would give users in that
situation the opportunity to use a system that works while they're
waiting.  It also gives a communication channel to users that aren't
technical enough to describe hardware problems - if we log hardware
profiles when users up/downgrade, we can see which profiles correlate
most strongly with downgrades, and use that to help guess which bug
reports are one guy with a dodgy graphics card, and which are something
more general.

- Andrew

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Sean Hodges
> Canonical does provide Support for Ubuntu for You, when you want to
> pay
> it. If not, fix it yourself, or help us fixing it e.g. join the irc
> and
> point people to it. If people can't help you directly, because of not
> having the broken hardware, you can try to provide this hardware to
> the
> people (that's an example, and hey, this you can't do when you use MS
> Windows). 

Nailed it.


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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Stephan Hermann
Hi Markus,

On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 11:56 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
> Am 13.11.2008 um 10:32 schrieb Stephan Hermann:
> 
> > But reality told me different.
> 
> Stephan, your points about the unfortunate truth are valid.  

Sad, but true.

> Nevertheless, software quality is one of the keys to success.

> I've just filed the second bug where one of the Gnome applets  
> segfaults in a standard situation. Many developers obviously code  
> really sloppy, a la "it worked once in my situation, so it works  
> always in all situations". Some developers even consider a segfault  
> as a normal way to end the execution of an application. This is a  
> more general observation of mine, this is ridiculous.
> 
> While we can't "fix" developers, we can put more automatic helpers  
> into place:
> 
>   - Keep Apport enabled even on stable releases. Hiding bugs doesn't  
> help.
> 
> While this doesn't fix bugs by it's self, it greatly helps to fix  
> them after the fact (and timely educate developers about their  
> practices).

Yes...this can help us, to shape applications which are running actually
on the user's desktops, but doesn't prevent it from happening.
If the bug is found after a release, it's already too late. Well, not
too late to fix it in an upcoming release, but too late today.

But here is a point: Why did the bug occur after the release first, or
when it occurred during development, why nobody took care to fix it?

And here are some answers (hopefully not all, but some, and mostly not
correct):

1. The bug occurred after the release:

a) The application in question is not used by a wide range of users. If
it would have been used by a broader community, the bug would have
occurred during development
b) Nobody, using this software before release, was actually able to file
a bug report to the distro bug tracker. That's not good. And this starts
another flow of questions, but those I won't raise here.

2. The bug occurred during development, why wasn't it fixed by someone?

a) There was no bug report, look at 1.b)
b) Most likely the application package waits in the Universe/Multiverse
pocket, and no non-paid/paid dev took care, because it's not important
for the release goal and nobody was interested, because it's
unsupported.
c) The application is in one of the supported pockets (main/restricted),
the core devs had it on the radar, but decided to take it as a
regression which could be fixed later, and is not so important for the
release in general.
d) the bug is so difficult and non-trivial to reproduce, or to fix, and
the bug was pushed upstream, and the distro team just have to wait for a
fix or an answer.

This is belongs to the application level so far.

Coming to the more delicate kernel level:

> 
> Additionally, this opens the door to get some automatic measure about  
> the quality of drivers or other software. Count open bugs and you  
> know what you roughly can expect. If you count too many of them, drop  
> the hardware in the compatibility list.

As said in one of my mails:

The problem here is, that some users with the hardware on a list don't
have problems, but others have.
Now, how can we determine what the difference between the hardware is,
between those with and those without problems?

This task is not easy. There needs to be input from the users with the
non-working hardware. Most likely, that this information can be gathered
with some magic commands on CLI, which is also provided by a nice
developer. But user thinks: "Damn, this takes more time, more that I
want to invest in this...this OS is crap...the devs are lazy bastards,
because the hardware is on the list...but as I can see, it doesn't work,
wait I'll tell them that on the ML or whereever".

So, for the kernel devs or other devs in other parts of the distro, it's
quite difficult sometimes to get the necessary infos, when people are
not coming back and providing the infos about the hardware, or if they
did, then they won't come back to test the fix, because they already
installed another OS or switched back to something else.

There are so many variables, which are playing a part, starting from
non-working hardware revision to the decision: "Ok, this card is only 10
days old, most likely that there are not many people who are using it,
we need to forget about this, during this release cycle, and yes, we
screw the people who have this card, but the majority is not affected at
all." to "Shit, we didn't even know that this wasn't working, yeah there
was a report, but we didn't get the infos back we needed to
investigate..shit happens, but shit happens all the time, let's document
it".

And in reality, only one or two newer revisions of chipset are not
working anymore...but to get this revision it takes time to get the
right info from the users.

> 
> To keep more users happy:
> 
>   - Allow downgrades. This should help narrowing potential causes of  
> the trouble.

This is something I don't understand.
When I upgrade to a new 

Hardware regressions was (Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions))

2008-11-13 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 09:00:36 + Vincenzo Ciancia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
>> If a distributor adds more goodies to the kernel, then be happy, but
>> that doesn't mean, that it really works...even when the distributor puts
>> the hardware on the list of supported hardware.
>> 
>
>I hope this is not really the idea of the ubuntu developers on this 
>topic, because if so, then I can really, really forget all my bugs, and 
>go home happy. If the idea is that a trial-and-error process should be 
>the normal way of using ubuntu (it is the way I use it every time I 
>install it to other people), then just tell me. I think it's 
>unbelievable how far things went in this direction. If this is 
>considered normal and unharmful, there's clearly something that I didn't 
>understand here.

Part of what goes on is that the details of a product change over time, 
where a specific part was made, or any number of things.  So when one 
person says (to pick one example, this is true for all vendors) IW 3945 is 
broken and another says it's not, they probably don't have identical cards.

We also have more than one kernel.  Maybe it works with i386, but is broken 
with amd64.

Use cases differ too.  I have a laptop with IW 4965 and it works great for 
me.  A lot of people reported problems on Intrepid with this card.  As it 
happens, I am mostly (maybe always) on 802.11G networks.  People with the 
problems have 802.11N (mostly anyway - see the other factors).

Part of the trouble with a hardware database is what to put in it to make 
it reliable, yet searchable.  So this is not an easy problem.  Back in Edgy 
I remember spending a lot of time digging through wiki pages trying to 
figure out wifi. Clearly we need to do better with this, but I'm not sure 
exactly how.

I think this may be a topic to take up with the QA team.

Scott K

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Markus Hitter

Am 13.11.2008 um 10:32 schrieb Stephan Hermann:

> But reality told me different.

Stephan, your points about the unfortunate truth are valid.  
Nevertheless, software quality is one of the keys to success.

I've just filed the second bug where one of the Gnome applets  
segfaults in a standard situation. Many developers obviously code  
really sloppy, a la "it worked once in my situation, so it works  
always in all situations". Some developers even consider a segfault  
as a normal way to end the execution of an application. This is a  
more general observation of mine, this is ridiculous.

While we can't "fix" developers, we can put more automatic helpers  
into place:

  - Keep Apport enabled even on stable releases. Hiding bugs doesn't  
help.

While this doesn't fix bugs by it's self, it greatly helps to fix  
them after the fact (and timely educate developers about their  
practices).

Additionally, this opens the door to get some automatic measure about  
the quality of drivers or other software. Count open bugs and you  
know what you roughly can expect. If you count too many of them, drop  
the hardware in the compatibility list.

To keep more users happy:

  - Allow downgrades. This should help narrowing potential causes of  
the trouble.


Ideally, there would be a big regression testing facility, like Wine  
has one. Each time a Wine developer fixes a bug, he's pushed to  
create a test for his case. These test cases are run automatically  
for each commited patch and pretty well avoid introducing a bug a  
second time.


to add my $o.o2,
MarKus

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Dipl. Ing. Markus Hitter
http://www.jump-ing.de/





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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Andrew Sayers
Sarah - this should make sense on its own, but it builds on an idea I
suggested in
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-discuss/2008-November/006250.html

which you might provide a little background to this post.

> 3) There are plenty of other hardware regressions by which I am affected
> and I feel like these should be a bit more acknowledged by developers.
> Because I can't be the only one."
> 
> What I'd like to raise - how does one write such a database, when there
> is no clear-cut answer on whether this card, with this driver, works?

Since we're talking about regressions here, one solution would be to
make downgrading as easy as upgrading, and to request an optional
hardware profile immediately before a user up/downgrades.  Spotting
problematic hardware then becomes a relatively simple statistical
problem: when a user gives their hardware profile ready for an upgrade,
they can be informed "you have , users with  were n%
more likely than average to downgrade.  Are you sure you want to continue?".

- Andrew

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RE: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Sarah Hobbs
Apologies for breaking threading, i'm not subscribed to this list
anymore, as the S/N ratio was too low.  However, this part is
interesting.  Please CC me on any responses to this mail.

Vincenzo writes:

"2) Another bug affected me at random (WIFI), and there was nothing I
could do about that, and it happened to me other times with other intel
cards. I've not been clear perhaps, but the problem is that I was used
to have my network card functioning, and one day it just left me without
connection - after I moved abroad for one month, not after I upgraded.
This is because intel's drivers mostly suck, there is no simpler
explanation. They have tons of bugs and corner cases (I can support this
by pointing at the number and gravity of LP bugs for them). I want to be
able to rely and let others rely on ubuntu so we need to know what works
and what not.

3) There are plenty of other hardware regressions by which I am affected
and I feel like these should be a bit more acknowledged by developers.
Because I can't be the only one."

What I'd like to raise - how does one write such a database, when there
is no clear-cut answer on whether this card, with this driver, works?

Take the intel 3945 card, for example.  Vincenzo says it doesn't work
for him, under various modes.  Various users on the forums have also
mentioned that their systems don't work with these cards.

However, other users on the forums, mailing lists, and a whole lot of
the developers, including myself, have this card, and see that it works
for them.  I personally haven't seen this break since I upgraded to
gutsy back at the UDS in Sevilla, 2007 (ie, pre-alpha 1), and I use WPA,
which seems to be one of the areas of complaint, otherwise without problems.

The bugs that affect everyone with a particular chipset are often
acknowledged, particularly in the release notes.  Maybe it would be nice
to acknowledge that some people have problems with this card- but that's
only some people.  You'd be telling a whole lot of other people that
their cards may not work, when they actually work just fine.

Also, I'd be willing to bet that at least one person has a problems with
*every* card in Ubuntu.  Does it really make sense to acknowledge them
all?  How does one generalise that, in a paragraph or two, and it still
be useful?

Arguably, it would help if the relevant (i presume kernel) developers
had access to some of these faulting cards - the ones that do break
where people can reproduce it on site seem to get fixed quite quickly.
But it's very hard to debug something where you don't have access (and
it's quite hard to buy hardware to try to fix it, if only a smallish
percentage of cards actually exhibit this buggy behaviour!)

Thoughts?

Just my 2c.

Hobbsee



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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Stephan Hermann
Hi,


On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 09:00 +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> > If a distributor adds more goodies to the kernel, then be happy, but
> > that doesn't mean, that it really works...even when the distributor puts
> > the hardware on the list of supported hardware.
> > 
> 
> I hope this is not really the idea of the ubuntu developers on this 
> topic, because if so, then I can really, really forget all my bugs, and 
> go home happy. If the idea is that a trial-and-error process should be 
> the normal way of using ubuntu (it is the way I use it every time I 
> install it to other people), then just tell me. I think it's 
> unbelievable how far things went in this direction. If this is 
> considered normal and unharmful, there's clearly something that I didn't 
> understand here.

This is reality :) Really.

Example: 

I bought an USB DTV Stick for terrestrial signals.
The product I bought is supported regarding all sources I read
(linuxdvb, kernel...)
So, I bought my hardware, regarding all infos I had access to.

What was the result?

In Hardy, this stick didn't work, just because the hardware vendor
changed one single chip revision. And what now? 

Regarding the Ubuntu Kernel + all other infos, I bought a product, which
just had to work out of the box. 

But reality told me different.

Good, that upstream (those guys from linuxdvb) heard about this issue,
and some guy also had this stick at home and they produced a new driver
release, but this wasn't in time for Hardy.

So, even if you buy hardware which should be supported by any linux
distro out there, because someone put it on a list, you can't be sure,
that it's actually working.

Noone can and will add all different revisions of hardware chip infos on
a list.

What you mostly get is: 

ATI Graphics Card -> supported
NVidia Graphics Card -> Supported
USB DTV Stick Made FooBar -> Supported


And then you will realize, that your very old card is not really
supported anymore, even if it's an ATI or Nvidia...You will even realize
that the new NVidia GeForce 10 with 8TB of RAM won't be supported,
because the drivers were not finished in time...

And this is nothing which only happens on Ubuntu...this happens all the
time with any other distro, too.

Most likely, if you use server hardware, which doesn't change so many
times over three years than desktop hardware, you will be more happy.

That's why most distros are not supporting a desktop version of their
enterprise release. Because Desktops are really a pain for users and
devs regarding hardware support.

Regards,

\sh


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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia

> If a distributor adds more goodies to the kernel, then be happy, but
> that doesn't mean, that it really works...even when the distributor puts
> the hardware on the list of supported hardware.
> 

I hope this is not really the idea of the ubuntu developers on this 
topic, because if so, then I can really, really forget all my bugs, and 
go home happy. If the idea is that a trial-and-error process should be 
the normal way of using ubuntu (it is the way I use it every time I 
install it to other people), then just tell me. I think it's 
unbelievable how far things went in this direction. If this is 
considered normal and unharmful, there's clearly something that I didn't 
understand here.

Vincenzo

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-13 Thread Stephan Hermann
Moins,

On Tue, 2008-11-11 at 02:27 +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> On 11/11/2008 Scott Kitterman wrote:
> > 
> > I would encourage you (and others, you certainly aren't the only one) 
> > to hold 
> > your temper and if you can't say something helpful, just take your 
> > hands off 
> > the keyboard.  Being angry, contemptuous, and disrespectful won't get 
> > your 
> > bugs fixed faster.  What it will get you is yet another list with no 
> > developers on it and you upset you can't get in touch with them.
> 
> 
> You are perfectly right, this went out of my control, and I appreciated 
> a lot the responses I got on various other issues in the past. I stop 
> now on the topic.
> 
> The only seriously valid point for you developers in my e-mails - I 
> think - and the one I wanted to expose in the first e-mail I wrote - is 
> that we users really need a seriously maintained hardware database, and 
> a serious attention to all hardware related regressions, because you 
> can't change your hardware like you can change your software. This is 
> what from times to times leads me to a complete demotivation on keeping 
> supporting ubuntu - and I bet you as a developer care, not of me in 
> particular, but of the numbers. Ubuntu is so popular because developers 
> care about usability and understand what it is, but also because users 
> are openly advertising and supporting it as if it was The Salvation from 
> the Evil Microsoft. Don't loose this important advantage.

Advocating Ubuntu doesn't mean you need to support it.
Advocating in a company and propose a switch from MS Windows XP/Vista to
Canonical+Ubuntu means, that you should have a point doing so. 
Software in general is not bug free, so mostly you need commercial
support for your OS or other Software you are using. 

Canonical does provide Support for Ubuntu for You, when you want to pay
it. If not, fix it yourself, or help us fixing it e.g. join the irc and
point people to it. If people can't help you directly, because of not
having the broken hardware, you can try to provide this hardware to the
people (that's an example, and hey, this you can't do when you use MS
Windows). 

> 
> If you start an officially endorsed hardware database with a forum for 
> comments and user-to-user support in launchpad etc, and keep an eye open 
> on regressions in hardware support, that should promptly be acknowledged 
> and put aside the relevant entries in the hardware database itself, and 
> that ideally should never be propagated to stable releases, but 
> _usually_ do, I am sure your user community will make a great job in 
> populating it. If you don't do that because of lack of manpower... I 
> understand and accept the reality.

You know, there is more and more hardware on the market, old and new.
And I never saw any hardware working out of the box which is quite new,
not even on Windows. Most drivers for new hardware on Windows are
broken...and believe me, asking the hardware vendor or creator, doesn't
help to fix those drivers in time, not if you don't want to pay them.

BTW, I do advocate Ubuntu in every company I'm working. And mostly I'm
the cursed guy who is doing the support, too. You know what? If I can't
fix it in time, I'll file a bug and I'm waiting. In the meantime, there
are workarounds (e.g. using an external wifi card, using another
graphics card driver etc.pp.) and most people are happy when they can
use their computers, it doesn't matter how. Actually most people don't
care about their special hardware they have in their laptops or
desktop...they just want to work.

TBH, if I really want to deploy Ubuntu as Desktop replacement, I'll call
Canonical or one of their partners and order some special support
contracts with developer support...it costs money, yes, but this should
be in your budget for such a project.

But in general, you shouldn't advocate things you can't handle. If you
are not able to help people out of a bad situation, don't switch
them..most likely people will not only hate the new OS, but they will
hate you.

If you really want to know which hardware is supported, you should read
the vanilla kernel mailing list, because this is the most valuable
source of finding out which hardware does work out of the box.

If a distributor adds more goodies to the kernel, then be happy, but
that doesn't mean, that it really works...even when the distributor puts
the hardware on the list of supported hardware.

Regards,

\sh


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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-12 Thread shirish
I feel your pain,  a colleague of mine who was an administrator in my
erst-while company. We had 100 desktops and we had close to 100 odd
developer desktops switched to ubuntu. We had also made an apt-mirror
to get updates but most of the time the updates were not used.

Reason :- The admin had to spend too much time to see as and when
things broke so he was static.

Applications used :-  4-5 applications were used mostly

a. Eclipse
b. Openoffice.org
c. Web-browsers (mostly Firefox)
d. PHP
e. Skype

Hardware used :-  Mostly Intel-based machine (C2D or whatever cheap we
could find) , 1 GiB RAM on some machines, smattering of AMD based
mobos, IDE HDD's and run of the mill monitors)

Even on the few machines we did some updates, many a times it would
break something or the other. The good point is that most of the times
the worksaround was there on the forums but that takes time.

Eventually we came to having a very static environment. Also the admin
was never interested to file bugs in ubuntu simply because too much
work (and language issues)

I dunno if anything given in the post is helpful to the developers or
not, or would be just 'noise' but felt like sharing hence did it.
-- 
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  Shirish Agarwal
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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-12 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
On 11/11/2008 Andrew Sayers wrote:
> I'd like to hear Vincenzo's take on this, but it sounds to me like the
> bugs here are:

If you ask for it, I reply but try to be concise. It is much simpler 
than that:

1) One bug is there since more than one year (VGA out) and it is 
affecting many people that I know, that would have become ubuntu users 
but will not, and this makes me sad. It's not "my bug" and I wanted 
ubuntu developers to know that there are users who have opted not to 
switch to ubuntu for that reason. And it does not happen every day, that 
one decides to try and switch to another operating system, so we should 
care of not missing the train when it passes by.

2) Another bug affected me at random (WIFI), and there was nothing I 
could do about that, and it happened to me other times with other intel 
cards. I've not been clear perhaps, but the problem is that I was used 
to have my network card functioning, and one day it just left me without 
connection - after I moved abroad for one month, not after I upgraded. 
This is because intel's drivers mostly suck, there is no simpler 
explanation. They have tons of bugs and corner cases (I can support this 
by pointing at the number and gravity of LP bugs for them). I want to be 
able to rely and let others rely on ubuntu so we need to know what works 
and what not.

3) There are plenty of other hardware regressions by which I am affected 
and I feel like these should be a bit more acknowledged by developers. 
Because I can't be the only one.

Vincenzo




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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-12 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
On 11/11/2008 Felipe Figueiredo wrote:
> The kind of rant that started this thread
> is not only uncalled for, but in fact counterproductive. Not to 
> mention
> these particular ones are unfair, incorrect and (as noted by several
> others) exaggerated. He was not asking if he was the one of many, he
> basically assumed it affected everyone. Also, he wrongly assumed the
> distribution is responsible for all the QA released, likely ignoring
> that are distribution bugs and upstream bugs.
> 
> There, I did it, I bit the bait. Now can we please move on?

No we can't. We could if you had not pointed your finger directly to me, 
now you have called me in cause and I have to reply, sorry if this will 
  augment noise (like your comment above, indeed). I pointed my finger 
in the past, too, and learned that it is almost always a bad idea.

I would like to point out to you that I have made many people switch to 
ubuntu in a professional environment (an academic department, by the 
way), and other had to come, that I report every bug I find, and 
encourage others to do so, trying to be as precise as my 22 years of 
experience with computers can help me to be, and occasionally I wasted 
working days (yes I am paid to do a real job like all the others here) 
to learn to package fixes to stuff that maybe you even use or used 
("left as an exercise" what stuff), just because "somebody should do the 
dirty job sometimes".

I have spent much time, and I have sometimes had to quarrel with other 
persons in my academic department, in various attempts to introduce and 
defend the principles of free software and open formats in our official 
regulations.

But I can't continue publicizing ubuntu if I can't rely on it - because 
people will come back to me and I will pass for a liar and completely 
ruin my public image.

So if, as you say, you CARE for ubuntu, you should be sorry that 
experienced people that actually does some "door to door" assistance for 
ubuntu, and helps the community (and I know we are many, I am not 
claiming any particular personal merit) gets so p**sed off with the 
current situation that they might want to stop doing this unpaid job.

If you really care for ubuntu, you probably will appreciate that its 
huge success is also due to this network of users that really "believe" 
in an independent distribution that is striving to change the world. Of 
which you probably are a part.

In the current situation - keep in mind I can be considered a very 
experienced user (for me, being asked to compile a driver on X is a 
matter of wasting a quarter of hour, for example) - I had the unpleasant 
experience to realise that I can rely on ubuntu _much less_ than on 
windows on various machines that I had _carefully_ chosen because their 
hardware is ADVERTIZED as SUPPORTING UBUNTU. Sometimes, all my experties 
is not sufficient: it just can not do the job it is supposed to do. And 
this happens also on the machines of other people in my department who I 
was helping to SWITCH TO ubuntu (from windows, from fedora, and even 
from OSX). This is very frustrating and surely not what ubuntu is aiming to.

This is why, in my first e-mail, I asked for _good documentation_ on 
what hardware REALLY works. Which implies that, as soon as you have a 
regression, you have to check if it is true (that is, to urgently triage 
the bug) and eventually ADVERTIZE the regression on the SAME PAGE where 
you ADVERTIZE THE HARDWARE. This is always done, the point is that you 
have to do in weeks, not years. I am not in the position to impose 
anything, though, if ubuntu has other priorities I can't change the reality.

The rest of the thread was an unuseful hurricane of repeated rants, 
likely due to my frustration in being constrained to use windows, that 
has been dealt with with __great kindness__ by other people, and frankly 
   "a posteriori" the fact that nobody flamed me (I don't consider yours 
a flame yet) is surprising, given the tone of my subsequent e-mails.

Vincenzo

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-12 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
On 11/11/2008 Scott Kitterman wrote:
> 
> I would encourage you (and others, you certainly aren't the only one) 
> to hold 
> your temper and if you can't say something helpful, just take your 
> hands off 
> the keyboard.  Being angry, contemptuous, and disrespectful won't get 
> your 
> bugs fixed faster.  What it will get you is yet another list with no 
> developers on it and you upset you can't get in touch with them.


You are perfectly right, this went out of my control, and I appreciated 
a lot the responses I got on various other issues in the past. I stop 
now on the topic.

The only seriously valid point for you developers in my e-mails - I 
think - and the one I wanted to expose in the first e-mail I wrote - is 
that we users really need a seriously maintained hardware database, and 
a serious attention to all hardware related regressions, because you 
can't change your hardware like you can change your software. This is 
what from times to times leads me to a complete demotivation on keeping 
supporting ubuntu - and I bet you as a developer care, not of me in 
particular, but of the numbers. Ubuntu is so popular because developers 
care about usability and understand what it is, but also because users 
are openly advertising and supporting it as if it was The Salvation from 
the Evil Microsoft. Don't loose this important advantage.

If you start an officially endorsed hardware database with a forum for 
comments and user-to-user support in launchpad etc, and keep an eye open 
on regressions in hardware support, that should promptly be acknowledged 
and put aside the relevant entries in the hardware database itself, and 
that ideally should never be propagated to stable releases, but 
_usually_ do, I am sure your user community will make a great job in 
populating it. If you don't do that because of lack of manpower... I 
understand and accept the reality.

Bye

Vincenzo

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-12 Thread Bruce Miller


- Original Message 
From: Scott Kitterman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2008 1:48:20 PM
Subject: Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad 
status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many 
accumulated regressions)

On Tuesday 11 November 2008 10:47, Luke L wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 10:03 PM, Martin Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development
> >> with developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to
> >> know anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously
> >> considering it myself.
> >
> > It should remain, developers should remain. Developers are never going
> > to get away from users who want to bitch, greater layers between the
> > developers and users just breeds users who resent and don't understand
> > developers and developers who don't understand (none programmer)user
> > needs. Very Bad.
> >
> > So on one side I think that list moderators or peers should be very
> > prompt in telling the wrong sorts of emails where to go, perhaps with a
> > standard template which explains the rules and a little checkbox by the
> > offence.
> >
> > On the other hand, list members should try not to bait the trolls. I've
> > caught myself being suckered in too, so I know it's not easy. But why
> > reward the wrong sort of emails with any response other than a boiler
> > plait 'Your being rude' email?
>
> On a practical note, it isn't as if this ML is getting flooded with
> hundreds of messages of traffic a day. For those who could benefit
> from the technical discussions and user input, I don't see why someone
> would disconnect themselves from that for the reason of saving
> themselves 15 minutes a day. As long as there are "signals", the
> "noise" should be dealt with and ultimately set aside.
>
Whether you see the reason for it or not, I guarantee you that fewer and fewer 
developers are subscribed to this list.  The general reason is not 'too many 
messages' it's to much rudeness.  

Users on this list have a choice.  Concerns can be raised in a way that is 
constructive, helpful, and brings us together or they can be raised in a 
divisive way.  

Offlist someone mentioned the example of kdvi brought up on this list a few 
months ago.  Based on that user's request, I looked into the validity of 
their concern and found it had merit.  As a result, I invested probably a 
dozen hours of my free time to repackage kdvi in a way that would work on 
Intrepid.  

Developers who are here do try to listen.  It's up to you to chose how you 
decided to engage them in discussion.

Scott K

This message is meant to promote the cause of peace, although the rest of this 
paragraph might just make all sides equally angry with me. I have much sympathy 
for developers (especially the unpaid ones) who devote time and skill to a 
project and who have to suffer high levels of noise and even unreasonable 
criticism and intemperate language in mailing lists. However, I hope also that 
developers will manage to understand how frustration at being unable to solve 
problems through regular channels can drive people to escalate problems in not 
always the most productive ways.

If it gives anyone some consolation, I will assure you that, having spent an 
entire professional career in my country's diplomatic service, flame wars just 
as bad as any here have been known to break out in e-mail discussions among 
foreign ministry colleagues. Is there any need to repeat the well-known tales 
about e-mail being an impersonal medium, something written gives the other 
person something to brood over, etc, etc? The problem is that, by its nature, 
flame wars will break out in e-mail and no number of Acceptable Use Policies 
nor exhortations to good behaviour will change that unhappy fact of human 
behaviour.

It is a given that any face-to-face meeting of people needs someone to chair 
it, with a firm hand, if necessary, when the it slips off-topic (or worse). 
Until we have computers that can design better (better, not necessarily bigger) 
people, electronic discussions are invariably subject to the same stresses.

My local LUG came up with a scheme which struck me as very sensible to have a 
couple of monitors who kept an eye on our mailing list, sought to deal in 
private e-mail with people who got too fired up, but who also had authority "to 
name and shame" and ultimately to ban repeat offenders from the list for 
whatever time the offence made appropriate.

The current president of the LUG is a professor from the Department of 
Ma

Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-11 Thread Matthew East
On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 4:03 AM, Martin Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development with
>> developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to know
>> anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously considering
>> it myself.
>
> It should remain, developers should remain.

I agree. If developers are unsubscribing from one of the two main
development mailing lists, we have a serious communication problem in
the community that needs to be addressed. When the distinction between
-devel and -devel-discuss was set up, it relied on developers to take
responsibility for following both lists. In the description of
-devel-discuss, you see the phrase "Point of contact for Ubuntu users
to reach Ubuntu developers". For this list to be successful,
developers need to be reading it, or it's not worth having the list in
the first place.

> So on one side I think that list moderators or peers should be very
> prompt in telling the wrong sorts of emails where to go, perhaps with a
> standard template which explains the rules and a little checkbox by the
> offence.

That seems a good idea also. Unsubscribing from a mailing list is not
the correct response to rudeness, it should be perfectly simple to
correct it simply by pointing out some ground rules. That's why we
have the code of conduct. If individuals who regularly read the list
are interested in taking on the role of doing a little gentle
moderating, then I'm pretty sure that it would be successful. From
what I read on this list, I don't actually think that much
intervention would be required.

-- 
Matthew East
http://www.mdke.org
gnupg pub 1024D/0E6B06FF

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-11 Thread Andrew Sayers
I think there's some value in approaching this in a more technological
way.  Users of a program (Ubuntu's collection of online forums) find
themselves looking in the wrong part of the program, or unable to
understand the UI, or finding it too cumbersome to use.  Then they
become frustrated and wind up venting that frustration somewhere.
That's neither unusual nor difficult to solve, it's just hard to think
about objectively when you're a part of the program being ab-used.

I'd like to hear Vincenzo's take on this, but it sounds to me like the
bugs here are:

1) The user has been asked to spend a lot of time doing highly technical
work to diagnose the problem (download and compile the git source for
x.org on a laptop)

2) Responsibility for the bug hasn't been communicated to the user in a
way that they understand - either in terms of the level of
responsibility that's implied by responding to a bug report, or in terms
of which project to talk to about issues.

3) The user has performed an action (updating Ubunutu) that had
unforeseeable negative consequences (hardware regressions), and hasn't
been presented with the option to undo that action.

Some possible solutions to the above might be:

1) Use PPAs to build versions of packages specifically for testing one
bug, preferably with some automated collection of logging information.

2) Allow responders to bugs to set a "relationship to bug" value that's
attached to each message they send.  For example, Bryce could have set
his initial status to "curious", then "helping to diagnose", and finally
"not my problem".

3) Allow users to downgrade all or part of Ubuntu as easily as they can
upgrade.

- Andrew

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-11 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Tuesday 11 November 2008 10:47, Luke L wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 10:03 PM, Martin Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development
> >> with developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to
> >> know anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously
> >> considering it myself.
> >
> > It should remain, developers should remain. Developers are never going
> > to get away from users who want to bitch, greater layers between the
> > developers and users just breeds users who resent and don't understand
> > developers and developers who don't understand (none programmer)user
> > needs. Very Bad.
> >
> > So on one side I think that list moderators or peers should be very
> > prompt in telling the wrong sorts of emails where to go, perhaps with a
> > standard template which explains the rules and a little checkbox by the
> > offence.
> >
> > On the other hand, list members should try not to bait the trolls. I've
> > caught myself being suckered in too, so I know it's not easy. But why
> > reward the wrong sort of emails with any response other than a boiler
> > plait 'Your being rude' email?
>
> On a practical note, it isn't as if this ML is getting flooded with
> hundreds of messages of traffic a day. For those who could benefit
> from the technical discussions and user input, I don't see why someone
> would disconnect themselves from that for the reason of saving
> themselves 15 minutes a day. As long as there are "signals", the
> "noise" should be dealt with and ultimately set aside.
>
Whether you see the reason for it or not, I guarantee you that fewer and fewer 
developers are subscribed to this list.  The general reason is not 'too many 
messages' it's to much rudeness.  

Users on this list have a choice.  Concerns can be raised in a way that is 
constructive, helpful, and brings us together or they can be raised in a 
divisive way.  

Offlist someone mentioned the example of kdvi brought up on this list a few 
months ago.  Based on that user's request, I looked into the validity of 
their concern and found it had merit.  As a result, I invested probably a 
dozen hours of my free time to repackage kdvi in a way that would work on 
Intrepid.  

Developers who are here do try to listen.  It's up to you to chose how you 
decided to engage them in discussion.

Scott K

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-11 Thread Felipe Figueiredo
On Tue, 2008-11-11 at 09:47 -0600, Luke L wrote:

> On a practical note, it isn't as if this ML is getting flooded with
> hundreds of messages of traffic a day. For those who could benefit
> from the technical discussions and user input, I don't see why someone
> would disconnect themselves from that for the reason of saving
> themselves 15 minutes a day. As long as there are "signals", the
> "noise" should be dealt with and ultimately set aside.

OTOH, someone has to do this filtering. Will you moderate this list? I,
as a user, don't want ubuntu developers wasting time dealing with
uneducated users' requests that should otherwise be discussed in forums
and brainstorm, dealing with users that consistently use bug reports as
forums, and devel irc channels as support channels, etc. And it looks
like no matter how polite you are with one, there will always be a
hundred more tomorrow. Maybe I'm being a little BOFH-inspired, here, but
I think this kind uneducated user sucks the life out of a project. 

There should be mechanisms to isolate these users to only communicate
with other users, or to devels who want/need to deal with them, but it
looks like the only way is to opt out. The fact that Ubuntu development
is open to the public doesn't necessarily mean that anyone can join in
*every* step of the process. The stages where people are welcome are
well documented, and the ones that are more or less closed to a smaller
proven group is left as an exercise to common sense.

I fully understand why a devel would unsubscribe from this list, and I
read it for only a few months. The kind of rant that started this thread
is not only uncalled for, but in fact counterproductive. Not to mention
these particular ones are unfair, incorrect and (as noted by several
others) exaggerated. He was not asking if he was the one of many, he
basically assumed it affected everyone. Also, he wrongly assumed the
distribution is responsible for all the QA released, likely ignoring
that are distribution bugs and upstream bugs.

There, I did it, I bit the bait. Now can we please move on?

regards
FF



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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-11 Thread Luke L
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 10:03 PM, Martin Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development with
>> developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to know
>> anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously considering
>> it myself.
>
> It should remain, developers should remain. Developers are never going
> to get away from users who want to bitch, greater layers between the
> developers and users just breeds users who resent and don't understand
> developers and developers who don't understand (none programmer)user
> needs. Very Bad.
>
> So on one side I think that list moderators or peers should be very
> prompt in telling the wrong sorts of emails where to go, perhaps with a
> standard template which explains the rules and a little checkbox by the
> offence.
>
> On the other hand, list members should try not to bait the trolls. I've
> caught myself being suckered in too, so I know it's not easy. But why
> reward the wrong sort of emails with any response other than a boiler
> plait 'Your being rude' email?
>
> Regards, Martin
>
>
> --
> Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list
> Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com
> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: 
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss
>

On a practical note, it isn't as if this ML is getting flooded with
hundreds of messages of traffic a day. For those who could benefit
from the technical discussions and user input, I don't see why someone
would disconnect themselves from that for the reason of saving
themselves 15 minutes a day. As long as there are "signals", the
"noise" should be dealt with and ultimately set aside.

-- 
Luke L.

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Re: Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-10 Thread Martin Owens

> This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development with 
> developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to know 
> anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously considering 
> it myself.

It should remain, developers should remain. Developers are never going
to get away from users who want to bitch, greater layers between the
developers and users just breeds users who resent and don't understand
developers and developers who don't understand (none programmer)user
needs. Very Bad.

So on one side I think that list moderators or peers should be very
prompt in telling the wrong sorts of emails where to go, perhaps with a
standard template which explains the rules and a little checkbox by the
offence.

On the other hand, list members should try not to bait the trolls. I've
caught myself being suckered in too, so I know it's not easy. But why
reward the wrong sort of emails with any response other than a boiler
plait 'Your being rude' email?

Regards, Martin


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Bryce Harrington
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 08:13:52PM -0500, Mackenzie Morgan wrote:
> On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 17:05 -0800, Bryce Harrington wrote:
> > > However, I am beginning to think that all the cases I know are i945 -  
> > > execpt for the aforementioned old laptop about which - frankly - I don't  
> > > care at all :) So perhaps "my" bug will solve most of the other ones  
> > > regarding VGA out.
> > 
> > Possibly.  VGA out issues tend to be extremely HW-specific.  I could
> > believe there could be a VGA out issue affecting just 945 chips.  That
> > said, I haven't seen the issue on the spare 945 laptop I have on hand.
> 
> The issue doesn't affect all 945 chips.  Mine isn't affected.  There are
> multiple different chips in existence labeled 945, however.  From
> drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.h:
> 945G: 2772
> 945GM: 27A2
> 945GM: 27AE

Yes, this is quite likely.  And indeed, quite often they're unique not
only to the chip PCI ID, but also the subsystem vendor PCI ID.  In other
words, the chip itself may be fine, but the issue came into being when
the chip was integrated onto the motherboard and wired to the VGA port.

The subsystem vendor PCI ID can be found in the 'lspci -vvnn' output, as
the second line after the VGA device PCI line.

> Maybe only one of these three is affected?
> 
> I do have to wonder if it is more likely to affect upgrades than clean
> installs, as well.

Certainly it's possible, if the user had stray configuration in their
xorg.conf.  But usually users doublecheck that stuff before they file a
bug report, so most VGA issues I've dealt with have been legitimate
video driver issues.

Bryce

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 17:05 -0800, Bryce Harrington wrote:
> > However, I am beginning to think that all the cases I know are i945 -  
> > execpt for the aforementioned old laptop about which - frankly - I don't  
> > care at all :) So perhaps "my" bug will solve most of the other ones  
> > regarding VGA out.
> 
> Possibly.  VGA out issues tend to be extremely HW-specific.  I could
> believe there could be a VGA out issue affecting just 945 chips.  That
> said, I haven't seen the issue on the spare 945 laptop I have on hand.

The issue doesn't affect all 945 chips.  Mine isn't affected.  There are
multiple different chips in existence labeled 945, however.  From
drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.h:
945G: 2772
945GM: 27A2
945GM: 27AE

Maybe only one of these three is affected?

I do have to wonder if it is more likely to affect upgrades than clean
installs, as well.

-- 
Mackenzie Morgan
http://ubuntulinuxtipstricks.blogspot.com
apt-get moo


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Bryce Harrington
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:14:34PM +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> I have done all my best for that bug - sometimes really struggling to  
> gather debug information in time before e.g. sending the laptop out. As  
> soon as I have a monitor at hand I will keep on. But my laptop is not  
> the only one. Problem is that most people in academia won't even bother  
> to set up ubuntu - fancy to report a bug - if it cannot enable their vga  
> out. Don't want this to look like a bug which will be quickly fixed and  
> it's only waiting for me. This problem existed since gutsy at least and  
> I cannot be the only one experiencing it.  If so I am sorry for noise - I  
> feel like intel is being said to be the "most free-software friendly  
> hardware vendor" while they are not caring about finalising their video  
> driver, and making at least decent their wifi one. I have been  
> recommending intel hardware for first and I regret having done that.  

Mmm, there is some truth amongst your points, but it seems clear that
the path to attaining a solution here is open to your hands.  I see you
have some strong passions on this topic, and would suggest they'd be
most productively channeled into working with Intel to solve it.

I'd also suggest calibrating your expectations on FOSS-friendliness.
Compared with how unfriendly other vendors are, Intel does indeed good
marks, but it doesn't mean they're perfect, just that they're the rare
good guy in a room full of rogues.

> However, I am beginning to think that all the cases I know are i945 -  
> execpt for the aforementioned old laptop about which - frankly - I don't  
> care at all :) So perhaps "my" bug will solve most of the other ones  
> regarding VGA out.

Possibly.  VGA out issues tend to be extremely HW-specific.  I could
believe there could be a VGA out issue affecting just 945 chips.  That
said, I haven't seen the issue on the spare 945 laptop I have on hand.

Bryce



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Do you really want developers to be on this list was (Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions)

2008-11-10 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Monday 10 November 2008 18:14, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> On 10/11/2008 Bryce Harrington wrote:
> > > > You should know them very well :) In fact you were "assigned" to
> > the
> > > > case  some point in time between winter and spring, or at least
> > these
> > > > were the words of somebody on the ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing
> > list.
> >
> > I wasn't assigned, but I did work on your bug around that time, and
> > found it to be an upstream bug so forwarded it.
>
> Yes I didn't ever take those words for serious but there was a thread on
> this mailing list where an ubuntu developer said that "an xorg developer
> had been assigned to the case". I was just joking about you having to
> know anything.

There has been a fair amount of chatter recently on IRC channels frequented by 
Ubuntu developers (none of which are secret, BTW) about the signal to noise 
ratio on this list.  Many indicated that they are no longer subscribed.

This list was created to give users a way to discuss Ubuntu development with 
developers.  Comments like "I was just joking about you having to know 
anything" make the decision to unsubscribe easy.  I'm seriously considering 
it myself.

I can understand being unhappy about regressions in particular and problems in 
general.  I'm not happy when they hit me (there are items in the release 
notes for 8.10 that are there because of 'fun' I had after upgrading).

I would encourage you (and others, you certainly aren't the only one) to hold 
your temper and if you can't say something helpful, just take your hands off 
the keyboard.  Being angry, contemptuous, and disrespectful won't get your 
bugs fixed faster.  What it will get you is yet another list with no 
developers on it and you upset you can't get in touch with them.

Scott K

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
On 10/11/2008 Bryce Harrington wrote:
> > > You should know them very well :) In fact you were "assigned" to 
> the
> > > case  some point in time between winter and spring, or at least 
> these
> > > were the words of somebody on the ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing 
> list.
> 
> I wasn't assigned, but I did work on your bug around that time, and
> found it to be an upstream bug so forwarded it.
> 
> 

Yes I didn't ever take those words for serious but there was a thread on 
this mailing list where an ubuntu developer said that "an xorg developer 
had been assigned to the case". I was just joking about you having to 
know anything.

I have done all my best for that bug - sometimes really struggling to 
gather debug information in time before e.g. sending the laptop out. As 
soon as I have a monitor at hand I will keep on. But my laptop is not 
the only one. Problem is that most people in academia won't even bother 
to set up ubuntu - fancy to report a bug - if it cannot enable their vga 
out. Don't want this to look like a bug which will be quickly fixed and 
it's only waiting for me. This problem existed since gutsy at least and 
I cannot be the only one experiencing it. If so I am sorry for noise - I 
feel like intel is being said to be the "most free-software friendly 
hardware vendor" while they are not caring about finalising their video 
driver, and making at least decent their wifi one. I have been 
recommending intel hardware for first and I regret having done that. 
However, I am beginning to think that all the cases I know are i945 - 
execpt for the aforementioned old laptop about which - frankly - I don't 
care at all :) So perhaps "my" bug will solve most of the other ones 
regarding VGA out.

Vincenzo



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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Bryce Harrington
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 09:50:22PM +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> 
> > Regarding -i810, indeed there are a few remaining corner cases where
> > there are issues (mostly with old 8xx-era chips that Intel provides only
> > limited support for), and I've discussed a lot of these with Intel.  But
> > I can't really speak on your issue without knowing the specifics of your
> > case.  LP#?
> > 
> > Bryce
> 
> You should know them very well :) In fact you were "assigned" to the
> case  some point in time between winter and spring, or at least these
> were the words of somebody on the ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list.

I wasn't assigned, but I did work on your bug around that time, and
found it to be an upstream bug so forwarded it.

> Various problems (my laptop broke twice for example, and now I don't
> have a monitor at all as I am abroad for a month) delayed the solution
> of the bug which is now active and waiting for me to find an external
> monitor for me (here in UK they are lots picky with their stuff).
> However I see vga out problems consistently on intel cards. On an older
> laptop with centrino I can enable vga out but then I can't get back... I
> have to reboot the system to get the LCD on again). On many new sony
> vaio laptops at my department in Pisa, they have the problem that the
> screen output does not come out (I will check this in detail when back
> in Pisa and add those models to my bug report). The lp bug is here:
> 
> https://bugs.edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/137234
> 
> and the upstream discussion you can follow from the link.

Yes, and looks like upstream is wishing for you to gather some
additional information for them.

Also it seems you're using 945 graphics, so you fall in none of the
corner cases I alluded to earlier.  Upstream will give you full support
on -intel, if you can please supply them with the info they need.

> Thanks in any case, since you helped a lot here.

No prob,
Bryce

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia

> Regarding -i810, indeed there are a few remaining corner cases where
> there are issues (mostly with old 8xx-era chips that Intel provides only
> limited support for), and I've discussed a lot of these with Intel.  But
> I can't really speak on your issue without knowing the specifics of your
> case.  LP#?
> 
> Bryce

You should know them very well :) In fact you were "assigned" to the
case  some point in time between winter and spring, or at least these
were the words of somebody on the ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list.
Various problems (my laptop broke twice for example, and now I don't
have a monitor at all as I am abroad for a month) delayed the solution
of the bug which is now active and waiting for me to find an external
monitor for me (here in UK they are lots picky with their stuff).
However I see vga out problems consistently on intel cards. On an older
laptop with centrino I can enable vga out but then I can't get back... I
have to reboot the system to get the LCD on again). On many new sony
vaio laptops at my department in Pisa, they have the problem that the
screen output does not come out (I will check this in detail when back
in Pisa and add those models to my bug report). The lp bug is here:

https://bugs.edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/137234

and the upstream discussion you can follow from the link.

Thanks in any case, since you helped a lot here.

Vincenzo


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Bryce Harrington
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 10:13:25AM +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> John McCabe-Dansted ha scritto:
> 
> > OTOH hand this means that the drivers together cover more than 85%.
> > Would it perhaps be worth making both drivers easily available on the
> > same kernel?
> > 
> > I guess ideally we would scan the CVS automatically compiling each
> > module, and identify the exact revision that caused the regression.
> > 
> 
> In the case of intel, that would have meant letting us the choice to use 
> "i810" for xorg and "ipw3945" for wifi also in hardy and intrepid. 
> "i810" does not recognise my card anymore if I try to use it manually. 
> Intel has deprecated both drivers but someone should go there and ask 
> them why they maintain their linux driver at a much lower level than 
> their windows ones. If official representatives of ubuntu go there we 
> have some chances.

Are you asking why Intel would devote more support resources to the side
with more marketshare that makes much more money for them?  ;-)


Regarding -i810, indeed there are a few remaining corner cases where
there are issues (mostly with old 8xx-era chips that Intel provides only
limited support for), and I've discussed a lot of these with Intel.  But
I can't really speak on your issue without knowing the specifics of your
case.  LP#?

Bryce

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 10:13 +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> For VGA out I really think I've not seen any recent laptop taking it 
> right on ubuntu, we are far beyond the 15% here I think but without a 
> serious analysis we can't know.

What issue do you have with VGA-out?  Does it not work *at all* or does
the "switch display" key just not work?  You can test this by booting
with the external display plugged in.

On my 945 laptop, I can plug in VGA while running and hit the "switch
display" key, and it's fine.  On my 965, I have to boot with it plugged
in.  I'm trying to figure out what to change to make the "switch
display" key work.

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
John McCabe-Dansted ha scritto:

> OTOH hand this means that the drivers together cover more than 85%.
> Would it perhaps be worth making both drivers easily available on the
> same kernel?
> 
> I guess ideally we would scan the CVS automatically compiling each
> module, and identify the exact revision that caused the regression.
> 

In the case of intel, that would have meant letting us the choice to use 
"i810" for xorg and "ipw3945" for wifi also in hardy and intrepid. 
"i810" does not recognise my card anymore if I try to use it manually. 
Intel has deprecated both drivers but someone should go there and ask 
them why they maintain their linux driver at a much lower level than 
their windows ones. If official representatives of ubuntu go there we 
have some chances. If normal users like me ask better support on linux, 
they get ignored. In the meantime, yes, I think that ubuntu should have 
left ipw3945 and i810 working on the hardware they supported - but maybe 
for ipw3945 it was not feasible. For i810, it still is, don't know why 
it does not want to recognise my card.

For VGA out I really think I've not seen any recent laptop taking it 
right on ubuntu, we are far beyond the 15% here I think but without a 
serious analysis we can't know.

Vincenzo



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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-10 Thread John McCabe-Dansted
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 7:57 AM, Bryce Harrington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That said, I do like generalizing.  :-)  I think there is a cyclical
> thing in FOSS, where you have some legacy thing that works 80%, and
> upstream decides to get that last 20% it requires a major rewrite.  They
> expect it to get to 90-95%, so distros adopt it, but when the dust
> settles it works at just 85%...
>
> ...and unfortunately the 15% it doesn't cover is different than the 20%
> the legacy system didn't cover, and that 15% is rightfully pissed that
> they are seeing a regression when things worked so well before.

OTOH hand this means that the drivers together cover more than 85%.
Would it perhaps be worth making both drivers easily available on the
same kernel?

I guess ideally we would scan the CVS automatically compiling each
module, and identify the exact revision that caused the regression.

-- 
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PhD Student
University of Western Australia

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia

> Is there a reason you are running Intrepid and not Hardy, the LTS
> release?
> 
> Also try installing from scratch instead of doing an upgrade.
> 
> HTH,
> Erik

I'd like to run intrepid because it has some nice usability 
improvements, but I don't at all, I use the LTS, because everything is 
broken in intrepid. At the moment actually I use windows, and I am 
waiting for my money to vanish and an external wifi card to appear.

I think I experience so many problems because I really move a lot, 
changing very different networks, I have an 802.11b only laptop at home 
which for intel means "I don't care" and I frequently change laptops 
(don't ask me why I don't know myself). This probably increases my 
probability of meeting a bug. However my laptop used to work in dapper, 
and it does not work at all in intrepid, I can't use it in hardy due to 
this iwl problem in any case. I'd like to see if ipw3945 solves the 
problem but hey, it's not supported and it can't be even compiled (the 
kernel interface I mean) in hardy, because the new driver works oh so well.

So, for the record, here is a list of hardware that was usable in 
dapper, and is not in intrepid:

- vga out (so that at conferences I can show my ubuntu to the world)
- webcams (you know the drill)
- audio input (no idea no clue whatsoever of why)
- tablet secondary and ternary buttons (ok here I am cheating, it is 
difficult but I seem to have understood that there is a way)
- wifi network (since at home I have an 802.11b router)
- hard disk (it would break if I didn't set hdparm -B 200 every 2 
minutes from an init script, since there are too many places, including 
suspend/resume, where that setting may be reset by mistake even if 
laptop mode is enabled etc.etc.).
- bluetooth functionality (is there, but needs code to switch it on, 
which has been broken by a *completely undocumented change of interface)

All these breakages happened in various stages during the various 
releases, so there is no release I could just use (e.g. feisty was nice 
but I couldn't suspend, with 1 hour battery life and system powering off 
suddenly, that is very dangerous). And so on. Instead of improving, it 
goes down and down and down.

 From a release to another, I report bugs, they are fixed after months 
of year, and this may be normal, but in the meantime other stuff breaks.

If you like, I can provide a patch against xorg that selectively 
disables the keyboard on M400 ... in case you need it for jaunty :)

By the *** way, this laptop will be returned to the university in 
march when I will leave for better places (hopefully) and I will never 
care anymore of it. Will restore windows tablet, and next user will 
likely use windows journal with its wondeful handwriting recognition, 
save its notes in a proprietary format, and give his handouts around 
because microsoft provides a reader for free. As in beer. And as in 
"windows only". I would be disgusted but it's going to end that way. And 
by march, I can now be sure, I will never have had the pleasure to be 
able to say that ubuntu worked well on it, even if I had chosen it by 
carefully looking at each component to check if it was supported, and 
even if it PROUDLY DOES NOT USE ANY *** PROPRIETARY DRIVER.

The times are finished, when I could just point my finger to evil 
proprietary drivers. And the worst thing is, that in these years I 
wasted hours reporting every bug I found, and keeping in contact ubuntu 
developers and upstream to maintain xournal in good shape (not that I 
was the only one, it is thanks to many persons that are much better than 
me in patching and bug hunting if hibernate now works properly, screen 
rotation with compiz at least does not hang everything, the tablet works 
after suspend-to-ram, and many other things that a restricted team of 
talented users of laptops similar to mine took care of).

What I wanted to learn by such a Virtuous Conduct, is how to Thank 
Ubuntu for the Good Software that I Receive Every Day. What I am 
probably learning, is to be an atheist also in my virtual life.

Don't do that for me, do that for the sake of letting the very good idea 
of ubuntu survive: start keeping a page of TRULY working hardware, that 
is, hardware that you would let e.g. 10% of your money DEPEND UPON. And 
if the "WIRELESS SUPPORT" section is empty, or will get empty, you will 
be in front of the amazing truth. And please start DELETING stuff from 
that page immediately when users report that they break. So that your 
"WIRELES SUPPORT" section will become empty, and the truth will be there 
with you, again.

If I had ubuntu only, as I was tempted to do many times, during this 
month abroad, I would have spent some 100-150 euros only in phone calls. 
This is more or less the 10% of my monthly income. I could not depend 
upon ubuntu, yet another time. LUCKILY I had windows. How disgusted I am 
to type this, but it is true. I had not rebooted into it for 2 years. 
This happene

Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Mackenzie Morgan
On Sun, 2008-11-09 at 17:19 +, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> I am the unlucky owner of an intel 3945 network card, internal to my 
> laptop.

Interesting.  I'm hoping my current laptop uses the same interface as my
old one so I can put my Intel 3945 into this one.  The only difference I
see between ipw and ipl is that ipw has *much* better range.

Here's the status of the Intel 4965:
- Hardy: the manufacturer of my laptop says I am the only buyer to
report kernel panics.  They also say most people didn't decide to pay
extra for the 4965 to get 802.11n.  This makes it sound like the 4965
802.11n card is likely the issue.
- Intrepid:  It *will* kernel panic.  It'll panic on 802.11g and
802.11n.  If you install l-b-m, it'll kernel panic after a day or two
instead of 15 minutes, but it'll still kernel panic.  Current workaround
being suggested for a patch is to turn panics into warnings. The
side-effect?  /var/log grows at a rate of 1 GB/hr.

We also saw a chunk of Atheros cards lose support this time around.

I'm using Hardy because Intrepid seems like a downgrade to me.  I'm
still hopeful for Jaunty though.  Hopefully my webcam's driver and my
fingerprint reader's driver will be included in Jaunty, and the Intel
wireless will be fixed, so I'll have a laptop where all the parts work.
It's kind of disappointing that even following the "Intel always
releases open drivers, so use Intel" rule doesn't really help.

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Bryce Harrington
On Sun, Nov 09, 2008 at 03:53:55PM -0500, Scott Kitterman wrote:
> On Sunday 09 November 2008 15:07, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> ...
> > network. Some of them work in a release, some of them in another. In the
> > end, you never see your laptop "just working" in a single release.
> 
> Oddly enough, for me, my Dell Latitude D430 laptop (not one of the ones that 
> is pre-sold with Ubuntu) has 'just worked' in Gutsy, Hardy, and Intrepid.  
> 
> I don't doubt you've had problems, but it's not safe to over-generalize.

Agreed about over-generalizing.

That said, I do like generalizing.  :-)  I think there is a cyclical
thing in FOSS, where you have some legacy thing that works 80%, and
upstream decides to get that last 20% it requires a major rewrite.  They
expect it to get to 90-95%, so distros adopt it, but when the dust
settles it works at just 85%...

...and unfortunately the 15% it doesn't cover is different than the 20%
the legacy system didn't cover, and that 15% is rightfully pissed that
they are seeing a regression when things worked so well before.

Bryce

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Erik de Castro Lopo
Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:

> The problems with intel wifi cards are various and many keep existing in 
> intrepid - many times in the past also with other laptops, with intel 
> 2100-2200 cards I've not been able to connect to the network.

I have a Dell laptop with an Intel 2200BG which has worked flawlessly
under Dapper, Edgy, Feisty, Gutsy, Hardy and now Intrepid. This is a
machine that is constantly moving between networks (home, office, freinds'
places, etc) and switching between wired and wireless connection. On
this machine, the wifi interface is not noticably less stable than the 
wired conenction.

My wife has a Dell laptop (currently running Hardy and running Feisty
before that) with 2100 wifi. This one isn't flawless. About once a month
it will loose its mind and need to be kicked by doing "/etc/init.d/networking
restart" but its definitely more than adequate.

I am not downplaying your problems, just suggesting that the problems
you are seeing are not as widespread as you suggest.

> Intrepid is a pain also for webcams and tablet (xournal is affected by a 

Is there a reason you are running Intrepid and not Hardy, the LTS
release?

Also try installing from scratch instead of doing an upgrade.

HTH,
Erik
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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Peteris Krisjanis
On Sunday 09 November 2008 15:07, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> ...
>> network. Some of them work in a release, some of them in another. In the
>> end, you never see your laptop "just working" in a single release.
>
> Oddly enough, for me, my Dell Latitude D430 laptop (not one of the ones that
> is pre-sold with Ubuntu) has 'just worked' in Gutsy, Hardy, and Intrepid.
>
> I don't doubt you've had problems, but it's not safe to over-generalize.

What he propably meant more is that Ubuntu don't deliver fully on it's
promises, and it is really hard and frustrating to people who like
Ubuntu to do more promotional work because usually something breaks
between releases.

I see solution as feature and hardware spec, where supported stuff is
provided as much as possible. It will be never 100% sure, of course,
but at least some starting point. Good report when starting new
development cycle on this (like bug list about hardware which doesn't
work) would be good start.

Just my two euro cents,
Peter.

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Sunday 09 November 2008 15:07, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
...
> network. Some of them work in a release, some of them in another. In the
> end, you never see your laptop "just working" in a single release.

Oddly enough, for me, my Dell Latitude D430 laptop (not one of the ones that 
is pre-sold with Ubuntu) has 'just worked' in Gutsy, Hardy, and Intrepid.  

I don't doubt you've had problems, but it's not safe to over-generalize.

Scott K

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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia

> So far most of the errors I've seen reported for wifi and that I have
> come across have either been because of faulty upgrades (a major
> problem) or lack of firmware or (and this was bad) drivers loading
> before all their dependencies or after a cut-off module has been loaded.
> 
> Best of luck with your problem, developers in various communities
> continue to work very hard on wifi and network problems.
> 
> Martin

The problems with intel wifi cards are various and many keep existing in 
intrepid - many times in the past also with other laptops, with intel 
2100-2200 cards I've not been able to connect to the network.

Intrepid is a pain also for webcams and tablet (xournal is affected by a 
problem in libgnomecanvas which should be trivial to fix, however it's 
there, plus you have to struggle with the things said today in another 
thread).  Intrepid is a pain also because audio input is broken for me. 
I think I reported the bug but am now too lazy to check. I reported tons 
of hardware bugs in the past and the fix cycle is 2 years on the 
average. This makes ubuntu typically unusable. I've never seen a release 
that is able to cover the whole of any of the laptops we own at home (4 
at the moment). VGA out, SD card reader, tablet, webcam, audio input, 
network. Some of them work in a release, some of them in another. In the 
end, you never see your laptop "just working" in a single release. 
That's a pity, and that happens to other laptops in my department. In 
the past, I strongly advocated the usage of free software to many 
people, and the fact that ubuntu works on most laptops (whereas people 
said to me "hey, I have a laptop, that's why I don't bother with linux". 
I am tired of this, because in the end I discovered they are becoming 
more and more right.

Said this, the edimax card should be working and is reported to work 
very well under ubuntu. I contacted the bug reporter personally and 
think he is going to close the bug - it was just a temporary problem. I 
just ordered it - hope it won't be wasted money.

Vincenzo


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Martin Owens

> Anyway, thanks for the good work in areas different from hardware 
> support. Intrepid is lovely, every time I try it I really would like to 
> be able to start using it. I hope to be in time for jaunty :)

Have you tried reinstalling Ubuntu 8.10 from scratch? I have the same
wifi as you and I have none of those problems. the iwp/iwl thing was a
pain in the neck in the past, but that's been made much better.

Things I would check: blacklist file, modules file, custom compiled
cruft that may be still around, dmesg, lsmod.

So far most of the errors I've seen reported for wifi and that I have
come across have either been because of faulty upgrades (a major
problem) or lack of firmware or (and this was bad) drivers loading
before all their dependencies or after a cut-off module has been loaded.

Best of luck with your problem, developers in various communities
continue to work very hard on wifi and network problems.

Martin


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Re: Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
Where I said rt2500, I actually meant the edimax cards with the rt73 
chipset that should be "very supported" and good under ubuntu, but try 
to search for "edimax" on launchpad and you'll see recent breakage.

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Very bad status of hardware (especially wifi) support in ubuntu, due to the too many accumulated regressions

2008-11-09 Thread Vincenzo Ciancia
To the ubuntu developers, in particular those who deal with hardware 
drivers.



 DISCLAIMER ***
Rather than using the pre-installed windows in my laptop, and giving bad 
publicity both to ubuntu and myself, I decided to spend some money of my 
own to purchase a kind of hardware that I already possess and even has 
an open source driver, which does however NOT work. So, if I am going to 
spend my money to remain a part of your community, please at least read 
this e-mail till the end, even if it is so long.

This is not a complaint, I suppose I can find my way out of this mess by 
buying various usb cards and returning them until I get the one that 
works, but I want to bring your attention to the problem of finding 
decent linux drivers for network cards, especially due to huge 
regressions in this area in recent releases of ubuntu, including the 
LTS. And this is also true for so many other components, so I am just 
calling for attention, not to me, but to (y)our distribution and (y)our 
hardware support.
***



I am the unlucky owner of an intel 3945 network card, internal to my 
laptop.

I say unlucky because, I have sadly to say this, it already used to be a 
bit broken when the default driver used to be ipw3495, but since when we 
have this new (completely open source?) driver, it created to me so many 
  problems that I can no longer use it. At home, it plays badly with my 
802.11b router and I get some 10kb/sec which go slowly down until 
frustrated I plug the cable in. Reported this bug a long while ago, also 
to upstream, but everybody is just waiting for us to throw away these 
802.11b routers, spend another bit of our money into consumer 
electronics, and pollute the environment a bit more.

Now I moved abroad for one month, and it doesn't see an access point (it 
mistakenly detected a network with a similar name, dunno why). I am 
constrained to use windows, and the bad thing is that the guy that 
shares the house with me was interested in linux until he asked me why I 
was using windows. I hate this. Will complete my bug report soon, but I 
had so many other little problems with this open source driver which we 
all are supposed to support by buying their cards, that I decided to get 
a new USB one.

Then I googled for a long time today, even found an UK resellers who 
only sells open hardware and they strongly endorsed the usage of rt2500 
chipsets because "the producer has embraced the GPL philosophy"... I 
don't know if this is true, but I went to launchpad and searched for 
bugs related to this chipset and found that also rt2500 has STOPPED 
WORKING in many situations in recent ubuntu releases.

Now, I really don't know which card to get, and won't trust any 
ubuntu-related source, since all of them say that iwl3945 works well, 
while it completely sucks, forgive me. This is a problem of mine, not 
yours. The question I want to raise is just.

***
For your own image, for the image of ubuntu, and for the sake of your 
users, are you ever going to become committed to quality hardware 
support, in particular starting to really prioritize all those 
regressions from feisty and gutsy?

Are you going to intel and demand more attention to their ubuntu 
customers, in particular making them notice that their beloved linux 
drivers sucks?
(As you are there you could also mention the complete lack of attention 
to problems in VGA out support in their graphics cards, ask toshiba or 
vaio users for details ;) )

Are you going to check those rt2500 bugs, so that I can trust your wikis 
and buy it?

Are you going to provide users a way (e.g. a tag that you watch) so that 
they can warn you of regressions, and are you consequently going to 
publish a page with ALL KNOWN BROKEN HARDWARE instead of just letting 
people pay for that hardware, and then having to use windows because 
they TRUSTED YOUR DOCUMENTATION that says it works, or just found a 
driver in the kernel that IS SUPPOSED TO work? Is it possible that I 
have to guess from launchpad bugs if rt2500 will work or not??? How is 
my non-geek friend supposed to guess what hardware to buy for its ubuntu?

These are not things that _I_ can do, it's UP TO YOU who ARE the 
distribution! So are you willing to do that or not?
***

People is actively reporting all regressions in times that I suppose 
beat microsoft beta testers. People is working for free for ubuntu, and 
ubuntu is working for free for people. That should be a good thing.

However, ubuntu is more and more broken, period. Intrepid is going to 
keep on broken hardware support inherited from hardy (in particular, 
iwl3945 and it seems also rt2500), and to break webcams and tablet PCs 
for most of us. For me, it also breaks audio input. When I showed a 
friend of mine that he could just plug his webcam and chat in his ubuntu 
in gutsy (he