New Debian Project Leader 71
Carlos Laviola writes: "Ben Collins is the new DPL. The results of the 2001 leadership election have been posted a few minutes ago on the debian-devel-announce and debian-vote mailing lists. The announcement is here. Congratulations to Ben Collins and the other candidates!"
Wow! (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
On X86 boxes, FreeBSD is more stable.
Apt-get rocks too.
And FreeBSD was there rocking 1st. Things like the make update,
Debian considered using a BSD kernel also.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
-- posting anonymously so I won't be next...
Re:Air time and focus (Score:2)
This comment says a lot about the shift in Slashdot demographics. (We're much more enlightened now that we have people who can tell us that Open Source is for wankers and 14-year-olds.)
Re:Netfilter (Score:1)
About 60-70 people and maybe 100 hosts. Not large, but bigger than a home network too.
I assume you're using it as a stateful firewall? Does it work well?
Yes I am and yes it does. The established/related rules haven't shown any problems over about a month, and both active and passive ftp work (a minor miracle after some past experiences). We aren't using any other protocols that really take advantage of statefulness, although something like traceroute could if a module existed for it.
Netfilter (Score:2)
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:3)
However, you are free to create a tarball of your home directory and bring it with you. You can also tar up your /etc directory, in case you want to remember how some things were configured in your old distribution. (Do NOT use your /etc directory as-is in the new distribution, however -- that would cause a mess.) Anyway, it's not hard. If you want it to be as easy as flipping the "now-be-a-debian-machine" switch, on the other hand, you're screwed.
Punishment and rewards (Score:2)
> for voting for DPL?
Lower or higher priority when finding time to evaluate patches and suggestions. I don't know about Debian, but that is a huge problem for gcc and gdb development, there are more people writing patches than people qualified or trusted enough to evaluate them for inclusion.
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:3)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
That said, apt-get is a damn fine tool and has made my life very easy for keeping up to date.
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Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:2)
If you are careful, you can always just mkfs over partitions that are distro-specific, making sure to preserve the partition with
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Re:Nice elections (Score:2)
There is nothing specifically undemocratic about non-secret votes when there is still a free choice. Recent non-secret votes for union representation in Mexican factories, in an environment when known labor activists are instantly fired and thugs are hired to beat people up, cannot be said to be democratic.
But there are other cases where secrecy would make things less democratic, like if representatives in a legislature can secretly vote for programs that favor their friends but outrage the people they are supposed to represent.
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
Hmm, my experience is partially different from yours. Debian works great on my servers, my workstations and my laptop. This is coming from a Sony VAIO F360, the 3 workstations I end up using in a week are 2 twin processor P3-550's and a P2-450. I only regret with Debian so far is that I haven't had spare hardware from other platforms to try it with :).
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Debian has considered making an additional distribution using a BSD kernel, but it was never an issue of replacing Linux with a BSD kernel as you imply.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Believe it or not there some people have seriously considering making a Debian Win32 distro. It does make some sense for people who have to use Windows for one reason or another, for the same reason there's CygWin.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Wow, you mean the whims of a large corporate distributor won't change my filesystem layout each upgrade?
Wow you mean that they have a set of ideals and they actually stick to them?
Wow, you mean if I like it I don't have to worry about it going away?
Where do I sign up? Oh, wait, I already have...
Missed the point. (Score:2)
Air time and focus (Score:5)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
If you think BSD's ports do the same thing, you're in for a surprise. apts dependency handling is much more complex: it doesn't just check if a program is there but also makes sure all versions match, handles multiple packages providing the same feature, takes conflicts and recommendations into account and complete dependency resolution. If you managed to screw up your dependencies by dpkg --force, apt can compute a complete set of changes to bring your system into a usable state.
libh just made me laugh.
Forth? (Score:2)
Re:Nice elections (Score:3)
In most Debian votes, the ballots are revealed afterwards. The same is true (IIRC) with Usenet new group votes, etc. There is nothing specifically undemocratic about non-secret votes.
In fact, revealing the votes can make the process more fair, because then everyone who voted can verify that their vote was recorded correctly, and that the vote was tallied correctly. That openness helps ensure that the vote remains fair.
However, the person running this particular vote made a mistake -- DPL votes are supposed to be kept secret. He didn't read the constitution properly while tired. He has already apologised to the Debian Developers.
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:2)
I've done it. Here [sourceforge.net] is a procedure. It is written for powerpc, but I don't see any reason why this can't be adapted to other platforms. It will be necessary to install a working kernel into the new / partition before booting from it for the first time. I have done this succesfully on a powerpc sytem. Debian provides an 'installkernel' script that can do it. If you are really tight on disk then it might be better to install from scratch.
It'll be tough (Score:1)
Debian is great because you really can know everything that's loaded on your system. The tricky part is that you're the one who has to get it there.
I love my debian system, but, for example, I had to apt-get the SVGA XServer after the install was complete. Its not an easy install.
Word. MrSndrs
Re:Air time and focus (Score:2)
To get back on topic, nice to see the new guy come in even though I don't know totally how Debian's organization works. It's just good to see them moving forward on something anyway! :) Hopefully we'll have a stable woody soon.
First Place Is One Week as Debian Project Leader.. (Score:3)
Congratulations and best of luck.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
Debian GNU/LInux
Debian GNU/HURD
We need more kernels
-Steve
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
What thi smeans is that ONLY people who are debian developers are affected by the vote, and only they can vote.
This is important, because Debian developers are a "small" group, of interested people. They are not "Joe Random", they are people brought together with a specific set of common goals.
Many of the protections that have been designed into larger social systems, systems that effect everyone, are not needed. Such "childish" behaviour as trying to unfairly influence the vote or use someones vote against them wont occur in these situations.
There is very little advantage to being DPL, sure you get to act as the voice of debian in some fashion, you get to make certain decisions and try to pull people together - there is some small amount of "prestige".
However, ther eis nothign to "buy votes" with. Every developer is (mostly) autonomous, and capable of making his own decisions.
Essentially, there is little motive to try and buy or otherwise coerce ones way into the position, and there is very little that one could leverage for such a coersion anyway.
-Steve
Re:Hope this will change the focus (Score:1)
2) X Broken? I stable? - Anything is likely to break in unstable, and the DPL has no control over that. Unstable is where stuff is suposed to break. How else do we find the problems and fix them?
(perhaps unstable is too stable
-Steve
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:2)
The various distros set up the system in slightly different ways. It would be a lot of work to write a tool that would scan through a Red Hat install, extract all the config info, and magically configure and install Debian for you. Worse, the tool would have to understand different versions of Red Hat, and Mandrake, and etc.
The Debian installer gets the job done, but it isn't newbie-friendly. The good part is that you have complete control over everything it is doing. The bad part is it is constantly asking you for input about things a newbie might not understand. (But if you choose the defaults you can perhaps get through an install without full understanding of what is going on.)
The very good thing about Debian is that you only install it once. After you have your Debian system up, you just keep running apt-get and upgrading things. When Debian comes out with a new release, you can even use apt-get to upgrade to that. (The command is "apt-get dist-upgrade".)
By the way, if you want to try Debian and you are not looking forward to the installer, you might want to check out Progeny Debian [progeny.com]. Progeny Debian is a version of Debian that has an improved installer. Unlike what Corel did with Debian, Progeny is sharing all the improvements with the Debian community so that future versions of Debian can have a cool installer too.
steveha
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
Why do you say this? I switched my laptop from redhat to Debian (testing) last year, and i don't miss a single thing from redhat. A few months ago, i installed debian on a bunch of old laptops at work which were unused (some ancient NEC, an old thinkpad, a couple old dells, a toshiba), and the installation for all of them was flawless. X worked fine right away for all of them. Sound took some effort (mainly looking at the linux-laptop-howtos, and copying the appropriate lines for conf.modules), but it worked for all of them except for the toshiba which wasn't supported by the kernel modules (it got alsa instead). Overall, the process was simple, and just as easy or easier than redhat installs.
Upgrading in debian is simple and actually works; i have much greater trust in debian packages than rpms.
To convert a system from redhat to Debian, you'll probably want to wipe your system and start anew. Tar up your home directories and any other directories you use to store files. Make a list of software you've installed so you remember to select them when you do the debian install. Backup /etc and any other directories which you think you might want files from.
Wipe the disks, install Debian, put your home directory into place. That's about it...
Re:Air time and focus (Score:3)
Far be it from me to deny that CmdrTaco and some of the /. crowd are Debian bigots of good standing, I'm still inclined to defend them on this. The key difference between Debian and the other distributions you mentioned is that Debian is an organization - a non-profit entity. All of the others are companies, and like most companies, they like to keep their internal stuff internal. Debian's foundation is in openness, and not just of the source variety. What news do the commercial distros release about themselves other than new releases or earnings reports.
Also, the nature of Debian's protocols and the fact that anyone can become familiar with them without becoming a part of the project provokes a ridiculous amount of "armchair developers". That, in and of itself, is a lot of the reason people submit these things to slashdot, whether they are involved or not.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
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Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
What kind of punishment or reward can you get for voting for DPL? What would one gain in this process, since Debian is a non-profit organization whose objective is to make a high-quality, 100% free GNU/Linux distribution?
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Re:Air time and focus (Score:2)
Just my $0.02.
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Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
Punishment could include things like not getting a maintership that you are the best person for, or having benificial patches rejected by the maintainer because of who you voted for.
Both rewards and punishment based on the way people voted will in the long run be detrimental to the Debian Project as a whole. Thats why I hope everyone just ignores the information about who voted for what and it can fade into obscurity.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
The problem isn't limited to what Ben does. Say I maintain the foobar package and I decide that I am going to give it up. Now say I supported someone other then Ben, and was upset that they didn't get in. I can go and look at this list and see that x supported the same person as I did. So even though they aren't as qualified as person y who supported Ben I decide that because x and myself both voted for the same person I am going to have x succeed me.
I will grant that this problem is much less likely to occur in a group as Debian where the developers have generally fewer and weaker relationships with each other. This kind of thing becomes a major issue in something like a high school student council election for several reasons. First off there is the fact that you see and interact with everyone else who voted on a much more regular basis. The second reason is what I think will save Debian from having too many problems with this, high school students as a group tend to be much more petty then Debian developers as a group.
Re:Nice elections (Score:3)
It's probably an honest mistake made with the intention of being open and transparent, although it went a little far. Its too late to get rid of it, I just hope that everyone will ignore it so that people aren't punished or rewarded for the way they voted. This is probably too much to hope for though, human nature being what it is.
Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Apt-get rocks too. That is possibly the biggest selling point for newbies, that it gets all dependancies as well and not just errors out when you're trying to upgrade a package.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page [cavalrypilot.com]
Way to go Ben! (Score:1)
Now that... (Score:2)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:3)
congrats (Score:1)
This guy likes Debian (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
theres nothing from stopping you from d/l'ing and installing it yourself. this is easy if you put a deb-src line for unstable in your sources.list file. then it's just an apt-get -b source away.
Precisely the reason why I have been using it for so long.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
Reward: you might gain influence with those you voted for, they might even buy you a beer
Childish behaviour, granted, and I wouldn't expect Debian developers to act like that.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
My laptop runs debian (installed off the internet last friday night at a friend's house over a bottle of whisky while we built his Alpha machine). Helix/Ximian Gnome.
My dual-head Athlon 850MHz workstation runs Debian, and I'll be playing Myth II and Quake II with sound and hardware accelerated 3D under XFree 4.0.2, care of Branden and his friends.
My file/print server, my mail server, my firewall, my friends' firewalls, my MP3 server and my web server all run Debian, on Intel and Sparc. My mp3 server is an old MCA architecture PS/2. Debian installed and ran out of the box.^H^H^H^Hoff the net
If I want to install software on any of these boxes, it's apt-get install packagename. No hunting around to find the right dependencies for some rpm file. A simple apt-get dist-upgrade brings them up to the latest release when it comes out.
Debian is incredible for servers. However, it's also incredible for everything else.
Re:Debian Question... (Score:1)
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:2)
If I was you, I would find an unused box to install debian on. You'll like it very much once it's installed.
For your laptop, stick with Redhat, Mandrake, etc. They do a much better job with configuration of X, sound, etc.
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
accidental public information? (Score:1)
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:2)
It will have to wait a while - I want to back some stuff up with my new CD-writer, and my job is taking more of my day. Still, you've given me some hope. If only I'd taken notes the first time around, so I'd know what configuration changes I had made to the default Red Hat system...
Again, thanks for responding to a question that probably should have been asked on a newsgroup.
Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:3)
So, if I want to try it out, how do I convert my Red Hat box to Debian? Kill everything and start over? Change some core files? Or is it unadvisable?
It is often said that the many Linux distributions is a strength. I'll believe it if it is possible to move between systems. Any ideas?
BTW, background info, I'm running Red Hat on a laptop, dual-booting with Win98. Newer hardware requires the latest kernel as well as at least XFree 4.0.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
I think most
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:1)
I have to agree with you here, but since I upgraded to the unstable branch I have not been out of date so to speak. Plus, unstable seems pretty damned stable to me. I have yet to have a crash of any kind using the unstable branch.
Re:Nice elections (Score:1)
The DPL doesn't have any authority in making decisions about maintainership, so that won't arise. It's up to individual package maintainers who succeeds them, or, if they just orphan the package, anybody who wants it can work on it.
Ben does maintain a number of core packages (glibc, pam, etc.), but he puts a lot of work into them and I'm guessing he won't be needing a successor in the near future.
The only situation where the DPL can actually appoint people is the small number of delegates who exist. Where people are competent enough for those roles, though, one vote in a long-past election is unlikely to make a great deal of difference.
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
I imagine he sees Debian's new debconf-based installer coming. boot-floppies (the old installer) is really just in maintenance mode for the woody release and is due to be replaced, so there's limited point in making lots of design-level improvements now.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Re:Air time and focus (slightly OT) (Score:1)
This type of article posting is what gives slashdot a bad name.
Slight OT, i also find the styles of discussions on some topics amoung slashdotters very .... pardon my enlish, uncivilised.
It seems like people are not sharing their opinions on things they find interesting or important. It appears that they are just trying to outwit each others. Almost a hockey fight.
In differt topics appear this week, we see
Right vs Left
Microsoft vs Linux
Linux vs BSD
Distribution wars
I just fear that we would be used as showcase to outside world on how unprofessional, stupid we are. And i feel that we are not that much better than those 'clueless people who buy MS products because they are being fed by Marketing'
How many hours a week do you visit here? Looks like i come here too often...
Ricky
Re:Anyone change to Debian from something else? (Score:1)
I just keep 2 partitions aside:
I just install the new desired distro into my sandbox partition, make a few changes to lilo so I can boot to it, and make sure it takes my
That gives me a chance to mess with things in a serious way until I get things how I want them. I then tar up any bits I want to keep, dump it all on
This does require a decent sized hard drive, but you only really need 2 or 3 gigs of sandbox space.
Jedidiah
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Re:Debian Question... (Score:1)
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Re: (Score:1)
Re:Hope this will change the focus (Score:1)
You'r right! It's time to move to experimental to be on the cutting edge! =)
Cool. (Score:1)
I hope Ben still has time to lead the SPARC port.
Congrats anyhow.
Re:Keep up the good work (Score:2)
Re:Congratz :) (Score:1)