apt-get install debian-wizard

Insider infos, master your Debian/Ubuntu distribution

  • About
    • About this blog
    • About me
    • My free software history
  • Support my work
  • Get the newsletter
  • More stuff
    • Support Debian Contributors
    • Other sites
      • My company
      • French Blog about Free Software
      • Personal Website (French)
  • Mastering Debian
  • Contributing 101
  • Packaging Tutorials
You are here: Home / Archives for Distro Tracker

My Free Software Activities in November 2017

December 3, 2017 by Raphaël Hertzog

My monthly report covers a large part of what I have been doing in the free software world. I write it for my donors (thanks to them!) but also for the wider Debian community because it can give ideas to newcomers and it’s one of the best ways to find volunteers to work with me on projects that matter to me.

Debian LTS

This month I was allocated 12h but I only spent 10h. During this time, I managed the LTS frontdesk during one week, reviewing new security issues and classifying the associated CVE (16 commits to the security tracker).

I prepared and released DLA-1171-1 on libxml-libxml-perl.

I prepared a new update for simplesamlphp (1.9.2-1+deb7u1) fixing 6 CVE. I did not release any DLA yet since I was not able to test the updated package yet. I’m hoping that the the current maintainer can do it since he wanted to work on the update a few months ago.

Distro Tracker

Distro Tracker has seen a high level of activity in the last month. Ville Skyttä continued to contribute a few patches, he helped notably to get rid of the last blocker for a switch to Python 3.

I then worked with DSA to get the production instance (tracker.debian.org) upgraded to stretch with Python 3.5 and Django 1.11. This resulted in a few regressions related to the Python 3 switch (despite the large number of unit tests) that I had to fix.

In parallel Pierre-Elliott Bécue showed up on the debian-qa mailing list and he started to contribute. I have been exchanging with him almost daily on IRC to help him improve his patches. He has been very responsive and I’m looking forward to continue to cooperate with him. His first patch enabled the use “src:” and “bin:” prefix in the search feature to specify if we want to lookup among source packages or binary packages.

I did some cleanup/refactoring work after the switch of the codebase to Python 3 only.

Misc Debian work

Sponsorship. I sponsored many new packages: python-envparse 0.2.0-1, python-exotel 0.1.5-1, python-aws-requests-auth 0.4.1-1, pystaticconfiguration 0.10.3-1, python-jira 1.0.10-1, python-twilio 6.8.2-1, python-stomp 4.1.19-1. All those are dependencies for elastalert 0.1.21-1 that I also sponsored.

I sponsored updates for vboot-utils 0~R63-10032.B-2 (new upstream release for openssl 1.1 compat), aircrack-ng 1:1.2-0~rc4-4 (introducing airgraph-ng package) and asciidoc 8.6.10-2 (last upstream release, tool is deprecated).

Debian Installer. I submitted a few patches a while ago to support finding ISO images in LVM logical volumes in the hd-media installation method. Colin Watson reviewed them and made a few suggestions and expressed a few concerns. I improved my patches to take into account his suggestions and I resolved all the problems he pointed out. I then committed everything to the respective git repositories (for details review #868848, #868859, #868900, #868852).

Live Build. I merged 3 patches for live-build (#879169, #881941, #878430).

Misc. I uploaded Django 1.11.7 to stretch-backports. I filed an upstream bug on zim for #881464.

Thanks

See you next month for a new summary of my activities.

My Free Software Activities in October 2017

November 3, 2017 by Raphaël Hertzog

My monthly report covers a large part of what I have been doing in the free software world. I write it for my donors (thanks to them!) but also for the wider Debian community because it can give ideas to newcomers and it’s one of the best ways to find volunteers to work with me on projects that matter to me.

Debian LTS

This month I was allocated 12h but I had 1.5h left from September too. During this time, I finally finished my work on exiv2: I completed the triage of all CVE, backported 3 patches to the version in wheezy and released DLA-1147-1.

I also did some review of the oldest entries in dla-needed. I reclassified a bunch of CVE on zoneminder and released DLA-1145-1 for the most problematic issue on that package. Many other packages got their CVE reclassified as not worth an update: xbmc, check-mk, rbenv, phamm, yaml-cpp. For mosquitto, I released DLA-1146-1.

I filed #879001 (security issue) and #879002 (removal suggestion) on libpam4j. This library is no longer used by any other package in Debian, so it could be removed instead of costing us time in support.

Misc Debian work

After multiple months of wait, I was allowed to upload my schroot stable update (#864297).

After ack from the d-i release manager, I pushed my pkgsel changes and uploaded version 0.46 of the package: this brings unattended-upgrades support in the installer. It’s now installed by default.

I nudged the upstream developer of gnome-shell-timer to get a new release for GNOME 3.26 compatibility and packaged it.

Finally, I was pleased to merge multiple patches from Ville Skyttä on Distro Tracker (the software powering tracker.debian.org). It looks like Ville will continue to contribute on a regular basis, yay. \o/ He already helped me to fix the remaining blockers for the switch to Python 3.

Not really Debian related, but I also filed a bug against Tryton that I discovered after upgrading to the latest version.

Thanks

See you next month for a new summary of my activities.

My Free Software Activities in December 2016

January 4, 2017 by Raphaël Hertzog

My monthly report covers a large part of what I have been doing in the free software world. I write it for my donors (thanks to them!) but also for the wider Debian community because it can give ideas to newcomers and it’s one of the best ways to find volunteers to work with me on projects that matter to me.

Debian LTS

I was allocated 10 hours to work on security updates for Debian 7 Wheezy. During this time I did the following:

  • I released DLA-741-1 on unzip. This was an easy update.
  • I reviewed Roberto Sanchez’s patch for CVE-2014-9911 in ICU.
  • I released DLA-759-1 on nss in collaboration with Antoine Beaupré. I merged and updated Guido’s work to enable the testsuite during build and to add DEP-8 tests.
  • I created a git repository for php5 maintenance in Debian LTS and started to work on an update. I added patches for two CVE (CVE-2016-3141, CVE-2016-2554) and added some binary files required by (currently failing) tests.

Misc packaging

With the strong freeze approaching, I had some customer requests to push packages into Debian and/or to fix packages that were in danger of being removed from stretch.

While trying to bring back uwsgi into testing I filed #847095 (libmongoclient-dev: Should not conflict with transitional mongodb-dev) and #847207 (uwsgi: FTBFS on multiple architectures with undefined references to uwsgi_* symbols) and interacted on some of the RC bugs that were keeping the package out of testing.

I also worked on a few new packages (lua-trink-cjson, lua-inotify, lua-sandbox-extensions) that enhance hindsight in some use cases and sponsored a rozofs update in experimental to fix a file conflict with inn2 (#846571).

Misc Debian work

Debian Live. I released two live-build updates. The second update added more options to customize the grub configuration (we use it in Kali to override the theme and add more menu entries) both for EFI boot and normal boot.

Misc bugreports. #846569 on libsnmp-dev to accomodate the libssl transition (I noticed the package was not maintained, I asked for new maintainers on debian-devel). #847168 on devscripts for debuild that started failing when lintian was failing (unexpected regression). #847318 on lintian to not emit spurious errors for kali packages (which was annoying with the debuild regression above). #847436 for an upgrade problem I got with tryton-server. #847223 on firefoxdriver as it was still depending on iceweasel instead of firefox.

Sponsorship. I sponsored a new version of asciidoc (#831965) and of ssldump 0.9b3-6 (for libssl transition). I also uploaded a new version of mutter to fix #846898 (it was ready in SVN already).

Distro Tracker

Not much happening, I fixed #814315 by switching a few remaining URLs to https. I merged patches from efkin to fix the functional test suite (#814315), that was a really useful contribution! The same contributer started to tackle another ticket (#824912) about adding an API to retrieve action items. This is a larger project and needs some thoughts. I still have to respond to him on his latest patches (after two rounds already).

Misc stuff

I updated the letsencrypt-sh salt formula for version 0.3.0 and added the possibility to customize the hook script to reload the webserver.

The @planetdebian twitter account is no longer working since twitterfeed.com closed doors and the replacement (dlvr.it) is unhappy about the RSS feed of planet.debian.org. I filed bug #848123 against planet-venus since it does not preserve the isPermalink attribute in the guid tag

Thanks

See you next month for a new summary of my activities.

My Free Software Activities in October 2016

November 2, 2016 by Raphaël Hertzog

My monthly report covers a large part of what I have been doing in the free software world. I write it for my donors (thanks to them!) but also for the wider Debian community because it can give ideas to newcomers and it’s one of the best ways to find volunteers to work with me on projects that matter to me.

Debian LTS

Last month I started to work on tiff3 but had not enough time to complete an update, it turns out the issues were hairy enough that nobody else picked up the package. So this month I started again with tiff3 and tiff and I ended up spending my 13h on those two packages.

I filed bugs for issues that were not yet reported to the BTS (#842361 for CVE-2016-5652, #842046 for CVE-2016-5319/CVE-2016-3633/CVE-2015-8668). I marked many CVE as not affecting tiff3 as this source package does not ship the tools (the “tiff” source package does).

Since upstream decided to drop many tools instead of fixing the corresponding security issues, I opted to remove the tools as well. Before doing this, I looked up reverse dependencies of libtiff-tools to ensure that none of the tools removed are used by other packages (the maintainer seems to agree too).

I backported upstream patches for CVE-2016-6223 and CVE-2016-5652.

But the bulk of the time, I spent on CVE-2014-8128, CVE-2015-7554 and CVE-2016-5318. I believe they are all variants of the same problem and upstream seems to agree since he opened a sort of meta-bug to track them. I took inspiration from a patch suggested in ticket #2499 and generalized it a bit by trying to add the tag data for all tags manipulated by the various tools. It was a tiresome process as there are many tags used in multiple places. But in the end, it works as expected. I can no longer reproduce any of the segfaults with the problematic files.

I asked for review/test on the mailing list but did not get much feedback. I’m going to upload the updated packages soon.

Distro Tracker

I noticed a sudden raise in the number of email addresses being automatically unsubscribed from the Debian Package Tracker and I got a few request of bounces. It turns out the BTS has been relaying lots of spam with executables files and those are bounced by Google (and not silently discarded). This is all very unfortunate… the spam flood is unlikely to stop soon and I can’t expect Google to change either, so I had little choice except trying to make the bounce handler smarter. That’s what I did: I have a list of regular expression that will discard a bounce. In other words, once matched the bounce won’t count towards the limit that triggers the automatic unsubscription.

Misc Debian work

Bugs filed. In #839403, I suggest the possibility to set the default pin priority for a source in the sources.list file directly. In #840436 I ask the selenium-firefoxdriver maintainer to do what is required to get this non-free package auto-built.

Packaging. I sponsored puppet-lint 2.0.2-0.1 and I reviewed the rozofs package (wihch I just sponsored into experimental for a start).

Publicity. I’m maintaining the Debian account on Twitter and Facebook. I have been using twitterfeed.com up to now but it’s closing down. I followed their recommendations and switched to dlvr.it to automatically post entries out of the micronews.debian.org feed. In #841165, I reported that the chroots created by sbuild-createchroot are lacking the usual IPv6 entries created by netbase. In #841503, I report a very common cryptsetup upgrade failure that I saw multiple times (both in Debian and in Kali).

Thanks

See you next month for a new summary of my activities.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • …
  • 9
  • Next Page »

Get the Debian Handbook

Available as paperback and as ebook.
Book cover

Email newsletter

Get updates and exclusive content by email, join the Debian Supporters Guild:

Follow me

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • GitHub
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Discover my French books

Planets

  • Planet Debian

Archives

I write software, books and documentation. I'm a Debian developer since 1998 and run my own company. I want to share my passion and knowledge of the Debian ecosystem. Read More…

Tags

3.0 (quilt) Activity summary APT aptitude Blog Book Cleanup conffile Contributing CUT d-i Debconf Debian Debian France Debian Handbook Debian Live Distro Tracker dpkg dpkg-source Flattr Flattr FOSS Freexian Funding Git GNOME GSOC HOWTO Interview LTS Me Multiarch nautilus-dropbox News Packaging pkg-security Programming PTS publican python-django Reference release rolling synaptic Ubuntu WordPress

Recent Posts

  • Freexian is looking to expand its team with more Debian contributors
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, July 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, June 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, May 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, April 2022

Copyright © 2005-2021 Raphaël Hertzog