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Posts tagged with 'maverick'

David

??We’ve uploaded  language packs in the maverick-proposed repository for everyone to test before they are released to all users. These should contain all the updates and fixes in translations done since the Maverick release date.

I’d like to ask translation teams and other community members to test them and provide an indication that they’ve done so by following some simple steps and submitting a sign-off, so that we know that translations have been successfully tested.

Simply follow the instructions in this page and add your sign-off in the table at the bottom:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Translations/LanguagePackUpdatesQA

The deadline for the testing is the 17th of December (in a weeks’ time). After that, we’ll update the language packs we’ve received feedback for into maverick-updates, so that all users can benefit from the new translations and fixes.

Remember that you’ll have to enable the maverick-proposed repository to get these updates.

Some Notes

Language Pack Update Schedule

Kenneth Nielsen from the Ubuntu Danish translation team has been rocking in getting the language packs schedule project into shape this cycle. Give him a hug if you see him around!

We’ve now got a plan for the Maverick schedule, including a wiki calendar, a google calendar and an iCal feed:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Translations/MaverickLanguagePackReleaseSchedule

You can now subscribe to the calendar with your calendar client (e.g. with Evolution) or web e-mail account, so that you can stay up to date on the next scheduled updates and coordinate translations accordingly.

You’ll find the links on the wiki calendar page.

Bugs

If there are open bugs for the translations in your language, it would be great if you could you check that they are fixed and mark them as “Fix Released”.

You can see if there are bugs for your language by going to the following URL:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-l10n-<yourlanguagecode>

As an example, the German team’s URL would be:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-l10n-de

Help us getting the language pack tested and get all those fixes and new translations to everyone!


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David

Once again, the unstoppable Catalan team demonstrate their drive and capacity in event organization and Free Software advocacy.

Last 20th of November, pursuing the lofty “hey, one install party is not enough” goal and organized by Vicent Cubells and Josep Martínez, the team pulled yet a second Ubuntu Maverick install party. This time round it was in the beautiful city of València, and in an emblematic location as well: the Ca Revolta center – which is currently celebrating its 10th anniversary.

Several Ubuntu installations were performed throughout the day, either in parallel to Windows or wiping it out completely at the user’s request. Technical support was also offered to anyone who came by, which in some cases required a big dose of genius and willingness to be confronted with -back in the day- state of the art technology, such as psychedelic laptop screens and the likes.

All in all, a fantastic event: everyone went back home satisfied, enjoying the new freedom of their shiny Ubuntu systems.

Big thanks to everyone who participated, and see you at the next one soon!

You can also read this post in Catalan.

Pictures by Vicent Cubells

?


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David

?You Rock!

Translations Awesomeness

As you all know the Meerkat is out.

After the release frenzy, I’d like to take a step back and use the opportunity to thank the people from the part of the community that’s closer to me: translators.

For those not familiar with them, they are a vital piece of the diverse group of individuals that bring Ubuntu to millions: they enable almost everyone to use Ubuntu in their own language. With every release they manage to organize, coordinate and perform the translation effort for the applications that are part of our Operating System.

We’ve got more than 1600 translatable applications for Ubuntu in Launchpad, and believe me, translating even the set of most visible ones is an incredible achievement. Not to forget the effort of upstream translation teams, the work of which is also reflected in Ubuntu.

All in all, the end result is something to be truly proud of.

This Cycle’s Hall of Fame

Special mention this time goes to the Spanish, Galician, English (United Kingdom), Brazilian Portuguese, Turkish and German teams, who have achieved 100% translation status according to the statistics at release time. If you see anyone from these teams around, give them a big hug.

Ubuntu-10.10 Top 20 Stats

A total of 37 languages reached what we consider a full translation in Ubuntu 10.10, with many more being close to that figure.

The Galician team, in 2nd place this time, has managed to beat the living daylights out of all languages in the Iberian Peninsula apart from Spanish. In comparison to them, we Catalan ranked 15. Congratulations! But next time it’s personal ;)

And the Turkish team has been working very hard in the last two cycles to make it to the top: in Lucid they already sprang from the 27th to the 7th position in terms of translation coverage of all Ubuntu translations in Launchpad. Well done, you’ve done a spectacular job.

Translators: thanks for your awesome work, you rock!

Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License You Rock! image by IAN RANSLEY DESIGN + ILLUSTRATION


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spamaps

Here are the minutes of the meeting. They can also be found online
with the irc logs here.

Meeting Actions

  • ACTION: mathiaz to send out a call for ideas on ubuntu to the puppet community (carry over)

  • ACTION: ALL to mark maverick assigned specs as “Implemented” or Deferred

  • ACTION: jjohansen to look into virtual kernel bug status (658461)

  • ACTION: jjohansen to look into t1.micro java lockup bug (634487)

Review ACTION points from previous meeting

  • ACTION: mathiaz to send out a call for ideas on ubuntu to the puppet community
    • mathiaz was unable to attend, action point carried over to next week
  • ACTION: smoser to get skaet info on how to publish EC2 images
    • DONE ec2 images were published along with the rest of 10.10
  • ACTION: Everyone to celebrate the 10.10.10 release in their own unique ways
    • DONE emphatically

Postmortem for Maverick (ttx)

  • Close your specs
    • ACTION: ALL to mark maverick assigned specs as “Implemented” or Deferred

  • SRUs (658227, 600174)

    • Everyone should keep a close eye on high priority bug candidates for SRU to maverick.

Natty development

  • Opening: Syncs and Merges (ttx)
    • Natty will open soon, now is the time to start looking at merges
  • Natty specs preparation (jib)

Weekly Updates & Questions for the QA Team (hggdh)

  • QA and BugSquad are phasing out the ‘regression-potential’ tag, and it should not be used anymore. regression-release, regression-proposed, or regression-updates should be used to signal even potential regressions.

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Kernel Team (jjohansen)

  • Phantom load bug fix in lucid has not landed yet but should soon
  • ACTION: jjohansen to look into virtual kernel bug status (658461)

  • ACTION: jjohansen to look into t1.micro java lockup bug (634487)

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Documentation Team (sommer)

  • sommer was not in attendance

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Ubuntu Community Team (kim0)

  • Reminder that this is UbuntuOpenWeek

  • kim0 has been talking with some community members and getting them fired up about contributing, with 8 potential contributors. He would appreciate volunteers for mentoring them.

Open Discussion

  • RoAkSoAx has an HA UEC-CLC setup using cluster stack (pacemaker, heartbeat), he would like to discuss this further at UDS during a cluster stack focused session.

Agree on next meeting date and time

Next meeting will be on Tuesday 2010-10-19 at 1800 UTC – #ubuntu-meeting


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Iain Farrell

I don’t want to sound like a broken record but “PHEW! What a week”. Next Thursday will be our final freeze for Maverick. After this point it’s full steam ahead bug fixing, checking translations and making sure everything is ready for the release on the 10th Ocotober.

The main news from the design team is that a lot of us are working on bug fixes and the last changes to the desktop. Otto’s been hard at it on a new wallpaper and we’ll talk to you more about that next week. The release is really stabalising now and if you’ve not yet upgraded as I’ve said in previous posts hop on over to the dailies server and try it out. At least whack it on a USB stick and boot from it. You’ll be a happier richer human being for it*.

On the font typeface front you’ve no doubt enjoyed the updates this week from our guest bloggers at Dalton Maag. There’s more to come and if you haven’t looked I encourage you to take a look at Bruno’s post about the slant on the Hebrew characters.

As promised Lilly introduced herself in a fine post and followed that with a report on dConstruct. UK readers may be aware of dConstruct, an annual conference on design held in Brighton on the south coast of England. It looks like it was a great event this year and I’d encourage you to go and look up the talks online – you can listen to them in their podcasts section.

And also on the team front we announced that we are hiring!

And finally … we ended this week by taking a look at some of the new things that are and will soon be appearing on the Ubuntu shop. The one that really took our fancy was the travel mouse which is already available!

Lovely Ubuntu merchandise

And on that shamelessly self promoting note thanks for all your comments and feedback. Have a great weekend!

* Canonical and Ubuntu in no way guarantee that you’ll be a happier richer human being once you’ve tried Maverick. Perhaps boot and watch this video. It’s the best I can do … it’s late on Friday and I want to go home …

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spamaps

GlusterFS is a nice flexible clustered filesystem for Linux servers, and (through several methods) a few different client OS’s. It is included in Debian, and so, we have it available in the Ubuntu universe archive.

With Maverick (soon to be Ubuntu 10.10), we wanted to see how easy it would be to setup a gluster server and client on EC2, using nothing but our nifty cloud-init tool in Maverick. Once we got the mounts working right This proved pretty easy actually, as gluster has a really simple initial setup.

So, first I setup servers. Normally I think you’d want to use EBS for the servers, so that if you accidentally teardown all of your servers, your data is still reachable. But for this test, I simply used the instance store.

I fired up two instances of Maverick first. I used uec-run-instances from the ‘cloud-utils’ package as I like the –wait-for=ssh mode


uec-run-instances -p ec2 -n 2 -t m1.small --wait-for=ssh -l clint-fewbar ami-46f9132

The -l clint-fewbar above actually tells cloud-init to load my SSH keys that are attached to my launchpad account. Pretty neat trick, though it is, unfortunately, incompatible with feeding in more config data (though you can still run the command that will import these anyway).

This started two m1.small maverick instances (note that my environment is setup to run ec2-* already, which is beyond the scope of this document, but basically involves setting the environment variables EC2_CERT and EC2_PRIVATE_KEY). It doesn’t return until the SSH service is reachable. You can also add –verify-ssh, but that can take a while as it must wait for the console data to be updated, which can be a few minutes on ec2 (On eucalyptus, it is instant).

From here, I added the public IP’s to a local file called gluster_servers.txt, and used parallel-ssh to set them up:


PSSH="parallel-ssh -h gluster_servers.txt -l ubuntu -P"
$PSSH -- sudo apt-get install glusterfs-server
$PSSH -- sudo mkdir /mnt/test
$PSSH -- sudo glusterfs-volgen -r 1 -n test internal-ip1:/mnt/test internal-ip2:/mnt/test
$PSSH -- sudo mv -f test-tcp.vol /etc/glusterfs/glusterfs.vol
$PSSH-- sudo mv `hostname -s`-test-export.vol /etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol
$PSSH -- sudo service glusterfs-server restart

Note that all of this could have actually been done by cloud-init too by feeding it a script.

Now to the clients, this was particularly cool. First, I took the example glusterfs file from /usr/share/doc/cloud-init/examples and modified it to substitute the internal hostname of one of my servers for ‘volfile-server-hostname’. Then I started up 3 instances feeding them all this file:


#cloud-config
# vim: syntax=yaml
# Mounts volfile exported by glusterfsd running on
# "volfile-server-hostname" onto the local mount point '/mnt/data'
#
# In reality, replace 'volfile-server-hostname' with one of your nodes
# running glusterfsd.
#
packages:
- glusterfs-client

mounts:
- [ 'internal-ip1:6996', /mnt/data, glusterfs, "defaults,nobootwait", "0", "2" ]

runcmd:
- [ modprobe, fuse ]
- [ mkdir, '-p', /mnt/data ]
- [ mount, '-a' ]

And to start three nodes with the above config data.


uec-run-instances -p ec2 -n 3 -t m1.small --wait-for=ssh --run-args='-k:myEc2KeyPairName:-f:cloud_config.txt' --run-args-delim=: ami-46f9132

As these were booting up, I started to see little messages in the logs…


[2010-08-19 20:41:10] N [server-protocol.c:6788:notify] server-tcp: 10.241.89.129:1023 disconnected
[2010-08-19 20:41:10] N [server-protocol.c:6788:notify] server-tcp: 10.241.89.129:1022 disconnected
[2010-08-19 20:41:10] N [server-protocol.c:5852:mop_setvolume] server-tcp: accepted client from 10.241.89.129:1023
[2010-08-19 20:41:10] N [server-protocol.c:5852:mop_setvolume] server-tcp: accepted client from 10.241.89.129:1021
[2010-08-19 20:41:25] N [server-protocol.c:6788:notify] server-tcp: 10.240.54.143:1023 disconnected
[2010-08-19 20:41:25] N [server-protocol.c:6788:notify] server-tcp: 10.240.54.143:1022 disconnected

Sweeeeet, this is the clients connecting to download the volume definitions.

Once this happened, I ran parallel-ssh with the client boxes to find out if they were mounted properly:


PSSH="parallel-ssh -h client_hosts.txt -l ubuntu -O "IdentityFile=myAmazonKeyFile.pem" -P"
$PSSH df

Lo and behold, they all had /mnt/data hosted and shared!

Coolness, now time to fire up some bonnie++…


$PSSH -t -1 -e stderr -o stdout -- bonnie++ -d /mnt/data/bonnie -f

You may notice that I had to pass ‘-f’. This is the “per-char” write test. This writes one char at a time, and on glusterfs was so slow, after 2 hours I aborted it.

While this was running, I was looking at the underlying exported data directory on the servers, and the files appeared to be staying in perfect sync, which makes sense given that we told gluster to use “raid 1″ redundancy.

And, upon finishing, I got this result:


Version 1.96 ------Sequential Output------ --Sequential Input- --Random-
Concurrency 1 -Per Chr- --Block-- -Rewrite- -Per Chr- --Block-- --Seeks--
Machine Size K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP /sec %CP
domU-12-31-39 3328M 6578 2 3881 1 37751 3 81.4 1
Latency 2013ms 667ms 254ms 436ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Create------ --------Random Create--------
domU-12-31-39-04-31 -Create-- --Read--- -Delete-- -Create-- --Read--- -Delete--
files /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP
16 37 0 275 0 48 0 35 0 71 0 51 0
Latency 371ms 647ms 842ms 536ms 286ms 264ms
1.96,1.96,domU-12-31-39-04-31-61,1,1282263738,3328M,,,,6578,2,3881,1,,,37751,3,81.4,1,16,,,,,37,0,275,0,48,0,35,0,71,0,51,0,,2013ms,667ms,,254ms,436ms,371ms,647ms,842ms,536ms,286ms,264ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Output------ --Sequential Input- --Random-
Concurrency 1 -Per Chr- --Block-- -Rewrite- -Per Chr- --Block-- --Seeks--
Machine Size K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP /sec %CP
domU-12-31-39 3328M 6568 2 3333 1 28002 2 116.0 2
Latency 2013ms 1709ms 178ms 437ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Create------ --------Random Create--------
domU-12-31-39-05-5A -Create-- --Read--- -Delete-- -Create-- --Read--- -Delete--
files /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP
16 33 0 170 0 43 0 34 0 133 0 59 0
Latency 481ms 761ms 679ms 306ms 87231us 129ms
1.96,1.96,domU-12-31-39-05-5A-77,1,1282263755,3328M,,,,6568,2,3333,1,,,28002,2,116.0,2,16,,,,,33,0,170,0,43,0,34,0,133,0,59,0,,2013ms,1709ms,,178ms,437ms,481ms,761ms,679ms,306ms,87231us,129ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Output------ --Sequential Input- --Random-
Concurrency 1 -Per Chr- --Block-- -Rewrite- -Per Chr- --Block-- --Seeks--
Machine Size K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP /sec %CP
domU-12-31-39 3328M 2442 0 2324 1 31734 3 90.4 1
Latency 640ms 287ms 95367us 457ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Create------ --------Random Create--------
domU-12-31-39-04-71 -Create-- --Read--- -Delete-- -Create-- --Read--- -Delete--
files /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP
16 45 0 5689 5 93 0 57 0 365 0 82 0
Latency 224ms 64123us 220ms 109ms 61270us 101ms
1.96,1.96,domU-12-31-39-04-71-67,1,1282262298,3328M,,,,2442,0,2324,1,,,31734,3,90.4,1,16,,,,,45,0,5689,5,93,0,57,0,365,0,82,0,,640ms,287ms,,95367us,457ms,224ms,64123us,220ms,109ms,61270us,101ms

Which basically says that over gluster, we were able to write at about 6.5MB/s, and read at about 37MB/s. To compare this to single m1.small I/O:


Version 1.96 ------Sequential Output------ --Sequential Input- --Random-
Concurrency 1 -Per Chr- --Block-- -Rewrite- -Per Chr- --Block-- --Seeks--
Machine Size K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP /sec %CP
ip-10-196-243 3328M 36281 10 40132 11 112935 20 328.8 7
Latency 421ms 241ms 273ms 917ms
Version 1.96 ------Sequential Create------ --------Random Create--------
ip-10-196-243-47 -Create-- --Read--- -Delete-- -Create-- --Read--- -Delete--
files /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP /sec %CP
16 18069 62 +++++ +++ +++++ +++ 22141 74 +++++ +++ +++++ +++
Latency 50194us 28054us 50611us 40347us 20038us 24108us
1.96,1.96,ip-10-196-243-47,1,1282346486,3328M,,,,36281,10,40132,11,,,112935,20,328.8,7,16,,,,,18069,62,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,22141,74,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,,421ms,241ms,,273ms,917ms,50194us,28054us,50611us,40347us,20038us,24108us

I re-ran this test a few times and it seemed to come out more or less the same, though I would guess it might come out differently on certain instances rather than others. Anyway, this shows 36MB/s writes, and 113MB/s reads. Seems like writing is about 6x slower over gluster, which makes sense as it must write over a network of unknown speed (gigabit? 100Mbit? congested?) and it must actually write to two servers, because of the “-r 1″ given to the glusterfs-volgen command, which means “RAID1″ or “replicate”. Latency also was about 1/4 of what it was over glusterfs, which again, is mostly owing to the network latency.

In conclusion, glusterfs is pretty easy to configure on Maverick cloud instances. I’m sure with some more knowledge and goal driven optimization, people will even tune it like crazy.


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spamaps

Here are the minutes of the meeting. They can also be found online
with the irc logs here.

Meeting Actions

  • SpamapS to submit rubygems change proposal as Important bug in Debian and CC ubuntu-devel
  • zul to nudge forward upstart script review process
  • jjohansen to review bug 493156
  • zul to review papercut status of bug 582963

Review ACTION points from previous meeting

  • everyone to pick 1 or 2 papercuts for the beta cycle
    • deferred until later point of order
  • zul to continue clean up the SRU assigne list by prodding people on status: DONE
  • SpamapS to finalize and send ruby gems proposal to ubuntu-devel
    • proposal finalized, action for coming week to submit as bug on debian rubygems package
  • ttx to send email about 10.04.1 release process to server team: DONE

Maverick development (jib)

Weekly Updates & Questions for the QA Team (hggdh)

  • (hggdh) UEC testing is progressing and build 1231 was pending build on a PPA before testing could commence on it.
  • (hggdh) QA is taking a look at bugs that are tagged regression-* and will be pushing server-team related bugs

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Kernel Team (jjohansen)

  • https://launchpad.net/bugs/574910 – high load for lucid on ec2 – is mostly phantom load, plan is to close that bug and open more specific bugs to target the issues that have caused so much piling on.

  • (Omahn) requested review of bug 493156 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/iotop/+bug/493156

  • (jjohansen) pv-ops kernel is still buggy, there is a chance the -ec2 kernel will have to be used instead. smoser doesn’t want to see that happen, but acknowledges that it may be necessary.
  • (jjohansen) kernel tema will be making the “pv-on-hvm drivers” available for testing purposes in a PPA

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Community Team (kim0)

  • kim0 was unable to attend, so this topic was skipped

Weekly Updates & Questions for the Documentation Team (sommer)

  • (sommer) says things are going smoothly, and he will have time to work on some new content this week
  • (sommer) String Freeze is Sept 9. sommer has discussed dropping the ubuntu-serverguide package and forwarded that discussion to the ubuntu-server mailing list after the meeting.

Papercuts status (jib)

  • Two papercuts were left, and mathiz and zul stepped up to claim/evaluate them

Open Discussion

  • (mathiaz) 10.04.1 ISO testing had all server tests completed.
  • (andreserl) cluster stack is waiting on a MIR for pacemaker to be approved

Agree on next meeting date and time

Next meeting will be on Tuesday 2010-08-24 at 1800 UTC in #ubuntu-meeting


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David

?I’m pleased to announce that Ubuntu Maverick is now open for translation:

https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/maverick

Remember that according to the release schedule translatable messages might be subject to change until the User Interface Freeze on the 26th of August.

During the Maverick development cycle, language packs containing the translations are generally released twice per week. This way you can see and test the results of the translations more frequently.

That’s it, happy translating!

Do you have any questions about translating Ubuntu? – Ask! – Did you find a bug in translations?  Report it!


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spamaps

Greetings! If you’re going to be at Velocity 2010 next week, we hope you’ll join us at the Ubuntu Server Users and Developers BoF, Tuesday June 22 @ 8:30pm.

We’re going to cover a number of topics:

  • UEC – We’ll do our best to build a fully functioning “private cloud” with just a couple of USB keys.
  • Ubuntu Server 10.10 – The release is just around the corner in October, we’ll talk about some of the things planned.
  • Feedback – The BoF will be attended by members of the Ubuntu Server development team, so bring your questions and feedback!

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