Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter Issue 229

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. This is issue #229 for the week August 15 -21, 2011, and the full version is available here.

In this issue we cover:

The issue of The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

  • Elizabeth Krumbach
  • Jessica Ledbetter
  • Miia Ranta
  • Neil Oosthuizen
  • Daniel Bo
  • holstein
  • Amber Graner
  • And many others

If you have a story idea for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu News Team mailing list and submit it. Ideas can also be added to the wiki!

Except where otherwise noted, content in this issue is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License BY SA Creative Commons License

Ubuntu 11 .10 Release Parties

It’s this time of year again where we get together in our local communities to celebrate the release of the newest release of Ubuntu. On October 13th 2011 we will celebrate the release of Oneiric Ocelot. With that in mind, lets get all the loco communities out celebrating, having fun and sharing with one another and having a party for 11.10.

We have added the event to the LoCo Directory, so please do add your team event on here so we can show everyone how welcoming our communities are. Have some fun, have a party.

Pick a date, chose a venue, add your event to the LD, and then let your team know what is going to happen. Take photos of the event, blog the event so we can all see how you celebrate Ubuntu in your own way.

Originally posted here by Laura Czajkowski on August 22, 2011.

New 2011-2012 Ubuntu Women Leadership Team Announced

Thank you so much to all those who voted and many thanks to Elizabeth Krumbach (pleia2), Jessica Ledbetter (jledbetter), Cheri Francis (Cheri703) and Valorie Zimmerman (valorie) for their willingness to run for these positions. Many thanks to Melissa Draper and Leigh Honeywell for serving on former leadership team.

Below is the New 2011-2012 Ubuntu Women Leadership Team:

  • Elizabeth Krumbach (pleia2)
  • Jessica Ledbetter (jledbetter)
  • Cheri Francis (Cheri703)

If you voted in the poll you can see the results by clicking on the link sent to you with your voting key. Many thanks again to all those who participated and congratulations to the new leadership team.

Ubuntu 11.10 Development update

Ubuntu Development Update

Last week we hit Feature Freeze. This is the big date that all developer dread the most. Now features and new upstream versions have to have landed, everything else will be a matter the release team has to decide upon. We are rushing towards release with UI Freeze and Beta Freeze coming up next week. Exciting times!

For this report I got an update from the Ubuntu Server team, written by Dave Walker.

What’s cooking in Ubuntu server land?

The Ubuntu Server Team has already had quite a busy cycle.  Last cycle, openstack components were initially introduced. This cycle has seen them receive much more attention, and packaging of extra components that  didn’t exist last cycle.

In addition, using Ubuntu Server to orchestrate deployments is something that has evolved this cycle. One of the most interesting parts is the use of cobbler for deployment.

Ensemble, which is now part of the server team has entered the archive this cycle. Originally, ensemble worked purely against the ec2 API to assist with cloud deployments. This cycle, support for provisioning bare-metal hardware using cobblers API has been achieved.

There are always areas where interested people can contribute to the server flavour. The development tasks that people can take on varies from bitesize trivial tasks, to larger undertaking depending on available time commitment and experience. The type of desired task also tends to vary depending on the stage of the development cycle.

The Ubuntu server team tracks these bugs for release. Please note, that anything unassigned or assigned to ‘Ubuntu Server Team’ is generally up for grabs.

Another crucial part of being part of the Ubuntu Server Team, is triaging incoming bugs. We generally follow this process. We also welcome testing of the development cd image, and server archive components. This is vital to help catch critical issues before release.

Ensemble is always interested in having formula contributions, which is another interesting way that people with experience in deploying workloads are welcomed to contribute.

All contributions to Ubuntu Server are appreciated, if you want to get more  involved please join #ubuntu-server on freenode IRC and say hello, or more formally follow: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ServerTeam/Membership

Thanks a lot Dave for the update! I’d like to add that if you’re interested in the Cloud and what’s happening there, make sure you visit http://cloud.ubuntu.com/! Also if you got excited about Ensemble and what it can do for you, have a look at existing formulas and requested formulas. Just join #ubuntu-ensemble if you need some help or want to meet the people behind this fantastic project.

If you’re interested in any other aspect of Ubuntu Oneiric, I’d refer you to the oneiric-changes mailing list and the big picture specification status overview instead. So what’s happening with the Ubuntu Desktop?

Events

We have one of the coolest events of the whole cycle coming up: Ubuntu Global Jam. Local Community teams around the world come together to have a good time on work on Ubuntu directly: translations, bugs, packaging, documentation, testing, documentation – everything goes! Check out the list of participating events to find out where to go, or set up an event yourself! There’s still some time until 2nd-4th September!

If you want to get involved in packaging and bug fixing, there’s still a lot of bugs that need to get fixed:

  • There’s packages that fail to build.
  • Also is the Ubuntu Mozilla team looking for help, so if you’re excited about Mozilla and what’s happening there, join IRC, talk to the guys on #ubuntu-mozillateam on irc.freenode.net.
  • And then there’s Security bugs you can take a look at, the team is a friendly bunch and they’re incredibly helpful in getting your patch reviewed.
  • Also is the Server team interested in your help: merges from Debian is one possibility, fixing important bugs another.

New contributors

I was on holidays for a two weeks, so here’s almost three weeks worth of new contributors! Here’s the list of new Ubuntu heroes: Ben HowardTim Niemueller, Stefan Tauner, Gary Poster, Guybrush88. Five new people in the Ubuntu world, welcome everyone! 🙂

Get Involved

  1. Read the Introduction to Ubuntu Development. It’s a short article which will help you understand how Ubuntu is put together, how the infrastructure is used and how we interact with other projects.
  2. Follow the instructions in the Getting Set Up article. A few simple commands, a registration at Launchpad and you should have all the tools you need, and you’re ready to go.
  3. Check out our instructions for how to fix a bug in Ubuntu, they come with small examples that make it easier to visualise what exactly you need to do.

Find something to work on

Pick a bitesize bug. These are the bugs we think should be easy to fix. Another option is to help out in one of our initiatives.

In addition to that there are loads more opportunities over at Harvest.

Getting in touch

There are many different ways to contact Ubuntu developers and get your questions answered.

  • Be interactive and reach us most immediately: talk to us in #ubuntu-motu on irc.freenode.net.
  • Follow mailing lists and get involved in the discussions: ubuntu-devel-announce (announce only, low traffic), ubuntu-devel (high-level discussions), ubuntu-devel-discuss (fairly general developer discussions).
  • Stay up to date and follow the ubuntudev account on Facebook, Identi.ca or Twitter.

Interview with Kate Stewart

Ubuntu users want to know more about the Ubuntu release process and with the Ubuntu 11.10 Feature Freeze milestone accomplished, Amber Graner catches up with Kate Stewart, Ubuntu Release Manger at Canonical, to talk about the ends and outs of the release process and more.

Thanks Kate! Let’s get started.

Amber Graner: Could you please introduce yourself and tell me a little about what you do at Canonical and for the Ubuntu Project?

kate-office

Kate Stewart

Kate Stewart: I’m the Release Manager for Ubuntu. I am very fortunate to get to work with the inspiring members of the Ubuntu Release Team, along with all the very talented Ubuntu and upstream project developers, and the testing teams to get images of Ubuntu and the various flavors published and available on timely basis.

 

AG: What was your first introduction to Open Source and when?

KS: My first introduction to Open Source was in the early 90’s working on compilers for a Unix based operating system at IBM, and then later doing some gnu toolchain work for the PowerPC architecture. After making the switch from development to management, I managed a team in the semiconductor part of Motorola (which was spun off to become Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.) doing the new PowerPC architecture bringup and enablement using Open Source projects (gnu toolchain, Linux, u-boot, etc.). Getting the GNU copyright assignment agreed to by upper management at a hardware company (twice!) was a challenge, but a very good education on persistence and the importance of licensing.

 

AG: What did you do before you became the Ubuntu Release Manager? How does that job differ from your job now?

KS: For the past 10 years at Motorola/Freescale Semiconductor Inc. I was managing the development teams that produced board support packages for the PowerPC development boards. After Apple switched from PowerPC to x86 for its cores, the PowerPC enablement was for development boards for the embedded networking infrastructure. Between alpha, betas and silicon revisions, etc. the world wide development and test teams we were releasing a board support package each week.

At Freescale, the board support packages had a software image with user space that had a slow rate of change, but we were porting and improving the linux kernel, u-boot, and toolchain (and contributing changes upstream) for each new silicon chip. This also involved working with the hardware architecture teams to improve the next generation, and standards bodies / open source projects to improve interoperability (power.org, eglibc, etc.). There were a couple of key embedded customers who dominated the development requirements.

Now there are millions of customers, and many different flavors of Ubuntu, and thousands of user space applications. The Linux kernel, gnu toolchain, and firmware changes come from the upstream projects and manufacturers.

In the last job, there were about 500 open space projects to worry about interacting with, and only 3 with a high rate of change, that we tracked. Now there are 12 official flavors in Ubuntu on multiple hardware architectures, and 18,558 packages (as of 2011/08/12), as well as the interactions and system integration issues. Quite a bit different!!!

The common denominator is getting useful images into developers and customers hands in a reliable and predictable fashion and working with great people on various open source community projects on improving standards for interoperability and performance tuning for specific requirements of target audiences.

 

AG: As the Ubuntu Release Manager at Canonical what are the biggest challenges you face personally and as a product and how do you over come them.

KS: My biggest personal challenge over the last year has been learning about the interactions in the user space applications and the different flavors’ user interfaces. It’s very challenging to figure out what the implications of a specific change are after we freeze, and to decide if it makes the product overall better or not. I expect I’ll be learning for as long as I’m in this role (since the contents of a release continue to evolve), which is one of the reasons I’m enjoying myself so much. Luckily for me, the other members of release team span a wide range of different backgrounds and have been doing releases for quite a while, and are very willing to share their knowledge.

The biggest challenge from an Ubuntu product perspective is getting an accurate overview of the quality of a specific image. Having a decent automated regression infrastructure to run against the images will definitely help. Also, our bug infrastructure has evolved over time, and is inconsistently used between teams and projects, which makes getting an overview a bit of a challenge! Efforts are underway to improve the modeling of the bug lifecycle based on some plans figured out at the UDS-O, and get some standardization of practices between the teams. The quality assurance team, defect analysts, bug control, launchpad team and release team are all working together to figure out ways to improve the infrastructure and cut down on busywork and improve the bug state accuracy. This is going to be key to help get the important bugs found, triaged and fixed quicker. The earlier we find and fix bugs, the better the experience for our users, and less time we’ll have to work on SRUs (Stable Release Updates).

AG: Can you tell readers what exactly the release process involves? Can the community help with this process, if so how?

KS: The process for each release cycle involves producing monthly ‘milestone’ images for the alphas, betas and then the final release. The first 3-4 months of a cycle is when we pull in the latest and greatest from the upstream projects. As a result there is a high rate of change, and the goal for the alphas is to keep things basically functional for the developers and testers. After we feature freeze, the rate of change decreases, letting us get the integration bugs get fixed and make things usable for the wider user community with the betas.

At each milestone, the process of creating images consists of a stabilization/testing phase, then a publishing phase. In the stabilization phase, we start to restrict the flow of changes to the archive, by declaring either a soft or hard freeze. We then focus on getting the images tested for some mandatory and optional test cases, and fixing those bugs that prevent usable images from being created and booted, i.e. the "blockers". Then, when we have a set of images that don’t have "blockers" in them, we work with the web team to publish them to standard locations, make sure the links work and they are accessible, check the release notes for installing and using them are available. … and then the announce goes out!

Help from the community is very welcome at all stages and with all the flavors of Ubuntu! Especially around the time of a milestone release, the more folk who can help us try out the images (according to their comfort level, ie. don’t try the alphas unless you’re comfortable dealing with breakage), and report bugs found, the better the release becomes for everyone. Of course, contribution of bug fixes are always welcome ;), as are proof readers, and content providers for the release notes.

 

AG: How many official derivatives of Ubuntu are now being released and what are they? How is the Ubuntu Release team involved with these derivatives?

KS: We just introduced two new flavor of Ubuntu, ‘Lubuntu‘, and ‘Ubuntu Core‘ with the Oneiric Alpha3 release. This brings us up to 12 official flavors, we currently have Ubuntu, Ubuntu Server, Ubuntu Cloud, Ubuntu Netboot, Ubuntu Core, Kubuntu Desktop, Kubuntu Mobile, Xubuntu Desktop, Edubuntu, Mythbuntu, Ubuntu Studio and Lubuntu.

The release team works with each of the product managers for these flavors, and decides if an image is going to be produced and published for a specific milestone. Then, the release team produces the all images as part of the stabilization phase, and works with the QA team and official flavor product managers to decide which of them to published for a mile stone.
We’re really excited for the opportunity to be able to start working closer with the localization teams in this release, and beta test out some newly introduced technologies that will help developers in the locos create language specific images (with help from the local translation teams, of course!).

AG: Why is it important for users to wait for the official release announcement to be issued before downloading or announcing any of the milestones or the final release is ready? What problems arise from not waiting on the Official release announcements? Where can readers find the official release announcement?

KS: Thanks for asking this! Until the announce goes out, the image can be replaced and updated at any point. The release team needs to do final checks to make sure all the right bits are in the right places, and no blockers have cropped up as a result of the last bug fix or upload. If people are trying to download the images during this final bit of testing, the slower the testing goes (and they run the risk of pulling down a flawed image) and it delays the time until we can actually release.

The official release announce is mailed out to ubuntu-announce maillist. Copies of prior release announces can be found in the mail list archives. Once we hit send on that email, the IRC channel is updated, as is the News & Announcements section on the Ubuntu Forums, a post is made on the release blog, and the Launchpad project is updated.

AG: What features are you looking forward to personally in Ubuntu 11.10?

KS: I’m looking forward to seeing how well the loco teams are able to use the new tools to be able to spin language specific localized Ubuntu images. Getting their input on his initial version of the localization tools, and figuring out to further help them, and the translation teams make Ubuntu easily accessible to a wider audience is exciting.

We’re not sure if it will land properly in time or not, but we’re also looking to replacing the traditional DVD image with one targeted towards a 2G USB stick.This will give us a bit more space than the CD image to include commonly used applications, without the long download time of a traditional DVD.

On an infrastructure side, I’m getting very excited about the automated regression testing that is starting to become available as Oneiric progresses. Very much looking forward to the day when I can get an auto generated health report on the daily image builds when I log on each morning. Being able to spot integration issues as soon as they occur will get things fixed much quicker, and let us know if we should hold off on updating to the current daily image.

AG: Are you involved in other FOSS projects beside Ubuntu?

KS: Yup, am one of the co-founders of the SPDX project, which is now being sponsored by the Linux Foundation. Our first deliverable is an specification for standardizing copyright and licensing information for software packages using machine and human readable formats, and once the spec is released hope to contribute to tools to detect and generate these files. We’ve been working for the last 2 years with license compliance consultants, legal experts, business supply chain management, open source distros, and technical teams to create a standard way of referring to common licenses and encoding the information. The goal is to make it easier to understand what has to be done to comply with the licensing if you choose to use an open source project. Its not limited to being used for open source projects though. We’ve gotten some prototype open source translation tools available to check the specification and some companies have been implementing prototypes around the specification. Exciting times, if you geek out on this sort of thing, and yes, I know not everyone does…. 😉 If you do, and want to learn more, see SPDX website.

AG: Is there anything I haven’t asked you about that you would like to tell readers about?

KS: I’d just like to take the opportunity to say a big THANK YOU to all members of the Ubuntu community (users, developers, testers, upstream projects, translators, documenters, loco teams, etc.) for making me feel so welcome and helping me transition from embedded linux ecosystem over the last year. I’m looking forward to continuing to learn from each and every one of you through the upcoming release cycles, and doing my best to help improve Ubuntu and the ecosystem that makes it possible.

Originally Posted here on 2011-08-16