From: Kurt Lieber <klieber@gentoo.org>
To: gentoo-gwn@gentoo.org
Subject: [gentoo-gwn] Gentoo Weekly Newsletter -- Volume 2, Issue 19
Date: Mon, 12 May 2003 01:31:42 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20030512053139.GW31425@mail.lieber.org> (raw)
[-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --]
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain; charset=unknown-8bit, Size: 29179 bytes --]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gentoo Weekly Newsletter
http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/current.xml
This is the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of May 12th, 2003.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
==============
1. Gentoo News
==============
Summary
-------
* Gentoo Linux to make major announcement at E3
* Gentoo Technologies to partner with Super Computer, Inc. to bring
Gentoo Linux to the Opteron and other enterprise platforms
Gentoo Linux to make major announcement at E3
---------------------------------------------
Gentoo Linux will be present at the upcoming Electronics Entertainment
Exposition[1] in Los Angeles. E3, as it is more commonly known as, focuses
on items related to electronic entertainment, including game consoles,
computer video games, entertainment and edutainment software and other
entertainment-related technologies and industries. Considered as the
premier event for its industry, E3 brings all of the major players
together under one roof.
1. http://www.e3expo.com
In addition to building brand awareness and educating people about the
benefits of Gentoo Linux, Gentoo Technologies will be making a significant
announcement on May 14th that will be covered in detail in next week's GWN.
Gentoo Technologies to partner with Super Computer, Inc. to bring Gentoo
Linux to the Opteron and other enterprise platforms
-----------------------------
We're pleased to announce that Super Computer, Inc.[2] (SCI) will be helping
the Gentoo Linux development team to create a 64-bit version of Gentoo Linux
for the AMD Opteron processor. SCI will initiate this relationship by
providing the Gentoo Linux development team with a dual Opteron workstation as
well as any other assistance required to officially support for the AMD
Opteron platform.
In cooperation with RackSaver, SCI will arrange for early access to future
enterprise-class hardware. RackSaver has joined SCI in its efforts to support
the continued development of Gentoo Linux into an enterprise-level operating
system.
2. http://www.supercomputerinc.com/
==================
2. Gentoo Security
==================
Summary
-------
* GLSAs
* New Security Bug Reports
GLSAs
-----
There were no GLSAs issued during the week prior to this summary's
compilation.
New Security Bug Reports
------------------------
There were no new security bugs reported this week.
===============
3. User stories
===============
Starting with the current issue, the GWN will feature this brand-new
section. Here you'll be given the chance to share your story with the
Gentoo community!
So did you just switch an entire serverfarm to Gentoo? Have you convinced
your grandma not to make steaks out of Larry the Cow? Or did you build a
gigantic space station running Gentoo Linux, to take over the world? Tell
us! Anything interesting, funny or plain unbelievable you discovered while
installing, using or modifying Gentoo Linux is welcome! Just send your
story to user-stories@gentoo.org and enjoy your 15 minutes of fame! ;)
Due to the sheer volume of responses that we expect, please don't be
offended if your submission doesn't make it into the GWN. There are
thousands upon thousands of Gentoo users, but only one issue of the GWN
each week.
Enough talking, let's get the ball rolling and take a look what our first
featured user has to tell us:
Kai-Uwe Kriewald and rsync7.de.gentoo.org
Kai is currently 35 years old and living in Hannover, Germany. There he's
working at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts[3] where he and his
3 colleagues are trying to keep the University's IT infrastructure up and
running. This is not always an easy job when you have to cope with about
6000 students, 100 workstations (Windows) and 15 servers
(Novell/Windows/Linux). Despite his job his hobbies include everything
regarding computers, as well as movies/going to the cinema, riding his
bike and reading (especially dramas and Science Fiction).
3. http://www.fh-hannover.de/english/ueberblick/index.htm
Why Gentoo Linux?
Kai discovered Linux when the Kernel was still at version 0.9x and using
it involved a lot of DIY. After a while he switched to SuSE Linux which he
effectively run for several years. Like Larry the Cow he became frustrated
with all the bloat and graphical wizards featured in most of the latest
distros and started to look for an optimzed server OS which gives full
control over every detail of the configuration to the admin. At the end of
2002 he finally discovered Gentoo Linux which seemed to fit his needs just
perfect.
Running the mirrors
Actually Kai found out that he liked Gentoo so much, that he decided to
set up a rsync (rsync7.de.gentoo.org) and distfiles mirror. He did this
out of two reasons: first he wanted fast access to all the distfiles in
the initial phase of trying out and setting up Gento Linux. On the other
hand he says he wanted to support Gentoo Linux and give something back to
the community which made and still makes this great distribution possible.
This is an excellent example of how open source/free software should work!
Currently a Celeron 1.3GHz, with 256MB of RAM, a 100GB HDD and a 100MBit
connections is used for mirroring. This is soon to be replaced by a P4
2.6GHz, with 1GB RAM, a 250GB HDD and a 1GBit connection. But Kai has
bigger plans for the future: he wants to set up a High Availability
cluster using two of the latter systems.
Conclusion and future prospects
Thanks to years of experience in running mirrors (in his "Windows days"
Kai used to run the primary Tucows mirror for Germany), good advice by
Kurt Lieber[4] and the nice people on the mirror-admin mailing list, he
dind't run into any major problems yet (except for using compressed rsync
which he deactivated). The mirror is offering distfiles to the users in 3
different ways: rsync, WWW (Apache[5]) and FTP (PureFTPd[6]). All these
packages are well tested and documented, so running them shouldn't give
you too much headaches.
4. klieber@gentoo.org
5. http://www.apache.org
6. http://www.pureftpd.org
With ongoing hardware upgrades Kai and his team continue to replace SuSE
installations with Gentoo Linux and plan to also use it as firewall,proxy,
database and CMS server. Sadly they couldn't get Gentoo to run Informix
9.3 (Kai thinks this is due to too new libraries in Gentoo Linux), which
is now run on SuSE 8.1.
If you have questions regarding setting up and running mirrors for Gentoo
Linux you can contact Kai by mail[7].
7. Kai-Uwe.Kriewald@Verw.FH-Hannover.DE
=================================
4. Featured Developer of the Week
=================================
Jack Morgan
Jack Morgan[8] is one of the Gentoo-SPARC project co-leads, and as such
makes sure that releases get ready, new developers get recruited, bugs get
fixed, ISOs get made, and more. A Gentoo-SPARC developer since July 2002,
just after the SPARC port began, Jack has met about half of Gentoo's
developers at Linux World Expo, FOSDEM, and in Oregon, where he lives, and
his goal is to meet over 80%.
8. jmorgan@gentoo.org
Jack's favorite applications include Mutt and exim, not to mention Tux
Racer. He has a SPARCStation 5 on which to do testing, an Ultra 30, his
main development box, as well as two Athlon XP boxen: a fileserver and a
workstation; he uses SCSI disks whenever possible. He usually doesn't run
XFree, but uses fluxbox when he does, as well as irssi, mutt, and many
other console apps. Jack recently moved to Eugene, Oregon from Japan,
where he lived for eight and a half years and met his wife. He spends most
of his free time with his three kids, but also runs marathons and likes to
play Japanese board games like Shogi and Go.
=========================
5. Heard In The Community
=========================
Web Forums
----------
Alleviating the Pressure on rsync Servers
Last week's GWN reminded Gentooists that synching the portage tree should
be reigned by sanity, as opposed to abusing the system by issuing an
'emerge rsync' every other hour or so. A few of the usual suspects in the
Forums, always true to form, quickly picked this up and started offering
their own clever solutions, including checks of the CVS changelogs and
only synching if anything of interest to somebody's own configuration has
been updated.
* rsync etiquette guideline[9]
9. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=51945
Lotus Domino in Gentoo
Running applications only available in binary form may be tricky in a
source-based distribution. In a nice example of help yourself, help
others, steveb[10]has documented his init scripts to get a Lotus Domino
server up and running:
* IBM Lotus Domino R6/(R5) gentoo init scripts[11]
10. http://forums.gentoo.org/profile.php?mode=viewprofile&u=6806
11. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=37172
Binary Packages in Gentoo, Portage in Other Distributions?
Source distribution evangelists are hardly ever tempted by pre-compiled
applications, and even if they were, serving all USE flag permutations via
the Gentoo Reference Platform just doesn't look feasible, does it now...
Contrary to popular belief, there are rather nice binary package
management systems out there, like Arch's Pacman or Crux' cvsup-based
ports system, but would they make sense as tools in Gentoo? Have a look at
the latest thread about binary vs. source distro virtues:
* Superduo?[12]
* Installing Portage on Other Distros[13]
12. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=52224
13. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=28559
gentoo-user
-----------
gentoo-user as a newsgroup
Let's face it, we can all use some extra time during the day. If you're
like the many who suffer through several high traffic mailing lists per
day, a little time organizing could save you hours! No, we're not going to
sell you a pocket organizer or even encourage you to buy a rolodex. What's
at hand here is a sound discussion on how to best sort through the
gentoo-user list. Apparently, using gmane[14] as a newsgroup reader and/or
gnus[15] to sort through threads is a popular solution. Martin Gramatke
pointed out[16] how to subscribe to the gentoo-user list as post only and
use gmane to read the list.
* gentoo-user as a newsgroup[17]
14. nntp://news.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user
15. http://www.gnus.org
16. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/32511
17.
http://news.gmane.org/onethread.php?group=gmane.linux.gentoo.user&root=%3C2
00305032047.42330.xmit%40gmx.de%3E
why rsync?
It appears that some members of the gentoo-user community, namely Rev.
Jeffrey Paul, question[18] the use of rsync in Gentoo's package managment
system. His complaint is simple; "rsync requires special server and client
software, increases loads on the servers, and significantly limits the
number of mirrors (by not being http/ftp compatible)." Others think a
change to the system is not necessary at the moment, as Paul de Vrieze
best describes[19]. While others want to see rsync further tweaked[20] ala
Mandrake's Troels bandwith saving system. Whatever the case, this is an
enlightening thread covering an interesting issue.
* life, the universe, and everything (why rsync?!)[21]
18. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/32380
19. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/32424
20. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/32387
21.
http://news.gmane.org/onethread.php?group=gmane.linux.gentoo.user&root=%3CP
ine.LNX.4.44.0305080816370.23093-100000%40datavibe.net%3E
More Portage Sync Etiquette
Sticking to the topic of bandwith saving and rsync, Louis Candell began a
long discussion[22] on the proper methods of updating multiple Gentoo
machines on a LAN. NFS[23] (Network File System) was the agreed upon
solution. Rex Young let us know that "It[NFS] just works, and it's just
easy. If you export /usr/portage to all of the machines on the network,
syncing from any one of them leaves all of them synced. It really saves
bandwidth, and can be used to ease some of the administration on the
machines." If you plan on implementing NFS to share a common /usr/portage
tree, reading Marius Mauch's approach[24] may help, and be sure all GIDs
and UIDs match on all machines and that you read Lee Fickenscher's
advice[25].
* GWN's Portage Sync Etiquette[26]
22. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/31892
23. http://nfs.sourceforge.net
24. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/32013
25. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/31991
26.
http://news.gmane.org/onethread.php?group=gmane.linux.gentoo.user&root=%3Cu
ut7k96t2xz.fsf%40ossh.com%3E
gentoo-dev
----------
This week there is alot of renewed focus on the init system. Suggestions
to add functionality or even entirely replace the current system based on
shell scripts with one written entirely in Python.
New service dependency
The idea came up to add a means of communicating when a script has started
successfully, in between init and the service scripts. So the service can
rely on another being up and functional before starting up itself.Read
about[27] how this would work.
27. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/8433
Init replacement
An interesting proposal was brought up about writing the Gentoo init
scripts in Python. Read about[28] the pros and cons
28. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/8445
GentooBSD
Also, Jeff Jeter has been working on adapting Portage to run on FreeBSD.
Here is how far he is with his project.[29] Interested people should
contact Jeff with their feedback and input.
29. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/8436
XFree 4.3.0
And finally, we are now well into the second release of XFree 4.3.0. Take
a look at the latest[30] discussion.
30. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/8456
=======================
6. Gentoo International
=======================
Regional German Gentoo User Meeting in Cologne, not Bonn!
Correcting the mistake made in last week's GWN, the meeting of Gentooists
in and around Kࣆln/Bonn will indeed take place this Wednesday, 14 May
2003, but Hellers Brauhaus[31] is of course located on Roonstrasse in
Köln, not Bonn as previously reported. Be there from 18:00, tell the
others you're coming right here[32].
31. http://www.hellers-brauhaus.de
32. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=40510
German Gentoo User Map
It's merely a fallout from a more ambitious project to get German Gentoo
users to register for a future all-German meeting, but it's rather nice in
itself: [33] holds an interactive map where Gentooists in Germany can mark
their current whereabouts based on GPS data.
33. http://cybersystem.iq-computing.de/gentoo/
================
7. Portage Watch
================
The following packages were updated since the last issue:
---------------------------------------------------------
We have started to use a different method to provide the information we
present in this section so, please, report any errors or inconsistencies
you may find. Thanks!!
* app-office/abiword: Fully featured yet light and fast cross platform
word processor.[34]
* dev-haskell/happy: A yacc-like parser generator for Haskell[35]
* dev-haskell/hdoc: A documentation generator for Haskell[36]
* dev-haskell/hmake: a make tool for Haskell programs[37]
* dev-java/ant: Java-based build tool similar to 'make' that uses XML
configuration files.[38]
* dev-python/4Suite: Python tools for XML processing and
object-databases.[39]
* dev-tcltk/Tk_Theme: Theming library for TCL/TK.[40]
* kde-base/arts: KDE 3.x Sound Server[41]
* kde-base/kde: KDE 3.1 - merge this to pull in all non-developer
kde-base/* packages[42]
* media-libs/SoGtk: A Gtk Interface for coin[43]
* media-video/DFBSee: DFBSee is image viewer and video player based on
DirectFB[44]
* net-dialup/capi4k-utils: Capi4Linux Utils[45]
* net-dns/bind: BIND - Berkeley Internet Name Domain - Name Server[46]
* net-firewall/dynfw: Dynamic Firewall Tools for netfilter-based
firewalls[47]
* net-p2p/bittorrent: BitTorrent is a tool for distributing files via a
distributed network of nodes[48]
* sys-kernel/gentoo-sources: Full sources for the Gentoo Linux kernel[49]
34. http://www.abisource.com
35. http://haskell.org/happy/
36. http://www.fmi.uni-passau.de/~groessli/hdoc/
37. http://www.haskell.org/hmake/
38. http://ant.apache.org
39. http://www.4suite.org/
40. http://www.xmission.com/~georgeps/Tk_Theme/
41. http://multimedia.kde.org
42. http://www.kde.org/
43. http://www.coin3d.org
44. http://www.directfb.org/dfbsee.xml
45. ftp://ftp.in-berlin.de/pub/capi4linux/
46. http://www.isc.org/products/BIND/bind9.html
47. http://gentoo.org/projects/dynfw
48. http://bitconjurer.org/BitTorrent
49.
http://cvs.gentoo.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/*checkout*/gentoo-x86/sys-kernel/
gentoo-sources/ChangeLog?rev=1.24
Total number of categories available: 82
Total number of packages available: 4167
===========
8. Bugzilla
===========
Summary
-------
* Statistics
* Closed Bug Ranking
* New Bug Rankings
Statistics
----------
The Gentoo community uses Bugzilla (bugs.gentoo.org[50]) to record and
track bugs, notifications, suggestions and other interactions with the
development team. In the last 7 days, activity on the site has resulted
in:
50. http://bugs.gentoo.org
* 229 new bugs this week
* 423 bugs closed or resolved this week
* 5 previously closed bugs were reopened this week.
* 2523 total bugs currently marked 'new'
* 345 total bugs currently assigned to developers
There are currently 2914 bugs open in bugzilla. Of these: 48 are labeled
'blocker', 104 are labeled 'critical', and 228 are labeled 'major'.
Closed Bug Rankings
-------------------
The developers and teams who have closed the most bugs this week are:
* Martin Holzer[51], with 20 closed bugs[52]
* The x86 Kernel Team[53], with 19 closed bugs[54]
* Robert Coie[55], with 18 closed bugs[56]
* Daniel Ahlberg[57], with 15 closed bugs[58]
51. mholzer@gentoo.org
52.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&ch
field=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&resolution=FIXED&assi
gned_to=mholzer%40gentoo.org
53. x86-kernel@gentoo.org
54.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&ch
field=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&resolution=FIXED&assi
gned_to=x86-kernel%40gentoo.org
55. rac@gentoo.org
56.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&ch
field=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&resolution=FIXED&assi
gned_to=rac%40gentoo.org
57. aliz@gentoo.org
58.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&ch
field=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&resolution=FIXED&assi
gned_to=aliz%40gentoo.org
New Bug Rankings
----------------
The developers and teams who have been assigned the most new bugs this
week are:
* Robert Coie[59], with 19 new bugs[60]
* Sven Vermeulen[61], with 12 new bugs[62]
* Robin Johnson[63], with 11 new bugs[64]
* Martin Schlemmer[65], with 9 new bugs[66]
59. rac@gentoo.org
60.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_s
tatus=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&=&a
ssigned_to=rac%40gentoo.org
61. swift@gentoo.org
62.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_s
tatus=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&=&a
ssigned_to=swift%40gentoo.org
63. robbat2@gentoo.org
64.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_s
tatus=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&=&a
ssigned_to=robbat2%40gentoo.org
65. azarah@gentoo.org
66.
http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_s
tatus=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2003-05-03&chfieldto=Now&=&a
ssigned_to=azarah%40gentoo.org
==================
9. Tips and Tricks
==================
Using Fluxbox Autogrouping
If you use the Fluxbox window manager, autogrouping and tabs allows you to
view programs as a grouped window instead of separate windows. This week's
tips demonstrates this feature using Eterm as an example.
First, you have to edit your ~/.fluxbox/init file. Make sure the group
file is defined.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Code Listing 9.1: ~/.fluxbox/init |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| |
|Add the following line |
|session.groupFile: ~/.fluxbox/groups |
| |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Make sure there are no tabs or extra spaces at the end of the line or it
won't work correctly.
The next file to edit is the ~/.fluxbox/groups file. This file specifies
program that automatically open inside a tabbed group. Simply add one
program per line.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Code Listing 9.2: ~/.fluxbox/groups |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| |
|Using our Eterm example, add this line |
|Eterm |
| |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To find out the exact name of the command to put in the file, use the
command xprop | grep '^WM_CLASS' and paste the name into the file.
Now when you open Eterms, they will open as a group. If you want other
programs to do the same thing, just add them to your ~/.fluxbox/groups
file.
===============================
10. Quote/Signature of the week
===============================
Starting this week, every issue of the GWN will feature a funny or
interesting signature or quote seen in the Gentoo community (forums, IRC,
mailing lists).
Gentoo Developer Sven Vermeulen[67] uses the following signature for his
mails:
"Thanks to DRM, you know that something has been built in environment of
unspecified degree of security, from source you cannot check, written by
programmers you don't know, released after passing QA of unknown quality and
which is released under a license which disclaims any responsibility..."
Something we should all think about...
67. swift@gentoo.org
===========================
11. Moves, Adds and Changes
===========================
Moves
-----
The following developers recently left the Gentoo team:
* Rodney Rees (manson)
Adds
----
The following developers recently joined the Gentoo Linux team:
* none this week
Changes
-------
The following developers recently changed roles within the Gentoo Linux
project.
* none this week
=====================
12. Contribute to GWN
=====================
Interested in contributing to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter? Send us an
email[68].
68. gwn-feedback@gentoo.org
================
13. GWN Feedback
================
Please send us your feedback[69] and help make GWN better.
69. gwn-feedback@gentoo.org
================================
14. GWN Subscription Information
================================
To subscribe to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter, send a blank email to
gentoo-gwn-subscribe@gentoo.org.
To unsubscribe to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter, send a blank email to
gentoo-gwn-unsubscribe@gentoo.org from the email address you are
subscribed under.
===================
15. Other Languages
===================
The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter is also available in the following languages:
* Dutch[70]
* English[71]
* German[72]
* French[73]
* Japanese[74]
* Italian[75]
* Portuguese (Brazil)[76]
* Portuguese (Portugal)[77]
* Russian[78]
* Spanish[79]
* Turkish[80]
70. http://www.gentoo.org/news/be/gwn/gwn.xml
71. http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/gwn.xml
72. http://www.gentoo.org/news/de/gwn/gwn.xml
73. http://www.gentoo.org/news/fr/gwn/gwn.xml
74. http://www.gentoo.org/news/ja/gwn/gwn.xml
75. http://www.gentoo.org/news/it/gwn/gwn.xml
76. http://www.gentoo.org/news/br/gwn/gwn.xml
77. http://www.gentoo.org/news/pt/gwn/gwn.xml
78. http://www.gentoo.org/news/ru/gwn/gwn.xml
79. http://www.gentoo.org/news/es/gwn/gwn.xml
80. http://www.gentoo.org/news/tr/gwn/gwn.xml
Kurt Lieber <klieber@gentoo.org> - Editor
AJ Armstrong <aja@clanarmstrong.com> - Contributor
Brice Burgess <nesta@iceburg.net> - Contributor
Michael Kohl <citizen428@gentoo.org> - Contributor
Yuji Carlos Kosugi <carlos@gentoo.org> - Contributor
Rafael Cordones Marcos <rcm@sasaska.net> - Contributor
David Narayan <david@phrixus.net> - Contributor
Ulrich Plate <plate@gentoo.org> - Contributor
Peter Sharp <mail@psharp.uklinux.net> - Contributor
Kim Tingkaer <kim@thinkit.dk> - Contributor
Mathy Vanvoorden <matje@lanzone.be> - Dutch Translation
Tom Van Laerhoven <tom.vanlaerhoven@luc.ac.be> - Dutch Translation
Peter Dijkstra <phj.dijkstra@home.nl> - Dutch Translation
Bernard Bernieke <bernieke@bernieke.com> - Dutch Translation
Vincent Verleye <zu@pandora.be> - Dutch Translation
Jochen Maes <linux@sejo.be> - Dutch Translation
Ben De Groot <yngwin@xs4all.nl> - Dutch Translation
Jelmer Jaarsma <j.jaarsma@dordrecht.arbounie.nl> - Dutch Translation
Matthieu Montaudouin <mat@frheaven.com> - French Translation
Martin Prieto <riverdale@linuxmail.org> - French Translation
Steffen Lassahn <madeagle@gentoo.org> - German Translation
Matthias F. Brandstetter <haim@gentoo.org> - German Translation
Thomas Raschbacher <lordvan@gentoo.org> - German Translation
Klaus-J. Wolf <yanestra@gentoo.org> - German Translation
Marco Mascherpa <mush@monrif.net> - Italian Translation
Claudio Merloni <paper@tiscali.it> - Italian Translation
Christian Apolloni <bsolar@bluewin.ch> - Italian Translation
Daniel Ketel <kage-chan@gentoo.org> - Japanese Translation
Yoshiaki Hagihara <hagi@p1d.com> - Japanese Translation
Andy Hunne <andy@billydpro.com> - Japanese Translation
Yuji Carlos Kosugi <carlos@gentoo.org> - Japanese Translation
Yasunori Fukudome <yasunori@mail.portland.co.uk> - Japanese Translation
Takashi Ota <088@t.email.ne.jp> - Japanese Translation
Ventura Barbeiro <venturasbarbeiro@ig.com.br> - Portuguese (Brazil)
Translation
Bruno Ferreira <blueroom@digitalmente.net> - Portuguese (Portugal)
Translation
Gustavo Felisberto <gustavo@felisberto.net> - Portuguese (Portugal)
Translation
Ricardo Jorge Louro <rjlouro@rjlouro.org> - Portuguese (Portugal)
Translation
Ricardo Nogueira <R.Nogueira@records.usyd.edu.au> - Portuguese (Brazil)
Translation
Sergey Kuleshov <infapx@yandex.ru> - Russian Translation
Dmitry Suzdalev <dimsuz@mail.ru> - Russian Translation
Lanark <lanark@lanark.com.ar> - Spanish Translation
Rafael Cordones Marcos <rcm@sasaska.net> - Spanish Translation
Julio Castillo <julio@castillobueno.com> - Spanish Translation
Sergio Gómez <s3r@fibertel.com.ar> - Spanish Translation
Pablo Pita Leira <pablo.leira@pitagoral.com> - Spanish Translation
Carlos Castillo <carlos@castillobueno.com> - Spanish Translation
Tirant <tirant@menta.net> - Spanish Translation
Jaime Freire <jfreire@ya.com> - Spanish Translation
Lucas Sallovitz <krusty_ar@yahoo.com> - Spanish Translation
Cagil Seker <cagils@biznet.com.tr> - Turkish Translation
Aycan Irican <aycan@core.gen.tr> - Turkish Translation
Emre Kazdagli <emre@core.gen.tr> - Turkish Translation
Gursel Kaynak <gurcell@gurcell.com> - Turkish Translation
Bugra Cakir <19913500@mail.baskent.edu.tr> - Turkish Translation
[-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --]
reply other threads:[~2003-05-12 5:35 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: [no followups] expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=20030512053139.GW31425@mail.lieber.org \
--to=klieber@gentoo.org \
--cc=gentoo-gwn@gentoo.org \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox