Search Results: "Alexis Sukrieh"

10 May 2007

Alexis Sukrieh: Backup Manager 0.7.6 released

Hey Yay, Backup Manger 0.7.6 came out of the SVN repo! Check it out. Expect the Debian package to be uploaded soon in sid.

8 April 2007

Alexis Sukrieh: He just did it!

Sam DPL

2 January 2007

Alexis Sukrieh: etch is ready for the laptop

Yes, I can tell you, if you have a laptop and want to power it with GNU/Linux, dont run too fast towards Ubuntu’s mirrors, give Debian etch 4.0 a try. It rocks baby. I’ve just installed it on an Asus W3 and a Sony Vaio SZ and the result is amazing. Everything works, even the damned suspend-to-ram thing works out-of-the box on the Asus laptop (not to mention it’s the first time I manage to suspend that laptop in that mode). Congratulations to the Debian-Installer team, you’ve made a great job guys: I wanted to have a 100% encrypted partition for my laptop and had nothing to do but telling d-i so. The graphical interface rocks too, maybe a little issue with synaptic touchpads though but that’s not that a problem as you can use the keyboard bindings at any time. That’s why I like Debian, you can raise your voice as much as you like when the release is not out in time, it just does not matter, because when it’s out, you know that quality is there. So be patient and enjoy the pleasure of the sexiest distro ever: Debian “etch” 4.0

17 November 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Logger::Syslog, my first CPAN-candidate Perl module

I wrote a Perl module a couple of years ago, and got used to it, I just cannot code without that module now. It’s called Logger::Syslog and is a wrapper over Sys::Syslog that lets you deal with syslog in a very simple manner. Use the module and enjoy the easiness of calling info(), warning(), error() or whichever Syslog message level you like, there is a function wrapping it. It also works properly under a mod_perl environment an logs your message with additional information coming from the Perl stack (module, function name, line number, …). I use that module quite everywhere I use Perl : at work but also in my Free Software projects, like Backup Manager. It’s really time to release an “official” version that I can rely on in the future. Next step is submitting the module to the CPAN (it’s pending) and then, debianize it so backup-manager can depend on it. Todo: set up a public SVN repo to handle the sources. Updates

6 November 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: When you re a Debian Developer

… You have to provide a “people.debian.org” web page. So I took the time to write some stuff about my work for Debian. I’ll try to maintain that page as precisely as possible to reflect my work. It will be a good place to put some bits about apcahe-lingerd, as my inofficial packages of that patch are still used, even if the Debian Apache Team consider Apache 1.3 as an undead package. Mohammed, dear fellow NM-blood brother, I’m waiting for yours!

30 October 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: [MeMe] Oh My God!

Well, Oh, Eh…
sukria –
[adjective]:
Sexually stunning ‘How will you be defined in the dictionary?’ at QuizGalaxy.com

25 October 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: WTF The Webapps Task Force strikes back!

We created the “Debian Webapps” alioth project a couple of months ago in order to write a Webapps Policy. Today, that team takes more responsability: it now maintains a couple of packages like, for instance, bugzilla which I find complex, rich and volatile enough to warrant a collaborative maintenance (long life to Subversion). TinyMCE - which can dynamically transform any textarea element into a rich-text area - will also be maintained by the team and is currently in the NEW queue (uploaded this morning).

5 October 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: The Debian Perl Group

I like Debian, and I like Perl (even if it’s not that hype nowadays). So why not joining the Debian Perl Group in order to get involved in the maintenance of Perl libraries? I’m wondering why I haven’t think about that earlier… Anyway, here it is, I joined that dynamic team; I also suggested to create an IRC chan (#debian-perl on irc.debian.org) in order to coordinate the work of the team.

27 September 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: More and more alioth://, less and less localhost://

That’s pretty cool to have such a useful environment like alioth for handling collaborative maintenance. I joined the Debian Perl Group recently in order to put my Perl packages into the hand of the team, and that reminded me how alioth is a powerful tool when you’re about handling a debian package with others. As I receive quite often some po/po-debconf updates for the package backup-manager, I decided to exhume the pkg-backup-mngr project, in order to handle the source with subversion, and to let the translators commit their changes. I now use enormously svn-buildpackage and I feel pretty happy about that. I even think about opening an alioth project for every single package I maintain (and of course, which cannot be handled by an already existing team). Update I apprently forgot the last paragraph of that post in my mind, and the mail Philipp Kern sent me made me aware of that (pointing to Rapha l Hertzog announcement about collab-maint). Indeed, Philipp, I wanted to conclude my post with something about collab-maint, I guess it’s done now. Thanks!

22 September 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: About choices and consequences

Indeed, Jon Downland is right, the way Debian behaves these days is not very glorious, we are reflecting a pretty bad image. I don’t know if Ubuntu can be a good example for us (because we don’t have the same priorities), but I know one thing: Debian is completely hijacked by that thing we call “money”. We have to face the reality, as soon as the money came into the game, Debian has lost a point. I cannot predict if the DPL made the good choice when he decided to launch Dunk-Tank, but I can tell that now that it’s done, people have to face a very big mess. And I really hardly see how that will help us to release etch in time…

20 September 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Money Money Money

The Dunc-Tank is out.
Why not paying Debian Developers? Why not allowing everybody to support the project? Yes, these are good ideas…
But don’t you think we should have took the time to think about it, to discuss ideas, pros and cons? It looks like that Dunc-Tank thing was not intended to be debated (because of the fact it’s “outside of Debian”).
Anyway, I’m puzzled by two issues around the idea of paying Debian Developers by such an entity:
Well, you know, when money comes in the game…

6 September 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Debian Developer

Here it is, I’m now an official Debian Developer. Thanks to my sponsors, Frankie, Neil and Est ban, thanks to Philipp Kern who was my Applicant Manager, thank you all.

27 August 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: The road to Backup Manager 0.8

Now that my Debian packages are in a better shape, I’m focusing on closing as much upstream bugs as I can in the BackupManager source tree. The more I close, the more I think it’s time to freeze the code for targetting a new stable release. I’d like very much to manage to release Backup Manager 0.8 before Debian enter its frozen-prerelase phase; providing a mature version of BM within “etch” would rock.

25 August 2006

Julien Danjou: DeFuBu contest #2

Bug Welcome to this 2nd issue of the DeFuBu contest, the monthly championship of the funniest bug reported to the Debian BTS. The challengers How the vote has been done Five Debian related people voted for these bugs: Roland Mas, Alexis Sukrieh, Cl ment Stenac, kolter and Yves-Alexis Perez. Full ranking Bugs Challengers The winners Notes To participate, simply drop me an email with a bug number. About DeFuBu

5 August 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Backup Manager 0.7.4-1 uploaded to sid

I finnaly took the time to package 0.7.4 for Debian, thanks to Philipp Kern, it has just been uploaded. This package closes about ten bugs and provide the last available “development” release of Backup Manager. I hope this package will please those who will “apt-get” into it. I now plan to fix as much upstream bugs as I can, and moreover, work on the inclusion of rdiff-backup.

19 July 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Gimme bandwith and CPU!

I finally managed to get my new servers up-and-running (got all the worst issues you can imagine with my hardware provider), hosted in the french data-center “TeleHouse 2″. It’s a Dual Core AMD 64 that runs a “Debian 3.1 Sarge” system, rock on babe! Now, it’s time to move everything from nyx.sukria.net (my home-hosted box) to hypnos.sukria.net… (…and yeah, @backup-manager.org services are affected by these changes)

9 June 2006

Philipp Kern: First AM report finished

Quite some time has passed since I accepted to process Alexis Sukrieh's NM application (back in August 2005) but today I fired his AM report out to the Front Desk, where it now waits for a review if any things are missing. I hope that I did not leave out anything crucial, due to him being my very first applicant to process as an application manager. Cheers.

30 May 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: About Bugzilla 2.22 Debian package

Yes, Bugzilla 2.22 is not yet in Debian, I know. And you know what?
That’s my top priority in my todo-list. Just be patient, I’m working on it. It’s just that I had a lot to do in real life recently and didn’t manage to find the time to focus on my pretty-complex-and-patched package, named bugzilla. By the way, as there are sometimes requests for help about the bugzilla debian package on irc.mozilla.org (chan #mozwebtools), I created a new chanel to gather those discussions: #debian on the same server. Feel free to join if you like.

5 May 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: Backup Manager 0.7.3 released

A new development version of backup-manager has been published.
This release provides two new upload methods. The first one is called “ssh-gpg” and lets you upload your locally-built archives to untrusted remote places. During the upload (permormed with SSH), the archives are encrypted using GPG. The other one, called “s3″ is able to upload your archives to the Amazon S3 Storage service (if you have a valid account). This release also comes with a couple of bug fixes (filenames with spaces are now fully supported) and provides some other new options.
As requested on the users mailing-list, a Debian package will come very soon.

23 April 2006

Alexis Sukrieh: bugzilla 2.20.1-2 uploaded

It took me a while to come back to the Debian bugzilla package, sadly I didn’t have the time in the past months to pay attention to it. Bug reports were coming and coming and it was really necessary to focus on them. As this weekend is a Bug Squashing Party in the Debian community, I thought it was the perfect time to wear my armor, take my sword and go squashing bugs… I’m now glad to announce that bugzilla 2.20.1-2 will be soon available for your sid box and provides some sweet improvements: I think that this package will bring back a good-shaped package in debian and hope that users will agree on that. The BTS will tell us if I’m right. Anyway, I feel better after this upload.

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