---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gentoo Weekly Newsletter
http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/gwn.xml
This is the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of December 30th, 2002.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kurt Lieber <klieber@g.o> - Editor
AJ Armstrong <aja@...> - Contributor
Brice Burgess <nesta@...> - Contributor
Yuji Carlos Kosugi <carlos@...> - Contributor
Rafael Cordones Marcos <rcm@...> - Contributor
David Narayan <david@...> - Contributor
Ulrich Plate <plate@...> - Contributor
Peter Sharp <mail@...> - Contributor
Lanark <lanark@...> - Spanish Translation
Marco Mascherpa <mush@...> - Italian Translation
Claudio Merloni <paper@...> - Italian Translation
Ventura <venturasbarbeiro@...> - Portugese (Brazil) Translation
1. Gentoo News
Summary
* Gentoo to be at LinuxWorld Expo in January
* Gentoo Linux 1.4 Release Schedule and Feature Update
* Gentoo Linux 1.4_rc2 to be Released on December 31st
* New Kernel Development Strategy
* New Formal Release Schedule Process
Gentoo to be at LinuxWorld Expo in January
Daniel Robbins and other members of the Gentoo Linux team will be at
LinuxWorld Expo[1] January 22nd-24th in New York City. They will be
manning booth #8 at the .org pavillion and hope to have an impressive
display of graphics hardware showing off Gentoo Linux. If you're in the
area, stop by and show your support for Gentoo Linux!
1. http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/
Gentoo Linux 1.4 Release Schedule and Feature Update
Daniel Robbins recently announced the planned Release Schedule for Gentoo
1.4_rc3, which will hopefully be released as Gentoo 1.4_final. While the
Release Shedule is subject to change based on bugs and user feedback, the
current release date is planned for January 14, 2003, just in time for
Linux World 2003[2] in New York. New for Gentoo is a more formal release
process, comprised of five main stages that take the 1.4_rc3/1.4_release
candidate through a testing and QA process that should improve the quality
and stability of the final system.
2. http://www.linuxworldexpo.com
1.4_final will take the improvements introduced in rc1 and rc2 and also
add:
* Fully integrated Xft2 support
* New baselayout to remove dependency on tmpfs
* expanded GRP package set
* integrated optional prelink support
As this release makes its way through the Release Schedule process, the
quality and stability of this version will determine whether it receives
the "1.4_final" designation. As with any unreleased product, features and
dates may change as we get closer to the deadline.
Gentoo Linux 1.4_rc2 to be Released on December 31st
The last release candidate prior to the final version of Gentoo Linux 1.4
is scheduled to be released on December 31st. As several Gentoo users have
already discovered, most of the 1.4_rc2 files have already been placed on
ibiblio[3]. Last minute additions to rc2 not ready at press time included
some finishing touches to the installation CDs (LiveCDs) and
documentation. New to the 1.4_rc2 release are:
* The first release of the Gentoo Reference Platform[4] (GRP) -- a
collection of ebuilds specifically tested for stability.
* New LiveCDs with increased hardware support, better technology and more
eye candy.
* Upgraded versions of gcc, binutils, portage and many other packages.
Users interested in living on the bleeding edge can see the new LiveCD
technology in action by trying out one of the experimental[5] LiveCDs.
3. http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/gentoo/releases/
4. http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/gentoo/releases/1.4_rc2/x86/GRP_files/
5. http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/gentoo/experimental/x86/livecd/
New Kernel Development Strategy
Daniel Robbins recently proposed a new kernel development strategy for
Gentoo Linux, with the main goals being to improve hardware support and
stability of the kernels used in the Gentoo project. As part of this
strategy, Gentoo would leverage many of the hardware patches that make
their way into the Red Hat kernel tree since most hardware vendors seek
out Red Hat as their primary/only Linux partner. In addition to taking
advantage of the improved hardware support in the Red Hat kernel source
tree, Gentoo users would also benefit from additional features and
functionality not normally found in the Red Hat kernel, including XFS,
EVMS and Win4Lin, as well as others. Furthermore, the focus of
gentoo-sources and xfs-sources would likely diverge somewhat, with
gentoo-sources focusing more on high performance and xfs-sources intent on
maximum hardware compatiblity and kernel functionality.
New Formal Release Schedule Process
As part of the 1.4 release process, Daniel Robbins proposed a formal
Release Schedule to ensure that the entire Gentoo development team knows
what the process and schedule is for future releases. Key to the new
policy is the migration away from one single "release manager", with one
person in charge of everything, to more of a "release process" whereby the
entire development team helps manage the release, based on one set of
common instructions. At a high level, the new Release Schedule consists of
5 main steps:
* Initial Decision -- The actual decision to release a new version of
Gentoo Linux.
* Package Upgrades Phase -- A period of time (generally 14 days) where
the developers focus on moving packages from an unstable (masked) state to
a stable (unmasked) state.
* Build and Test -- Assigned builders for each architecture build a
"generic CPU" set of stage tarballs using a current Portage snapshot.
* Release Build and Test -- A full-scale, distributed build effort begins
to build the full new Gentoo Linux release or release candidate including
GRP package sets.
* Release -- The new version of Gentoo Linux is released to the Gentoo
community.
2. Gentoo Security
Summary
* GLSA: openldap
* GLSA: cyrus-imapd
* GLSA: cyrus-sasl
* GLSA: KDE-3.0.x
* GLSA: canna
* GLSA: wget
* GLSA: perl
* New Security Bug Reports
GLSA: openldap
Several buffer overflows and other bugs exist that could allo remote
attackers to exploit to gain access to systems running vulnerable LDAP
servers.
* Severity: high - potential remote execution of arbitrary code.
* Packages Affected: openldap-2.0.25-r2
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge cyrus-sasl.
* GLSA Announcement[6]
* Advisory[7]
6. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27735
7. http://www.suse.de/de/security/2002_047_openldap2.html
GLSA: cyrus-imapd
Cyrus' Sieve implementation contains a couple of classic string based
buffer overflows in script parsing code. Anyone who can execute Sieve
scripts can exploit these bugs. Versions up to libSieve 2.1.2 and Cyrus
IMAP 2.1.10 are affected.
* Severity: high - potential remote execution of arbitrary code.
* Packages Affected: cyrus-imapd 2.1.10 and earlier
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge cyrus-imapd.
* GLSA Announcement[8]
* Advisory[9]
8. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27733
9. http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=bugtraq&m=103886433123554&w=2
GLSA: cyrus-sasl
Insufficient buffer length checking in user name canonicalization may
allow attacker to execute arbitrary code on servers using Cyrus SASL
library.
* Severity: high - potential remote execution of arbitrary code.
* Packages Affected: cyrus-sasl 2.1.9
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge cyrus-sasl.
* GLSA Announcement[10]
* Advisory[11]
10. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27720
11. http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=bugtraq&m=103946297703402&w=2
GLSA: KDE-3.0.x
KDE-3.0.x sometimes fails to quote command parameters in calls to the
shell. This means that a carefully crafted emails and web pages may permit
the attacker to pass arbitrary commands using the victim's system
privileges. Exploits are known to exist.
* Severity: high - potential remote execution of arbitrary code under
victim's privileges.
* Packages Affected: kde-3.0.4 and earlier in the kde-3.x series.
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge kde.
* GLSA Announcement[12]
* Advisory[13]
12. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27299
13. http://www.kde.org/info/security/advisory-20021220-1.txt
GLSA: canna
The canna server versions 3.6 and earlier expose a heap overflow that
permits a remote exploit that has been demonstrated, but not reported in
the wild. In addition, the same server versions fail to validate some
request cases.
* Severity: moderate to high - DOS attack and information exposure,
remote exploit permits execution with same privileges as the canna server.
* Packages Affected: canna-3.6
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge canna.
* GLSA Announcement[14]
* Advisory[15]
14. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27118
15. http://canna.sourceforge.jp/sec/Canna-2002-01.txt
GLSA: wget
Wget could permit a malicious ftp site operator to overwrite certain key
files and potentially gain privileges on the target computer through
replacing executable files. No cases in the wild have been reported.
* Severity: moderate - DOS and remote exploit mitigated by requirement
for victim participation.
* Packages Affected: wget-1.8.2-r1 and earlier
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge wget.
* GLSA Announcement[16]
16. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27117
GLSA: perl
Perl's Safe module (Safe.pm) exposes a potential vulnerability in that, if
a safe compartment is reused it is no longer safe (due to an inability to
alter operation masks).
* Severity: moderate - somewhate obscure and requires code that reuses
safe compartments.
* Packages Affected: perl-5.8.0-r5 and earlier
* Rectification: Synchronize and emerge perl or (less drastic) emerge
Safe.
* GLSA Announcement[17]
* Advisory[18]
17. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27103
18. http://use.perl.org/articles/02/10/06/1118222.shtml?tid=5
New Security Bug Reports
The past week has not seen any significant new security bugs posted to
bugzilla. Therefore, we will use this section to provide a summary of
currently open security bugs on the system (we should note that most of
these 'bugs' have been fixed in packages that are currently in testing,
and could be unmasked and emerged now):
* evolution[19]
* glibc[20]
* freeswan[21]
* libpng[22]
* cups[23]
19. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9209
20. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=10421
21. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11536
22. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12447
23. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12450
3. Heard In The Community
Web Forums
Forums Crashed - Back Online
Nitro writes[24] that the Forum's backbone, the MySQL server that makes
the phpBB surface ripple, was unreachable on Christmas Eve (probably out
having an eggnog somewhere warm and cozy). The downtime was caused when a
new server being brought online crashed. Things have since been migrated
back to the old server and the new server is undergoing further stress
testing. Fortunately, nothing has gone missing, the entire database has
been restored, and only those few people who created new accounts during
the brief period of downtime will have to do so again.
24. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27427
Dual boot alert!
People have been unwrapping their Christmas presents, and this may well be
the reason behind the current wave of dual boot configurations reflected
in the forums. This at least is the impression one gets from the sudden
flurry of activity documented in the threads listed below. For people
planning on setting up Gentoo in a dual configuration with a legacy
operating system, these are as good a place as any to start from:
* EVMS and dual booting[25]
* Setting up Dual Boot?[26]
* yaboot problem Dual USB iBook[27]
* Grub + Winnt[28]
25. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27406
26. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27545
27. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=4889
28. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=22198
Gentoo Linux Users Everywhere
What is one to do with an optimized Gentoo system after all the emerging
is done? Several active topics have formed as centers for the organization
of Gentoo teams for such diverse distributed computing projects as
SETI@home, distributed.net's RC-5-72, Folding@home, and
ClimatePrediction.Net. Properly niced(nice is used to run a program with
modified scheduling priory), clients for these projects can use systems'
spare CPU cycles, doing (potentially) constructive work without any
adverse effect on performance. The SETI@home team[29]is currently the
largest, with 85 users from all over the world and a whopping 76 CPU
years, but the Folding@home team[30] is quite active as well. For more
information about setting up the clients, joining the teams, and the
effects of SETI@home participation on one enthusiastic user's electric
bill, among other things, see the following threads:
* SETI: Gentoo Linux Users Everywhere (85 users)[31]
* folding@home and Gentoo Linux Users Everywhere[32]
* RC-5-72 started yesterday[33]
29. http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/team/team_149448.html
30. http://folding.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/teampage.detailed?q=11298
31. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=13450
32. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=16826
33. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=25088
gentoo-user
Gentoo vs. FreeBSD
Portage, Gentoo's package management system, undoubtedly resembles the
ports system found in FreeBSD. So, which is better? Gentoo advocates will
argue that newer is of course better, as exemplified by evolution. FreeBSD
loyalists remind us of Marlon Brando in the Godfather, things were better
back then. Truthfully it would be silly to draw such simple conclusions.
Charles Burns posted an excellent response[34] comparing the two different
OSes. When it comes to desktops or less popular hardware, there is no
substitute for Gentoo.
34. http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gentoo-user&m=104094576224242&w=2
Don't fear the downgrade
Every once in awhile an emerge preview will notify you that it is going to
downgrade an important package. For instance, emerging edb may downgrade
freetype, instilling an instant fear of losing those good looking fonts.
Fear not. Many packages coexist happily with each other and the newer
versions will not be removed after the 'downgrade'. For example, Glib2 and
Glib1 also behave well on the same system. Jean Smith has posted a
suggestion[35] that will hopefully clear up this confusion.
35. http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gentoo-user&m=104074984711425&w=2
gentoo-dev
Final Release of Gentoo?
M. Zuelsdorff wrote[36] to say: "I am following the the discussion in the
gentoo-dev group for more than a year now. All I see is "a problem with
this" and "a problem with that". Some days ago, something even appeared to
be "really fucked up". My question: When do you expect Gentoo to become a
final usable release?". Most of the answers in the thread agreed in that
human nature might play some role here and make us take time to complain
more often than we do to say things work for us. Arthur Britto chipped
in[37] with: "You've just highlighted one of the biggest problems with
Gentoo: manual problem discovery and resolution. When a package breaks,
someone must (1) manually discover it, (2) search mailing lists for Gentoo
and the application, (3) search the forums for Gentoo and the application,
(4) attempt reasonable diagnostics to insure the problem is not just with
their system, (5) if they are competent they might try to solve the
problem, and (6) share their problem with the community." Finally, Daniel
Robbins (Chief Architect of Gentoo Linux) closed the thread with the
steps[38] being taken in order to improve quality control.
36. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/6236
37. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/6250
38. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/6277
USE Flags Selector.
John Nilsson wrote an e-mail[39] in which he exposed his interest in
writing an interface for selecting USE flags and GCC flags. Turns out,
this interface already exists in the form of ufed[40] and kportage[41].
But, as always, with free software[42], there is room for improvements! ;-)
39. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/6207
40. http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/pkgs/app-admin/ufed.xml
41. http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/pkgs/app-admin/kportage.xml
42. http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html
4. Gentoo International
Yet Another French Linux Documentation
The French Gentoo community is very excited[43] about a brand new Linux
installation and configuration guide by Christian Casteyde. Not exactly
built to order for Gentooists (he appears to be a SuSE and Slackware man
himself), it is a very extensive and up-to-date documentation, with a
strong emphasis on additional features of XFree86 4.x and kernel 2.4.x. He
calls it Yet Another "Guide d'Installation de Linux"[44], or YAGIL, and it
certainly looks like enough of a reason to brush up your French.
43. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=27366
44. http://casteyde.christian.free.fr/system/linux/guide/
Gentoo Shinnenkai - New Year's Party at Gentoo-JP...
In what can only be called an effort at Doing The Right Thing, the
Japanese Gentoo activists have agreed on a date for the first get-together
of the year 2003. With the precise location still to be announced, all of
Japan's Gentoo users and developers present in Tokyo on that date will
meet on 17 January 2003, starting at 19:00. The easiest way to tell them
you're coming is probably the IRC channel, #gentoo-ja on irc.freenode.net,
or you can drop a mail to the organizers.
5. Portage Watch
Security Updates (see above)
* openldap - fixed in openldap-2.0.27 and above
* cyrus-imapd - fixed in cyrus-imapd-2.1.11 and above
* cyrus-sasl - fixed in cyrus-sasl-2.1.10 and above
* Perl - fixed in perl-5.6.10-r10 / perl-5.8.0-r6 and above
* wget - fixed in wget-1.8.2-r2 and above
* canna - fixed in canna-3.6-r1 and above
* kde-3.0.x - fixed in kde-3.0.5a and above
The following stable packages were added to portage this week
* app-crypt/keylookup : "A tool to fetch PGP keys from keyservers."
http://www.palfrader.org/keylookup/
* app-games/gnurobots : "Game/diversion where you construct a program for
a little robot then set him loose and watch him explore a world on his
own" http://www.gnu.org/directory/games/gnurobots.html
* app-games/gnushogi : "Japanese version of chess (commandline +
X-Version)" http://www.gnu.org/directory/games/gnushogi.html
* dev-java/xdoclet : "A code-generation engine primarily for EJB"
http://xdoclet.sf.net/
* dev-perl/File-Temp : "File::Temp can be used to create and open
temporary files in a safe way."
http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/File/File-Temp-0.12.readme
* dev-perl/Graph : "Graph is a module to create graphs."
http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Graph/Graph-0.20101.readme
* dev-perl/Heap : "Heap - Perl extensions for keeping data partially
sorted." http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Heap/Heap-0.50.readme
* dev-perl/MIME-Lite : "low-calorie MIME generator"
http://search.cpan.org/src/ERYQ/MIME-Lite-2.117.readme
* dev-perl/SOAP-Lite : "Provides a simple and lightweight interface to
the SOAP protocol (sic) both on client and server side."
http://cpan.valueclick.com/modules/by-module/SOAP/SOAP-Lite-0.55.readme
* dev-perl/Text-Shellwords : "Provides shellwords() routine which parses
lines of text and returns a set of tokens using the same rules that the
Unix shell does."
http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Text/Text-Shellwords-1.00.readme
* dev-perl/Time-modules : "A Date/Time Parsing Perl Module"
http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Time/MUIR/modules/Time-modules-2002.1
001.readme
* media-libs/lib3ds : "overall software library for managing 3D-Studio
Release 3 and 4 .3DS files" http://lib3ds.sourceforge.net/
* media-libs/libjsw : "provide a uniform API and user configuration for
joysticks and game controllers" http://wolfpack.twu.net/libjsw/
* media-sound/aseqview : "ALSA sequencer event viewer/filter."
http://www.alsa-project.org/~iwai/alsa.html
* net-analyzer/wepattack : "WLAN tool for breaking 802.11 WEP keys"
http://wepattack.sourceforge.net/
* net-misc/bwwhois : "Perl-based whois client designed to work with the
new Shared Registration System" http://whois.bw.org/
* app-emacs/yc : "YC - Yet another Canna client on Emacsen."
http://www.ceres.dti.ne.jp/~knak/yc.html
Updates to notable packages
* sys-apps/portage - portage-2.0.47_pre1.ebuild;
portage-2.0.47_pre2.ebuild;
* kde-base/kde - kde-3.0.5a.ebuild;
* sys-kernel/* - development-sources-2.5.53.ebuild;
lolo-sources-2.4.20.1_pre6.ebuild; lolo-sources-2.4.20.1_pre7.ebuild;
lolo-sources-2.4.20.1_pre8.ebuild; openmosix-sources-2.4.20-r1.ebuild;
usermode-sources-2.4.19-r36.ebuild; usermode-sources-2.4.19-r37.ebuild;
usermode-sources-2.4.19-r38.ebuild; usermode-sources-2.4.19-r39.ebuild;
usermode-sources-2.4.19-r40.ebuild; xfs-sources-2.4.20_pre1.ebuild;
xfs-sources-2.4.20_pre2.ebuild;
* sys-devel/perl - perl-5.8.0-r7.ebuild;
6. Bugzilla
Summary
* Statistics
* Bugs of Note
Statistics
The Gentoo community uses Bugzilla (bugs.gentoo.org[45]) 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:
* 190 new bugs this week
* 1166 total bugs currently marked 'new'
* 535 total bugs curently assigned to developers
* 54 bugs that were previously closed have been reopened.
There are currently 1755 bugs open in bugzilla. Of these: 29 are labelled
'blocker', 74 are labelled 'critical', and 104 are labelled 'major'.
45. http://bugs.gentoo.org
The developers and teams with the highest apparent bug-related workload
are:
* Nicholas Jones[46], with 260 open bugs
* Martin Schlemmer[47], with 120 open bugs
* Brandon Low[48], with 105 open bugs
* The KDE Team[49], with 106 open bugs
* The Gnome Team[50], with 60 open bugs
Please lend them (and the entire development team) your best wishes,
toothbrush and continuing support.
46. mailto://carpaski@g.o
47. mailto://azarah@g.o
48. mailto://lostlogic@g.o
49. mailto://kde@g.o
50. mailto://gnome@g.o
Bugs of Note
Each week, we will single out a few bugs for special mention, because they
have been provoking significant discussions, they are particularly
problematic, they are amusing or simply because they struck our fancy.
This week's featured bugs are (in no particular order):
* Bug 9459[51] discusses apparent problems with intermittent file
corruption after incorrect shutdowns on ReiserFS using Gentoo-Sources.
* Bug 12537[52] discusses problems with the latest baselayout changing
the gid of smmsp - which provokes problems with sendmail.
* Bug 8324[53] critiques the lack of a keyboard language select (for
non-US keyboards) in the 1.4 install CD release candidate. Daniel Robbins
has indicated that this will be resolved by the final release.
* Bug 11384[54] discusses a problem compiling glibc using
-march=pentium4. The issue is apparently inherent in the current gcc code,
so it cannot be fixed. However, the bug is an excellent example of
interaction between the reporter and the developer.
* Bug 9633[55] indicates a problem with booting the 1.4 install CD
release candidate on certain architectures (Fujitsu P2000) without the
ability to specify boot parameters. Apparently,the resolution may require
a modification to the install kernel, which seems likely.
51. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9459
52. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12537
53. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8324
54. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11384
55. http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9633
7. Tips and Tricks
Getting information about installed packages
New Gentoo users often ask how to get a list of installed packages from
the Portage tree, but what many of those who give answers might not know
is the abundance of tools that can be used to do so. From Portage's
pkglist, the gentoolkit's qpkg and epm(an rpm work-alike), to walking the
/var/db/pkg/ directory structure yourself, there are definitely quite a
few choices. Here are two ways to list all installed packages, first using
pkglist (found in /usr/lib/portage/bin/, which is often not in $PATH), the
second running find on /var/db/pkg/:
Code Listing 7.1:
pkglist
Code Listing 7.2:
find /var/db/pkg/ -mindepth 2 -maxdepth 2 -printf "%P\n"
A list of files that belong to a package can be generated by either epm or
qpkg; to find out which files belong to the xmms package, try one of:
Code Listing 7.3:
epm -ql xmms
Code Listing 7.4:
qpkg -l xmms
And lastly, if you want to know to which package a file belongs, here are
two ways:
Code Listing 7.5:
epm -qf /usn/bin/namei
Code Listing 7.6:
qpkg -f /usr/bin/namei
8. Moves, Adds and Changes
Moves
The following developers recently left the Gentoo team:
* none this week
Adds
The following developers recently joined the Gentoo team:
* Jan Seidel (tuxus) -- MIPS
* John Lennard (yakmoose) -- win4lin
* Christian Birchinger (joker) -- Sparc
Changes
The following developers recently changed roles within the Gentoo project.
* none this week
9. Contribute to GWN
Interested in contributing to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter? Send us an
email[56]
56. gwn-feedback@g.o
10. GWN Feedback
Please send us your feedback[57] and help make GWN better.
57. gwn-feedback@g.o
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