Gentoo Archives: gentoo-gwn

From: Ulrich Plate <plate@g.o>
To: gentoo-gwn@l.g.o
Subject: [gentoo-gwn] Gentoo Weekly Newsletter 1 November 2004
Date: Mon, 01 Nov 2004 12:32:15
Message-Id: 20041101152648.72753e24.plate@gentoo.org
1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 Gentoo Weekly Newsletter
3 http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/current.xml
4 This is the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of 1 November 2004.
5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6
7 ==============
8 1. Gentoo News
9 ==============
10
11 Report from last week's Linux World Expo in Germany (Frankfurt)
12 ---------------------------------------------------------------
13
14 The Linux World Conference & Expo[1] in Frankfurt is one of Germany's top
15 5 specialized fairs, with 15,000 visitors and its main focus on commercial
16 Linux offerings. The exhibition serves as a platform for Linux products
17 and development, and is complemented by a conference program spanning all
18 three days. Gentoo was present in the ".org Pavilion" next to a lot of
19 other non-commercial community projects. The German non-profit association
20 "Förderverein Gentoo e.V."[2] had been in charge of organization, and
21 brought together more than ten Gentoo developers from Germany, Austria and
22 the Switzerland to man the booth.
23 1. http://www.linuxworldexpo.de
24 2. http://www.gentoo-ev.de
25
26 Figure 1.1: The Usual suspects
27 http://www.gentoo.org/images/gwn/20041101-lwe.jpg
28 Note: Left to right: zypher (Marc Hildebrand), dj-submerge (Marc Herren),
29 visiting GWN editor Ulrich Plate, swegener (Sven Wegener), crouching ian!
30 (Christian Hartmann), PyLon (Lars Weiler), yah (Markus van Bracht),
31 cybersystem (Markus Nigbur), amne (Wernfried Haas), stkn (Stefan Knoblich)
32 and tantive (Michael Imhof)
33
34 There was quite some interest in the large variety of supported platforms
35 displayed at the Gentoo booth this year, from various x86 and PPC laptops
36 to three Ultra-Sparc machines, and even a Siemens Primergy quadruple Xeon
37 server. With half a dozen hosts constantly building base systems or
38 emerging applications, a dedicated Mini-ITX based distfiles server was put
39 in place as a local repository right at the booth, very convenient for
40 both staff and Gentoo users passing by. Several visitors came to get
41 special support for their Gentoo installations, or just wanted to meet
42 some of the developers involved in the project. One of their most frequent
43 request was a "server edition" or "Enterprise Gentoo", with a more
44 stabilized tree and more comfort for updates in a production environment -
45 hardly surprising, since the LWE is a predominantly commercial trade fair.
46
47 Special LWE edition Gentoo x86 LiveCDs (nicknamed "Fizzlewizzle")
48 featuring German localizations of KDE, extensive documentation and a
49 nightview of Frankfurt's office district on the CD label were distributed
50 at the booth. Both the ISO image (remastered by Tobias Scherbaum[3]) and
51 Christian Hartmann's[4] artwork to print directly onto the media can be
52 downloaded from here[5].
53 3. dertobi123@g.o
54 4. ian@g.o
55 5.
56 http://download.iansview.com/gentoo/exhibitions/lwe-frankfurt/2004/livecd/
57
58 Figure 1.2: Gentoo LiveCD LWE edition cover
59 http://www.gentoo.org/images/gwn/20041101-livecd.jpg
60
61 Mixed messages were heard from neighboring exhibitors: While Sven Herzberg
62 of the Gnome[6] booth was kind enough to point out that Gentoo's bugzilla
63 (unlike his own project's older version) provides buglists in iCalendar
64 format for import into Evolution, Sun Microsystems had disappointing news
65 about the future availability of Java on the PowerPC platform - none
66 planned, unfortunately. Their project Looking Glass[7] remains quite an
67 eyecatcher, though.
68 6. http://www.gnome.org
69 7. http://www.sun.com/software/project-looking-glass
70
71 Call for help: Experienced J2EE developers needed
72 -------------------------------------------------
73
74 Karl Trygve Kalleberg[8] of Gentoo's Java team really needs help: "Judging
75 from the number of bugs and requests for feature enhancements that we've
76 been assigned in the recent past, there must have been increased interest
77 in Java applications since the release of Eclipse[9]," explains Karl. The
78 first request for additional help went out in August, but this time
79 there's a tad more urgency to it: If you're an experienced Java developer,
80 especially with a J2EE track record, please mail Karl[10] and the Gentoo
81 recruiters team[11] today.
82 8. karltk@g.o
83 9. http://www.eclipse.org
84 10. karltk@g.o
85 11. recruiters@g.o
86
87 Coming up: Gentoo Bugday on Saturday, 6 November 2004
88 -----------------------------------------------------
89
90 Gentoo Bugday is a monthly event where users and developers gather on IRC
91 to fix lots of bugs. This unique opportunity to meet the devs and directly
92 participate in fixing problems has been hugely successful, in the past. A
93 dedicated IRC channel has been set aside for this collaborative effort,
94 #gentoo-bugs on irc.freenode.org, and if you want to participate, all you
95 have to do is /join the channel.
96
97 ==================
98 2. Gentoo security
99 ==================
100
101 MySQL: Multiple vulnerabilities
102 -------------------------------
103
104 Several vulnerabilities including privilege abuse, Denial of Service, and
105 potentially remote arbitrary code execution have been discovered in MySQL.
106
107 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[12]
108 12. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-22.xml
109
110 Gaim: Multiple vulnerabilities
111 ------------------------------
112
113 Multiple vulnerabilities have been found in Gaim which could allow a
114 remote attacker to crash the application, or possibly execute arbitrary
115 code.
116
117 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[13]
118 13. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-23.xml
119
120 MIT krb5: Insecure temporary file use in send-pr.sh
121 ---------------------------------------------------
122
123 The send-pr.sh script, included in the mit-krb5 package, is vulnerable to
124 symlink attacks, potentially allowing a local user to overwrite arbitrary
125 files with the rights of the user running the utility.
126
127 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[14]
128 14. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-24.xml
129
130 Netatalk: Insecure tempfile handling in etc2ps.sh
131 -------------------------------------------------
132
133 The etc2ps.sh script, included in the Netatalk package, is vulnerable to
134 symlink attacks, potentially allowing a local user to overwrite arbitrary
135 files with the rights of the user running the utility.
136
137 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[15]
138 15. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-25.xml
139
140 socat: Format string vulnerability
141 ----------------------------------
142
143 socat contains a format string vulnerability that can potentially lead to
144 remote or local execution of arbitrary code with the privileges of the
145 socat process.
146
147 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[16]
148 16. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-26.xml
149
150 mpg123: Buffer overflow vulnerabilities
151 ---------------------------------------
152
153 Buffer overflow vulnerabilities have been found in mpg123 which could lead
154 to execution of arbitrary code.
155
156 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[17]
157 17. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-27.xml
158
159 rssh: Format string vulnerability
160 ---------------------------------
161
162 rssh is vulnerable to a format string vulnerability that allows arbitrary
163 execution of code with the rights of the connected user, thereby bypassing
164 rssh restrictions.
165
166 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[18]
167 18. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-28.xml
168
169 PuTTY: Pre-authentication buffer overflow
170 -----------------------------------------
171
172 PuTTY contains a vulnerability allowing an SSH server to execute arbitrary
173 code on the connecting client.
174
175 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[19]
176 19. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-29.xml
177
178 GPdf, KPDF, KOffice: Vulnerabilities in included xpdf
179 -----------------------------------------------------
180
181 GPdf, KPDF and KOffice all include vulnerable xpdf code to handle PDF
182 files, making them vulnerable to execution of arbitrary code upon viewing
183 a malicious PDF file.
184
185 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[20]
186 20. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-30.xml
187
188 Archive::Zip: Virus detection evasion
189 -------------------------------------
190
191 Email virus scanning software relying on Archive::Zip can be fooled into
192 thinking a ZIP attachment is empty while it contains a virus, allowing
193 detection evasion.
194
195 For more information, please see the GLSA Announcement[21]
196 21. http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200410-31.xml
197
198 =========================
199 3. Heard in the community
200 =========================
201
202 Web forums
203 ----------
204
205 To sleep - perchance to dream: ay, there's the patch
206
207 Ending many months of insomnia in PowerBooks, Gentoo/PPC developer JoseJX
208 reported in a Forum thread on Wednesday that Benjamin Herrenschmidt, the
209 PPC kernel maintainer, has published his latest enhancement to the power
210 management of portable Macs, more specifically for putting the aluminium
211 PowerBooks with ATi graphics chipsets to sleep. Benh's patch seems to
212 apply cleanly to Gentoo's development sources 2.6.9-r1, and a wave of
213 gratitude is washing over the PPC forum:
214
215 * Test patch for sleep on AluBooks[22]
216 22. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=243169
217
218 gentoo-user
219 -----------
220
221 Analogue distributions
222
223 Users commented on a new linux distribution vidalinux[23] which is based
224 on Gentoo. It uses the Gentoo system tools and portage as its package
225 manager.
226 23. http://www.vidalinux.com
227
228 * vidalinux[24]
229 24. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/105000
230
231 Master USE
232
233 Several discussions arose this week regarding USE flags in Portage. USE
234 flags provide a convenient approach to managing support and dependency
235 information when emerging packages. Understanding what flags are necessary
236 and how they might impact a system's configuration can be challenging for
237 new users.
238
239 * USE flags documentation[25]
240 * Choosing USE flags (and choosing well)[26]
241 * changed USE flags[27]
242 25. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/105145
243 26. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/105001
244 27. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/104703
245
246 Binary pop
247
248 One user noticed that etc-update was asking them to overwrite /etc/X11/xdm
249 binary files in addition to just configuration files.
250
251 * Portage: binaries seen as config files[28]
252 28. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/105121
253
254 gentoo-dev
255 ----------
256
257 A few glibc changes
258
259 Travis Tilley[29] has again done some (major) changes to Gentoo's glibc.
260 This includes enabling some sanity checks, and improved DNS and mDNS
261 handling.
262 29. lv@g.o
263
264 * A few glibc changes[30]
265 30. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/22501
266
267 "Planet Gentoo" blog aggregator
268
269 Daniel Drake[31] presents a proposal for a Gentoo Blog Aggregator to
270 provide users and developers with a better overview of developments in
271 Gentoo. The ensuing discussion centered more on the usefulness of such a
272 service, as many people dislike blogs.
273 31. dsd@g.o
274
275 * GLEP 30: "Planet Gentoo" web log aggregator[32]
276 32. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/22415
277
278 GLEP 29: USE flag grouping
279
280 In another GLEP started this week, Ciaran McCreesh[33] proposes some new
281 input on USE flag groups. This should enable users to select groups (for
282 example, @KDE, @MULTIMEDIA), but the fine details (what does @KDE -@GNOME
283 do?) are still not perfectly worked out.
284 33. ciaranm@g.o
285
286 * A GLEP 29: USE flag grouping[34]
287 34. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/22378
288
289 ======================
290 4. Gentoo in the press
291 ======================
292
293 Newsforge (30 October 2004)
294 ---------------------------
295
296 Joe Barr has written a tongue-in-cheek piece[35] answering the question
297 what the choice of Linux distributions says about a person. According to
298 Barr, Gentoo's motto is "If it moves, compile it," supposedly making it
299 the distribution most appealing to lone ranger types like John Wayne.
300 35. http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=04/10/30/1322227
301
302 ===========
303 5. Bugzilla
304 ===========
305
306 Summary
307 -------
308
309 * Statistics
310 * Closed bug ranking
311 * New bug rankings
312
313 Statistics
314 ----------
315
316 The Gentoo community uses Bugzilla (bugs.gentoo.org[36]) to record and
317 track bugs, notifications, suggestions and other interactions with the
318 development team. Between 24 October 2004 and 30 October 2004, activity on
319 the site has resulted in:
320 36. http://bugs.gentoo.org
321
322 * 802 new bugs during this period
323 * 378 bugs closed or resolved during this period
324 * 19 previously closed bugs were reopened this period
325
326 Of the 7368 currently open bugs: 115 are labeled 'blocker', 255 are
327 labeled 'critical', and 551 are labeled 'major'.
328
329 Closed bug rankings
330 -------------------
331
332 The developers and teams who have closed the most bugs during this period
333 are:
334
335 * Gentoo's Team for Core System packages[37], with 45 closed bugs[38]
336 * AMD64 Porting Team[39], with 25 closed bugs[40]
337 * Gentoo Security[41], with 19 closed bugs[42]
338 * Java team[43], with 14 closed bugs[44]
339 * netmon herd[45], with 13 closed bugs[46]
340 * Gentoo KDE team[47], with 12 closed bugs[48]
341 * Wine Maintainers[49], with 10 closed bugs[50]
342 * Gentoo Toolchain Maintainers[51], with 10 closed bugs[52]
343 37. base-system@g.o
344 38.
345 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=base-system@g.o
346 39. amd64@g.o
347 40.
348 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=amd64@g.o
349 41. security@g.o
350 42.
351 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=security@g.o
352 43. java@g.o
353 44.
354 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=java@g.o
355 45. netmon@g.o
356 46.
357 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=netmon@g.o
358 47. kde@g.o
359 48.
360 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=kde@g.o
361 49. wine@g.o
362 50.
363 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=wine@g.o
364 51. toolchain@g.o
365 52.
366 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=RESOLVED&bug_status=CLOSED&chfield=bug_status&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&resolution=FIXED&assigned_to=toolchain@g.o
367
368 New bug rankings
369 ----------------
370
371 The developers and teams who have been assigned the most new bugs during
372 this period are:
373
374 * Gentoo's Team for Core System packages[53], with 19 new bugs[54]
375 * Gentoo Linux Gnome Desktop Team[55], with 17 new bugs[56]
376 * AMD64 Porting Team[57], with 17 new bugs[58]
377 * Alpha Porters[59], with 15 new bugs[60]
378 * Gentoo Games[61], with 12 new bugs[62]
379 * Dylan Carlson[63], with 12 new bugs[64]
380 * Portage team[65], with 11 new bugs[66]
381 * Mozilla Gentoo Team[67], with 10 new bugs[68]
382 53. base-system@g.o
383 54.
384 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=base-system@g.o
385 55. gnome@g.o
386 56.
387 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=gnome@g.o
388 57. amd64@g.o
389 58.
390 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=amd64@g.o
391 59. alpha@g.o
392 60.
393 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=alpha@g.o
394 61. games@g.o
395 62.
396 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=games@g.o
397 63. absinthe@g.o
398 64.
399 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=absinthe@g.o
400 65. dev-portage@g.o
401 66.
402 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=dev-portage@g.o
403 67. mozilla@g.o
404 68.
405 http://bugs.gentoo.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&chfield=assigned_to&chfieldfrom=2004-10-24&chfieldto=2004-10-30&assigned_to=mozilla@g.o
406
407 ==================
408 6. Tips and Tricks
409 ==================
410
411 nice and PORTAGE_NICENESS
412 -------------------------
413
414 Last week's GWN introduced brandnew Portage features, this week we'd like
415 to take you back to a venerable, sturdy old feature that's hot
416 nonetheless: PORTAGE_NICENESS. Let's look at some basics first.
417
418 Very simply put, the Linux kernel has a (process) scheduler that selects
419 which process to run next in your system. One factor influencing the
420 scheduler's decision about which process to assign CPU time to, is the
421 priority of a process. Processes with a high priority will run before
422 those with a lower priority, and processes with the same priority will
423 take turns in running, one after the other and over again.
424
425 Better have a look at it for yourself: Run top from a terminal on your
426 host and pay special attention to the PR and NI columns:
427
428 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
429 | Code Listing 6.1: |
430 |Sample top |
431 output---------------------------------------------------------------------
432 ----
433 | |
434 | PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND |
435 | 8005 root 20 0 85188 33m 57m R 3.3 6.7 8:43.77 X |
436 | 8148 tobias 20 10 25624 2376 24m S 0.3 0.5 0:00.60 xscreensaver|
437 | 1 root 20 0 2476 552 2304 S 0.0 0.1 0:00.31 init |
438 | 2 root 39 19 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 ksoftirqd/0 |
439 | 3 root 15 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.09 events/0 |
440 | |
441 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
442
443 The PR column indicates the priority level of a process, the value in the
444 NI column displays the so-called nice value of process, which allows you
445 to adjust the priority of a running process. Possible values range from
446 -20 (very high priority), via 0 (standard priority) to 20 (very low
447 priority). In our little example the xscreensaver process has a higher
448 nice value than X, which indicates that X has a higher priority than
449 xscreensaver.
450
451 Now, how do we make this work to our advantage when using Portage?
452
453 If you keep using your computer while compiling packages you will notice
454 that your box is much less responsive as usal. This is caused by having
455 two "groups" of processes with the same nice priority: your usual running
456 tasks on one side, and emerge (and its child processes) on the other. Now,
457 if you could renice emerge and its children to a higher nice (i.e. lower
458 priority!) value, compiling would inevitably take somewhat longer, but you
459 could use your workstation without noticing much difference to its usual
460 performance. That's what the PORTAGE_NICENESS parameter in /etc/make.conf
461 is for:
462
463 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
464 | Code Listing 6.2: |
465 |Put this in |
466 /etc/make.conf-------------------------------------------------------------
467 ------------
468 | |
469 |PORTAGE_NICENESS="15" |
470 | |
471 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
472
473 You can generally "renice" individual processes from the commandline,
474 (e.g. renice 0 -p 8148 to prioritize xscreensaver in the above example),
475 but this will not work with emerge, as Portage reads the PORTAGE_NICENESS
476 setting from /etc/make.conf once and executes all child processes with the
477 specified nice value.
478
479 ===========================
480 7. Moves, adds, and changes
481 ===========================
482
483 Moves
484 -----
485
486 The following developers recently left the Gentoo team:
487
488 * None this week
489
490 Adds
491 ----
492
493 The following developers recently joined the Gentoo Linux team:
494
495 * None this week
496
497 Changes
498 -------
499
500 The following developers recently changed roles within the Gentoo Linux
501 project:
502
503 * None this week
504
505 ====================
506 8. Contribute to GWN
507 ====================
508
509 Interested in contributing to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter? Send us an
510 email[69].
511 69. gwn-feedback@g.o
512
513 ===============
514 9. GWN feedback
515 ===============
516
517 Please send us your feedback[70] and help make the GWN better.
518 70. gwn-feedback@g.o
519
520 ================================
521 10. GWN subscription information
522 ================================
523
524 To subscribe to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter, send a blank email to
525 gentoo-gwn-subscribe@g.o.
526
527 To unsubscribe to the Gentoo Weekly Newsletter, send a blank email to
528 gentoo-gwn-unsubscribe@g.o from the email address you are
529 subscribed under.
530
531 ===================
532 11. Other languages
533 ===================
534
535 The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter is also available in the following languages:
536
537 * Danish[71]
538 * Dutch[72]
539 * English[73]
540 * German[74]
541 * French[75]
542 * Japanese[76]
543 * Italian[77]
544 * Polish[78]
545 * Portuguese (Brazil)[79]
546 * Portuguese (Portugal)[80]
547 * Russian[81]
548 * Spanish[82]
549 * Turkish[83]
550 71. http://www.gentoo.org/news/da/gwn/gwn.xml
551 72. http://www.gentoo.org/news/be/gwn/gwn.xml
552 73. http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/gwn.xml
553 74. http://www.gentoo.org/news/de/gwn/gwn.xml
554 75. http://www.gentoo.org/news/fr/gwn/gwn.xml
555 76. http://www.gentoo.org/news/ja/gwn/gwn.xml
556 77. http://www.gentoo.org/news/it/gwn/gwn.xml
557 78. http://www.gentoo.org/news/pl/gwn/gwn.xml
558 79. http://www.gentoo.org/news/br/gwn/gwn.xml
559 80. http://www.gentoo.org/news/pt/gwn/gwn.xml
560 81. http://www.gentoo.org/news/ru/gwn/gwn.xml
561 82. http://www.gentoo.org/news/es/gwn/gwn.xml
562 83. http://www.gentoo.org/news/tr/gwn/gwn.xml
563
564 Ulrich Plate <plate@g.o> - Editor
565 Brian Downey <bdowney@×××××××××××.net> - Author
566 Patrick Lauer <patrick@g.o> - Author
567 Tobias Scherbaum <dertobi123@g.o> - Author
568 Emmet Wagle <ewagle@×××××.com> - Author
569 Lars Weiler <pylon@g.o> - Author
570
571
572 --
573 gentoo-gwn@g.o mailing list