For those that don't know, The Ubuntu Foundations Team is responsible for delivering the core Ubuntu system, which is common to the whole Ubuntu family of products and services. For the past couple months, I had the pleasure and honour to work with the Foundations team, assisting in preparation for the Foundations Track at UDS and planning for the 10.10 cycle.
Below I will give a brief summary of the major topics covered at UDS which, in turn, generated scheduled work items. They are listed in alphabetical order.
Boot Work
Several boot-related areas were identified for work during Maverick. These include the following:
- cd boot - by converting CD boot to use grub2 with its new graphical goodness, we will only need to maintain use of a single bootloader
- continued performance improvements
- grub2 framebuffer - the end goal being a near flicker-free graphical boot splash experience
- UEFI - support booting on systems that use UEFI firmware
Related blueprints:
btrfs
In Maverick, we will be adding support for btrfs. Our tasks include such work as making ureadahead work with btrfs, adding btrfs support to grub2, integration work, and features support.
Related blueprint:
Cleanup
Just after an LTS release is a perfect time to clean house. We will be taking this opportunity to do so, with such work as dropping unused/unneeded packages from the base system, double-checking package dependencies, and investigating space-saving measures.
Related blueprints:
Installer Redesign
The installer is getting a serious make-over. Foundations and the Design team are working very closely together, improving the workflow, minimizing user clicks, improving the look-and-feel, and providing utility with increased ease of use.
Related blueprint:
Software Center
We want to get new applications into the Software Center, ideally providing developers with a means of generating revenue with the applications. For the former, we need to define some good social and technical processes to ensure ongoing quality and excellent producer/consumer experience. In conjunction with that, we need to work on getting a billing system in place.
Related blueprint:
Upstart is getting major work this cycle. New and improved features include the following:
- Manual mode
- Resource limits
- Dependencies
- Better support for UIs that want to use Upstart
- Simple skeleton to make life easier for sysadmins
- Provide an API for services and tasks so that folks don't have to think about the event-based model if they don't need to
- Explore the conversion of conf files into jobs
- Possibly extend the debug capabilities into an interactive mode
- Improve job disabling
Foundations will also be working closely with the server team to get their init scripts converted to Upstart. Conversely, the Kernel team will be providing new features that will allow Foundations to fully develop the planned Upstart features.
Related blueprint:
Miscellaneous
There is lots of other work we'll be doing, some of which are highlighted in the following:
- i686 Default Compile
- Stop building the ia64 and sparc community ports
- Multiarch Support for gcc, binutils, dpkg, and apt
- Foundations Python improvements
- Upgrade and install testing
Related blueprints:
6 comments:
Just an idea:
If you want to allow developpers to sell their apps in the Ubuntu Software Center, why not add a button to voluntarily donate money to free software developpers? Shouldn't be too much work once the payment infrastructure is set up.
Thanks for the update. It's very interesting and useful to have all this information on what to expect for the release in one place.
flow,
you should also share your thoughts with the Desktop and Launchpad teams, as Foundations is coordinating with them for these tasks.
atallcostsky,
great! glad you find it useful :-)
The m686 blueprint is a blank wiki template. Anyhow, the gobby document shows that this wasn't properly investigated. FWIW, choosing anything newer than 586 will essentially kill LTSP on Ubuntu, since most thin client hardware out there runs on 586-compatible chipsets.
One thing I always install these days is Matt Parnell's apt-fast script, which gives far faster results than apt-get with no drawbacks I have seen thus far. I suggest making it a part of the foundation by default. http://www.mattparnell.com/projects/apt-fast-and-axel-roughly-26x-faster-apt-get-installations-and-upgrades.html
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