On Wed, 2015-07-08 at 16:48 +1000, James Cameron wrote: > Yes, OLPC is also an RPM distribution based on Fedora. > > We are also packaging Sugar and activities using Debian. > > I'm not aware of any announcement. Hmm, OK. In that case, welcome to the derivatives census! https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/Census/OLPC It would be great if you could join our mailing list and IRC channel: https://wiki.debian.org/DerivativesFrontDesk I would encourage you to look at Debian's guidelines for derivatives: https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/Guidelines You may want to look at our census QA page, some of the mails from there may apply to OLPC. https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/CensusQA You don't appear to be subscribed to the OLPC census page, I've made a few changes to the OLPC census page: https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/Census/OLPC?action=info I note that the page says that OLPC is based on Ubuntu but there is a stretch suite in the repo. Are you planning on a transition to being based on Debian? The page says that OLPC modifies Debian binary packages. It is quite rare that distributions modify Debian binary packages instead of modifying source packages and rebuilding them. Does OLPC actually do this? If so could you describe what kind of modifications you are making? If not I guess the page needs to be fixed. Some of the Release files in the apt repository for OLPC are missing the Valid-Until header, which allows clients to find out when active network attackers are holding back newer Release files. At minimum, rolling releases and suites containing security updates should have this header. With reprepro you can use the ValidFor config option. https://wiki.debian.org/RepositoryFormat#Date.2CValid-Until The page has a dpkg vendor field of 'Ubuntu', we would suggest that systems running the OLPC Debian/Ubuntu packages should use OLPC as the vendor instead. https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/Guidelines#Vendor I've added the OLPC blog to Planet Debian derivatives which helps the Debian community find out the things that are happening in the world of Debian derivatives. It would be interesting to have a post on the OLPC blog about OLPC's experiences with Debian. http://planet.debian.org/deriv/ This year the annual Debian conference is in Germany. It would be great if developers from OLPC could attend DebConf. If this isn't possible, next year DebConf will be in South Africa. http://debconf15.debconf.org/ I would encourage any attendees to volunteer to ensure the continued the success of the annual Debian conference, here are some examples of things that need helpers. https://wiki.debconf.org/wiki/DebConf13/VolunteerCoordination I note that OLPC has a stretch suite in the repository. A great way to help ensure that the next Debian release working well is to install and run the how-can-i-help tool and try to work on any issues that come up. http://www.lucas-nussbaum.net/blog/?p=837 https://packages.debian.org/unstable/how-can-i-help https://wiki.debian.org/how-can-i-help I would encourage OLPC folks to join the Debian sugar team: https://wiki.debian.org/SugarTeam You might want to consider adding DNSSEC to your domains, TLSA records and SSL to some of your domains. SSL on the repository will help OLPC users to obscure package names and version numbers from global active adversaries. You might also want to add HSTS headers. Please feel free to circulate this mail within the OLPC team. -- bye, pabs https://wiki.debian.org/PaulWise
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