CommonCustomizations
Launchpad Entry: https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+spec/xdeltas
Created: Date(2006-06-21T06:53:01Z) by MattZimmerman
Contributors: MattZimmerman, AndreasLloyd (Gobby dump clean-up and presentation)
Packages affected:
Summary
Rationale
Use cases
Scope
Design
- A list of what the scripts and guides actually do
- A todo list for improvements we can make so that they aren't necessary
- A set of instructions for the community about how to avoid these scripts and help us implement proper solutions
- an explanation of the things we can't or won't adopt
Implementation
Code
Data preservation and migration
Outstanding issues
Dissection of community scripts and how-tos
EasyUbuntu
Easy Ubuntu is a community script, maintained at http://easyubuntu.freecontrib.org/ It uses a GUI to allow the user to choose to do the following:
- Swapping totem-xine for totem-gstreamer
- we believe this is now obsolete; totem-gstreamer should work as well and is more flexible
- Freecodes
- installs multimedia codecs
covered by the EasyCodecInstallation spec
- libdvdcss
- installs libdvdcss package
- cannot be adopted. See explanation below.
* midi
- installs timidity, timidity-interfaces-extra and freepats: midi playback in the desktop still doesn't seem to work, but selecting a midi file in firefox will launch timidity in the background (Soren: i think there's some sort of integration between alsa and timidity available that emulates a midi playback device which in turn sends the midi stream to timidity.) dsilvers: Indeed there is, and it's documented in the timididy README.Debian so it needs to be made easier(default when there's no hardware midi device available?) perhaps?
- too large to include on the CD
- timidity already depends on freepats
* Flash
- We already have flashplugin-nonfree -- do we need more?
- already in Gnome Application Installer (g-a-i)
- gnash is supposedly getting better support for newer SWF features -- may be useful for amd64 systems in the future
- Java
- Installs non-free Java
- Is there a suitable free implementation?
- We ship free java in main, but it isn't generally useful for running popular apps
- Videos -- embedded into web pages
- installs totem-gstreamer-firefox-plugin and kaffeine-mozilla
- totem-gstreamer-firefox-plugin has proven unstable in the past, but is under consideration for Edgy already
- mozilla-mplayer from multiverse (or something like that) is working quite nicely for some
- RAR (support for proprietary file compression format)
- installs non-free rar tools
- ACE (support for proprietary file compression format)
- the free version of rar doesn't even support listing the content of an archiveACE - installs unace from universe
- file-roller doesn't seem to integrate with it, so only command-line support
- Repository list
this is covered by https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+spec/enabling-additional-components
- Fonts
- installs msttcorefonts (non-free), gsfonts-x11 (free, but useful?), xfonts-intl-european (free, but useful?)
- Expect that most users benefit from msttcorefonts and the others are noise. msttcorefonts cannot be added to Ubuntu - see explanation below.
- the installation of the ms fonts is covered by the desktop guide and we also have got a virtual "application" for it in gnome-app-install
- DMA - on Breezy, this installed a hardcoded hdparm.conf. On Dapper, it does nothing
- The Dapper kernel now enables DMA where it is known-safe
- nvidia video drivers
- installs non-free driver and correctly enables
- ati video drives
- installs non-free driver, doesn't seem to enable
- wengo (free SIP phone)
- installs package from Universe
- in gnome-app-install for those who want it
- skype - installs non-free package
- Investigate adding skype to gnome-app-install
Automatix
Automatix is a community script, maintained at http://www.getautomatix.com/ It does not seem to have source packages in repository, and is written in sh. The german version has some serious issues currently: removes its own files instead of using the packaging system. uses apt-get --force and --assume-yes
It install most of the packages that EasyUbuntu offers as well as the following:
- Acrobat reader (proprietary .pdf-reader which can be used with Firefox plugin (see below))
- installs non-free package
- Is available in gnome-app-install
- AMSN (a F/OSS chat program that copies the look and feel of MSN Messenger, for those users who are used to that)
- installs package from universe
- Is available in gnome-app-install
- aMule (P2P application)
- installs package from universe
- Is available in gnome-app-install
- avidemux
- installs package from universe
- Is available in gnome-app-install
- backup and restore
- installs sbackup from universe
https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+spec/home-user-backup is meant as a better solution
- bittorrent clients
- installs bittornado and azureus from universe
- The default bittorrent that comes with Dapper has a far easier GUI so it's more useful for new users
- azureus is in gnome-app-install
- doesn't install the GUI for bittornado; what's the point?
- boot-up manager
installs bum [http://www.marzocca.net/linux/bum.html] from universe
- perl-gtk application to enable/disable services
- We ship services-admin already, which provides a simpler interface
- checkgmail (system tray application which notifies of new mail in gmail)
- installs checkgmail by downloading hardcoded .debs from Debian (which will be synced to Ubuntu when syncing starts for Edgy...)
- we already have gmail-notify and kcheckgmail in universe
- ctrl-alt-del
- configures GNOME shortcut for ctrl-alt-del to launch gnome-system-monitor (similar to Windows)
gconftool-2 -t str --set /apps/metacity/global_keybindings/run_command_9 "<Control><Alt>Delete" && gconftool-2 -t str --set /apps/metacity/keybinding_commands/command_9 "gnome-system-monitor"
- This key-combination does nothing by default; why not this?
- Maybe more appropriate to open the logout dialog?
DCPP (P2P client) maintained at http://linuxdcpp.berlios.de/
- installs linuxdcpp by untarring in /opt
- Is already in universe
- Has been failing to build for some time, but may be trivially fixable (missing build-dep)
- Has a .desktop file, should appear in g-a-i
- Debian Menu
- enables the Debian menu
- we don't want this; packages should provide XDG .desktop files instead
- DVD ripper
- installs dvdrip (command-line program) from multiverse
- Eject CD
- disables tray locking on CD-ROM drive
- We do better than this in Dapper; HAL sends a signal and the device is unmounted cleanly
- GAIM beta
- adds a people.ubuntu.com source to get beta GAIM .debs
- for use as a msn replacement, more usable than gaim1.5 (offical MSN client has increased functionality)
- Firefox 1.5 plugins
- installs Sun Java, Flash, msttcorefonts(?), mozilla-acroread, mozilla-mplayer
- Sun Java, Flash and msttcorefonts are already in g-a-i
- mozilla-acroread and mozilla-mplayer should be added
- Frostwire (P2P client)
- installed by downloading third party .deb
- GPL
- gdesklets (desktop applets for GNOME)
- installs gdesklets gdesklets-data from universe
- gdesklets depends on gdesklets-data
- available in gnome-app-install for those who want it
- gftp
- installs gftp from universe, which installs gftp-gtk and gftp-text
- gftp-gtk is in main and available in gnome-app-install
- gnomebaker
- installs gnomebaker from universe
- is available in gnome-app-install
- how does this compare to Nautilus/Serpentine?
- wifi-setup
- installs ndiswrapper, ndis-gtk and network-manager-gnome
- ndiswrapper is just a command line app
- ndis-gtk integration could be included it in g-a-i or by default
- network-manager-gnome is in gnome-app-install
a spec about wireless client : https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+spec/comprehensive-coherent-wireless-client
- gnomeppp
- installs gnomeppp
listen media manager (http://listengnome.free.fr/)
- installs third party deb of Listen
- media players
- package realplayer in commercial
- totem-xine is not in g-a-i (totem-gstreamer is)
- vlc is in g-a-i
- beep-media-player is in g-a-i
- nautilus-scripts
- opens a root terminal in the correct directory
- opens the selected file in gedit as user root
- starts the gnome-search-tool with the current path
- Numlock ON
- installs numlockx from universe
- replaces /etc/X11/gdm/Init/Default with a version that runs numlockx
- should really be part of gnome, in keyboard preferences or something
- Opera Browser
- Installs the Sun JRE and other dependencies of Opera
- Installs a third-party xlibs .deb(!)
- Adds the Opera .deb repository to sources.list
- Installs the opera .deb
- Installs a custom .desktop file
- Opera should go in the commercial repo (that will handle all dependencies)
- Programming tools
- Installs anjuta, bluefish, screem and nvu from universe
- all of these are in g-a-i
- Rhythmbox
- Downloads a pre-release rhythmbox .deb from people.ubuntu.com/~seb128 and installs it
- Ripper and Tuner
- Installs streamripper, streamtuner, xmms from universe
- streamripper: command line tool
- streamtuner is in g-a-i
- xmms is in g-a-i
- Sun Java 1.5 JRE
- Installs sun-java5-jre from multiverse
- is in g-a-i
- Sun Java 1.5 SDK
- Installs sun-java5-sdk from multiverse
- is in g-a-i
- Swiftfox Browser
Installs swiftfox (http://www.getswiftfox.com/, a binary firefox build) from a tarball
- given compelling benchmarks, we would consider building our firefox for 686 instead
- Swiftfox plugins
- Installs sun-java5-plugin msttcorefonts acroread mozilla-acroread mplayer-386 mplayer-fonts mozilla-mplayer from multiverse
- Clobbers totem firefox plugin if it is installed
- Cannot be included in Ubuntu - see explanation below.
- Thunderbird 1.5
- Installs mozilla-thunderbird from main
- in g-a-i
- Wine
- Adds wine.lowvoice.nl repository to sources.list and installs wine package from there
- Ubuntu a version of Wine in g-a-i
- XChat
- Installs xchat, xchat-systray from universe
- xchat-gnome is rumoured to do what xchat-systray does
- NVIDIA Cards
- If a PCI device in a hardcoded list is present:
- Installs nvidia-glx and l-r-m
- Runs nvidia-xconfig (which is the wrong thing to do)
- nvidia-glx should automagically configure itself upon installation
- Laptop-wifi
- Installs ndisgtk (a GTK configuration thing for ndiswrapper)
- Installs network-manager-{gnome,kde} depending on which env you're in when running it.
- as above
PLF Repositoty
A community repository that offers various controversial packages. Maintained at http://wiki.ubuntu-fr.org/doc/plf, http://plf.zarb.org/
Contains the following:
- "free" component
- deCSS
- "non-free" component
- realplayer
- w32codecs
Ubuntu cannot include any of this for copyright reasons (not patents). For further explanation, see below.
Multimedia howto on ubuntuforums by ubuntu_demon
howto found at http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=186792
Contains instructions on how to install codecs, Java and Flash from multiverse, universe and cipherfunk repositories. Again, Ubuntu cannot include the codecs, Java and Flash is discussed above.
Ubuntu Guide
Another community how-to. Offers instructions on how to enable universe and plf repositories and on how to install many of the above packages as well as the following:
- Clipboard daemon for GNOME
Download and unpack a tarball directly to /usr/bin (http://easylinux.info/uploads/gnome-clipboard-daemon-1.0.bin.tar.bz2)
- chown and chmod it
- run it.
- Seems to recommend running gnome-clipboard-daemon in a crontab @reboot rule(?!)
- Surely we can do better?
gnome includes a partial fix for this stuff, JeffWaugh will link to upstream discussion about this
- Winpopup (linpopup)
- Install linpopup from universe
- Manually create a .desktop in /usr/share/applications
- should have a .desktop file added to the package, will appear in g-a-i
- Multimedia codecs
- installs all the gstreamer plugin packages from Ubuntu
- these are in g-a-i
- DVD support
- install libdvdread3 from main
- Run the install-css.sh
- Install totem-xine
- Multimedia player (xine-ui)
- installs xine-ui from universe
- Bodges the autoplay_dvd_command to run xine
- Futzes the default app from totem to xine in /usr/share/applications
Joe Brockmeier's 10 Ubuntu tips
Another community guide. Contains instructions to:
- Getting multimedia to work
- Should be adequately addressed above
- Changing the default editor from nano to vim
- ???
- How to install packages
- Suggests Synaptic and Adept -- but not gnome-app-install?
- Sudo and gksudo
- Documentation issue, covered by existing docs
- Add users to sudo
- Documentation issue
- Adding a new desktop
- Introduction to -desktop metapackages; not necessarily a good idea for most users
- How to reconfigure X.org
- We don't cope automatically with hardware changes yet
- How to configure autologin
- Documentation issue
- Compiling from source
- gcc and build-essential -- mdz supports installing these by default
- checkinstall (not recommended for quality reasons)
- Installing an optimized kernel
- Done automatically on the DVD
- No space for it on the CD
Implementation
The following
- add an icon in gnome-app-install which installs timidity
* Sun java is available and easily installed via g-a-i, but only installs sun-java5-bin and not the (browser) plugin, which is only Suggested
- Include an additional .desktop file for the browser plugin, or a bundle which installs both, or upgrade Suggests to Recommends
- JSS libraries are needed to allow user certificates (and digital signatures) to work with firefox (allowing e-government processes). We have them packaged for guadalinex.
msttcorefonts - Description in gnome-app-install could be clarified (says "TrueType core fonts")
- nvidia
- installs non-free driver and correctly enables
- should add to gnome-app-install and automatically enable
- ati
- installs non-free driver, doesn't seem to enable
- should add to gnome-app-install and automatically enabled
- skype - installs non-free package
- Investigate adding skype to gnome-app-install
- Consider moving Azareus to main if it is confirmed to work well with current free Java in edgy
- boot-up manager
installs bum [http://www.marzocca.net/linux/bum.html] from universe
- perl-gtk application to enable/disable services
- We ship services-admin already, which provides a simpler interface
- Consider adding an option to services-admin to display a full list of services for power users
- ctrl-alt-del
- configures GNOME shortcut for ctrl-alt-del to launch gnome-system-monitor (similar to Windows)
gconftool-2 -t str --set /apps/metacity/global_keybindings/run_command_9 "<Control><Alt>Delete" && gconftool-2 -t str --set /apps/metacity/keybinding_commands/command_9 "gnome-system-monitor"
- This key-combination does nothing by default; why not this?
- Maybe more appropriate to open the logout dialog?
- GAIM beta
- adds a people.ubuntu.com source to get beta GAIM .debs
- for use as a msn replacement, more usable than gaim1.5 (offical MSN client has increased functionality)
- Consider for dapper-backports
- Firefox 1.5 plugins
- installs Sun Java, Flash, msttcorefonts(?), mozilla-acroread, mozilla-mplayer
- Sun Java, Flash and msttcorefonts are already in g-a-i
- mozilla-acroread and mozilla-mplayer should be added
- Frostwire (P2P client)
- installed by downloading third party .deb
- GPL
- should be packaged for universe and in g-a-i
- wifi-setup
- ndis-gtk integration could be included it in g-a-i or by default
- Gnome PPP
JeffWaugh to check back in the archives about why gnome-ppp wasn't included in GNOME upstream
listen media manager (http://listengnome.free.fr/)
- installs third party deb of Listen
- put it in universe
- package realplayer in commercial
- totem-xine is not in g-a-i (totem-gstreamer is)
- should we put both in g-a-i?
* add bmp-docklet from http://www.fuckbirdflu.com/automatix/bmp-docklet_1.2-1_i386.deb
- nautilus-scripts
- nautilus-actions should be in g-a-i
- Numlock ON
- installs numlockx from universe
- replaces /etc/X11/gdm/Init/Default with a version that runs numlockx
- should really be part of gnome, in keyboard preferences or something
- Opera should go in the commercial repo (that will handle all dependencies)
- Rhythmbox
- Downloads a pre-release rhythmbox .deb from people.ubuntu.com/~seb128 and installs it
- apply pressure to upstream to ship more regularly, possibly use backports
- Swiftfox Browser
Installs swiftfox (http://www.getswiftfox.com/, a binary firefox build) from a tarball
- given compelling benchmarks, we would consider building our firefox for 686 instead
- Wine
- Adds wine.lowvoice.nl repository to sources.list and installs wine package from there
- should look at this package and see what differs from ours in universe
- ours is in g-a-i
- Winpopup (linpopup)
- Install linpopup from universe
- Manually create a .desktop in /usr/share/applications
- should have a .desktop file added to the package, will appear in g-a-i
7. How to reconfigure X.org
- We don't cope automatically with hardware changes yet
- Need a better way to recover from incorrect autodetection
Need a better way to recover from incorrect autodetection (https://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+spec/simple-x-mode-selection should solve most problems)
- Clipboard daemon for GNOME
Download and unpack a tarball directly to /usr/bin (http://easylinux.info/uploads/gnome-clipboard-daemon-1.0.bin.tar.bz2)
- chown and chmod it
- run it.
- Seems to recommend running gnome-clipboard-daemon in a crontab @reboot rule(?!)
- Surely we can do better?
gnome includes a partial fix for this stuff, JeffWaugh will link to upstream discussion about this
Code
Data preservation and migration
Outstanding issues
Gobby dump
General
- Planned enhancements to gnome-app-install will make finding many of these packages easier, as the most popular applications in its list will be sorted to the top
- g-a-i relies on good keywords in package descriptions. We should study user behaviour to see what keywords they are using to find these applications, and make them easier to find good keywords would be: mp3, dvd (bring up gstreamer extra plugins), flash (bring up flash plugin) etc.
IMHO all average desktop users benefit by having universe and multiverse enabled by default. But this is not useful for corporate use. as long as the ui continues to indicate main vs. universe/multiverse when installing packages through synaptic/smart/etc in the future. I agree. also in enterprise use if the selection packages is centrally deployed they can take care to avoid universe when necessary. We still install lots of universe packages at umn.
needed : firefox totem plugin installed byu deault (or mplayer or something else) its nice to use totem for playback because it follows gstreamer preferences, but mplayer seems to have the highest success of playback. in my personal experiences mplayer and totem-gstreamer are almost equal .. some videos don't play using totem and other don't play using mplayer. but therefor totem-gstreamer is probably the better choice How does totem-gstreamer handle non-free win32 dlls these days -- it seemed to be difficult to configure. It does some magic with ffmpeg, I think. It seems to kind of work.. sometimes theres some package on cipherpunk .. pitfdll or something. i think it works for most wmv's except the newest ones(wmv 10 doesnt work at all AFAIK) it appears pitfdll is in dapper at least.great! I know I'm jumping in late, but what about VLC?
extra artwork
gnome-themes-extras nice
ubuntu-calendar AFAIK it doesn't get used very much by users but it can't hurt
compiz/aiglx/xgl currently needs a warning
- ((I tried it on a geforce 3 when Dapper was still in development I stopped trying after a bit of time though))
- compiz.net -forums for aiglx/xgl/compiz howtos for ubuntu (and other distros) * xgl.compiz.info repositories contain cvs debs of compiz, aiglx, xgl and
- associated xlibs, as well as patched parts of gnome to make compiz function
- many users report sucess
- aiglx/compiz/i810 has wacky breakages in it like password dialogs don't draw right and sustpend is broken. must make sure users understand that this has a