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Quantum Unveils 156TB DXi6800 Disk Backup Solution

The DXi6800 fits between the company’s mid-range 6700 and high-end 8500 models, and is designed to take on products from market leader EMC’s DataDomain range of storage solutions.

Samsung: The only Android Smartphone Maker that Matters

The latest smartphone figures from analyst firm comScore show that Samsung is pretty much the only Android phone maker that matters.

AF_BUS, D-Bus, and the Linux kernel

There’s been a lot of information scattered around the internet about these topic recently, so here’s my attempt to put them all in one place to (hopefully) settle things down and give my inbox a break.

Last week I spent a number of days at the GNOME Developer Hackfest in Brussels, with the goal to help make the ability to distribute applications written for GNOME (and even more generally, Linux) in a better manner. A great summary of what happened there can be found in this H-Online article. Also please read Alexander Larsson’s great summary of what we discussed and worked on for another view of this.

Both of these articles allude to the fact that I’m working on putting the D-Bus protocol into the kernel, in order to help achieve these larger goals of proper IPC for applications. And I’d like to confirm that yes, this is true, but it’s not going to be D-Bus like you know it today.

Our goal (and I use “goal” in a very rough term, I have 8 pages of scribbled notes describing what we want to try to implement here), is to provide a reliable multicast and point-to-point messaging system for the kernel, that will work quickly and securely. On top of this kernel feature, we will try to provide a “libdbus” interface that allows existing D-Bus users to work without ever knowing the D-Bus daemon was replaced on their system.

 

nothing blocks

 

“But Greg!” some of you will shout, “What about the existing AF_BUS kernel patches that have been floating around for a while and that you put into the LTSI 3.4 kernel release?”

The existing AF_BUS patches are great for users who need a very low-latency, high-speed, D-Bus protocol on their system. This includes the crazy automotive Linux developers, who try to shove tens of thousands of D-Bus messages through their system at boot time, all while using extremely underpowered processors. For this reason, I included the AF_BUS patches in the LTSI kernel release, as that limited application can benefit from them.

Please remember the LTSI kernel is just like a distro kernel, it has no relation to upstream kernel development other than being a consumer of it. Patches are in this kernel because the LTSI member groups need them, they aren’t always upstream, just like all Linux distro kernels work.

However, given that the AF_BUS patches have been rejected by the upstream Linux kernel developers, I advise that anyone relying on them be very careful about their usage, and be prepared to move away from them sometime in the future when this new “kernel dbus” code is properly merged.

As for when this new kernel code will be finished, I can only respond with the traditional “when it is done” mantra. I can’t provide any deadlines, and at this point in time, don’t need any additional help with it, we have enough people working on it at the moment. It’s available publicly if you really want to see it, but I’ll not link to it as it’s nothing you really want to see or watch right now. When it gets to a usable state, I’ll announce it in the usual places (linux-kernel mailing list) where it will be torn to the usual shreds and I will rewrite it all again to get it into a mergable state.

In the meantime, if you see me at any of the many Linux conferences I’ll be attending around the world this year, and you are curious about the current status, buy me a beer and I’ll be glad to discuss it in person.

If there’s anything else people are wondering about this topic, feel free to comment on it here on google+, or
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How To Integrate ClamAV Into PureFTPd For Virus Scanning On Fedora 18

How To Integrate ClamAV Into PureFTPd For Virus Scanning On Fedora 18

This tutorial explains how you can integrate ClamAV into PureFTPd for virus scanning on a Fedora 18 system. In the end, whenever a file gets uploaded through PureFTPd, ClamAV will check the file and delete it if it is malware.

Read more at HowtoForge

Mandriva Pulse2 Gets a New Release, Moves on to the Next Level

Paris, the 8th of February 2013. Mandriva S.A. the leading European software vendor announces the immediate release of its new version of Pulse2, the market leader in open source I.T. infrastructure management platforms.

Building on a solid foundation and several years of successful deployments Mandriva Pulse2 ships with many improvements and several new features. Among them the integration with GLPI and the use of FusionInventory as its default inventory engine bring numerous enhancements and enable the use of Pulse2 inside organizations that were previously unable to expand their I.T. management capabilities despite growing needs of compliance and costs reduction.

Read more at Official Mandriva Blog

John Shalf on Energy Efficiency and its Impact on Requirements for Future Programming Environments

 In this video, HPC Rockstar John Shalf from LBNL presents: Energy Efficiency and its Impact on Requirements for Future Programming Environments. The presentation was recorded at the HPC Advisory Council Stanford Conference 2013. Download the slides (PDF).

Read more at insideHPC

Q4 Smartphone Shipments Reflect Android and Samsung Momentum

Market researchers at Canalys, which tracks mobile phone shipments in more than 50 countries, have just published their shipment estimates for Q4 of 2012, and the results show that it’s an Android-powered world. According to the report, the worldwide smartphone market grew 37% in 2012. Android smart phones accounted for 34% of all phone shipments and iOS phones 11%. Clearly, Android is making its mark.

Smartphones represented almost 50% of all the phones that shipped in Q4 2012, according to Canalys. Here are some of the other key findings.

 

 
Read more at Ostatic

7 Essential Predictions For Mobile Apps In The Enterprise

Guest author Chris O’Connor is chief executive of mobile solutions provider Taptera.

The booming mobile applications market is a hot topic right now at many a water cooler in Silicon Valley and beyond. I’ve toiled in the mobile market since 2007 and in those  years I’ve witnessed more than my fair share of changes – some entirely predictable – others not so much. Relying on the wisdom that comes with a decade-plus in the business, I’d like to offer a few educated guesses as to what’s next in enterprise mobile apps.

A Mobile Crystal Ball

Here are seven predictions for the mobile apps market in the coming year:

1. Mobile Tools For Salespeople. Mobile devices are the business tool of choice for most salespeople. As a result, there will be even more new apps that cater to these often-mobile employees. Look for apps that allow salespeople to more effectively pitch prospective clients, make presentations to existing ones and update opportunities, all while they’re away from the office. 

Read more at ReadWriteEnterprise

BSDs Struggle With Open-Source Graphics Drivers

While there’s plenty of code pouring into the Linux world for bettering open-source graphics drivers from desktop graphics cards to ARM SoCs, in the *BSD world they are struggling with their graphics driver support. Matthieu Herrb gave a presentation on the (rather poor) state of graphics on Unix-like platforms outside of Linux…

Read more at Phoronix

The Impossible Quest for the Most Popular Linux Distro

Linux lacks any clear-cut system for determining which is the most popular or the best distribution, or which desktop environment is used more than others. That may be one of the major frustrations among Linux developers trying to spread the word about adopting the Linux desktop instead of Microsoft Windows or Apple’s OS X. Linux, like the countless denominations of religions, is a product of technology, ideology and endless options. Unlike its competitors, the Linux OS is not sold. It just is available to those who know about it.

 

Read more at LinuxInsider