Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-03 Thread Bryan Berry
On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 18:57 +1300, Martin Langhoff wrote: On Fri, Oct 3, 2008 at 6:52 PM, Bryan Berry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dans can use a good bit of memory but I haven't really calculated how much. Top shows me a lot dansguardian processes, each using about 10K of RES memory, 980 of

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-03 Thread Andrew McMillan
On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 18:57 +1300, Martin Langhoff wrote: Am I right in thinking that DG is actually a custom apache or an apache with a custom config + a DG module? Hi Martin, I don't think that's correct... As I understand it, Dansguardian is a layer that sits in front of squid. The

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Bryan Berry
of the problems we are having. I strongly agree that, while Moodle is important, a lot of work needs to be done on ejabberd and dansguardian. Message: 1 Date: Wed, 01 Oct 2008 12:42:19 -0400 From: Greg Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Bryan Berry
Wad, you're right that Dansguardian is a can of worms but it is a very important can of worms that needs to work w/ minimal configuration, at least initially. I would say that the initial install should set a medium level of restriction and then leave it to the local deployment teams to tweak it

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Martin Langhoff
On Thu, Oct 2, 2008 at 5:42 AM, Greg Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On your question of who is waiting for XS 0.5, I know of at least two deployments that are building labs and testing configurations with XS software: Paraguay Birmingham Those two appear to be a bit later. We can probably

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Bryan Berry
I don't have time currently to work on this but I will ask Tony and our interns Avash and Aakash to work on this. On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 00:37 -0400, John Watlington wrote: Perhaps you want to suggest a specific set of configuration files that provides what you consider a medium level of

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Bryan Berry
On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 18:09 +1300, Martin Langhoff wrote: On Fri, Oct 3, 2008 at 4:51 PM, Bryan Berry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: We will be setting up two labs here in Nepal, one in the next couple weeks and likely one in the first week of November at Nepal's Dept of Education. Depending on

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-02 Thread Martin Langhoff
On Fri, Oct 3, 2008 at 6:22 PM, Bryan Berry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: How happy are you with DanGuardian? Is it a useful filter? We use it internally w/in our office and we are happy w/ it. We use it locally to eat our own dog food. By default it blocks a lot if not most content on the

Re: [Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-10-01 Thread Greg Smith
Hi Martin, Thanks for the update! Its great to see all the items planned for or in 0.5: http://dev.laptop.org/query?status=assignedstatus=closedstatus=newstatus=reopenedorder=prioritycol=idcol=summarycol=statuscol=typecol=prioritycol=componentmilestone=xs-0.5 On your question of who is waiting

[Server-devel] What's cooking in the XS pot this week (2008-10--01)

2008-09-30 Thread Martin Langhoff
Overall, XS 0.5 is looking shaping up nicely... and late. The F9 port took quite a bit more time to get finished off, perhaps because I tried too hard to get it work relatively well, and uncovered a whole lot of problems with it -- it was a good thing to do as we now have fixes for all of them