Maybe you can try GNU Unifont.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Unifont
TTF format:http://www.lgm.cl/trabajos/unifont/index.en.html
Original Message
Sender:Yuri astrakhanyastrak...@wikimedia.org
Recipient:Wikimedia developerswikitec...@lists.wikimedia.org
Date:Wednesday, Jul 30, 2014 05:33
Subject
On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 2:25 AM, Krinkle wrote:
> Since Grade B never ended up being recognised in any way by the software,
> I've kept that out. And the previously undocumented Grade C represents
> browsers we are interested in supporting due to their traffic but only via
> the non-javascript mo
Chris S.,
I agree that in many cases an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
I will also say that I feel that you're a self-motivated, capable person
and you'd do good work anywhere in the org chart.
In my experince generally, Wikimedia is a more security-conscious and
privacy-conscious
>but maybe browser and preferences
> fingerprinting would be more effective anyway, since: tor.
Probably not as effective as straight up blocking tor as we do now? :P
(Although seriously - I would love if we didn't block tor like we do
now. However you can't abuse the site with tor when you can't
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 3:46 PM, Yuri Astrakhan
wrote:
> Thanks Federico, I used /usr/share/fonts/truetype/ttf-dejavu/DejaVuSans.ttf
> but didn't see FreeSerif. DejaVuSans doesn't seem to render Hindi. Is there
> a font for that?
>
>
> On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 2:12 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo)
> wrot
As an addendum; when reporting bugs; we will need one of the following two
things to debug:
1) The title of page (or collection being rendered)
2) The collection_id parameter from the URL on the status page
~Matt Walker
Wikimedia Foundation
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 6:17 PM, Matthew Walker
wrote:
Ambassadors (and developers),
I am tremendously happy to announce that the new PDF rendering service is
live for testing on the cluster. At this time, while we shake out
production bugs, it is only available via Special:Book using the 'e-book
(PDF, ocg latex renderer)'. You can also render a speci
++the EFF for more ideas, they are actively doing great work on so-called
perfect forward secrecy.
There are simple things we could do to achieve a better balance between
privacy and sockpantsing, such as cryptolog [1], in which IP addresses are
hashed using a salt that changes every day. In theo
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 2:06 PM, Pine W wrote:
> The everyday difference that this change makes may be trivial, but it makes
> sense to me to think of QA (and Security Engineering) as being part of
> RelEng.
I doubt we disagree too much, but I'll put on my security evangelist
hat and get on my so
Thanks Federico, I used /usr/share/fonts/truetype/ttf-dejavu/DejaVuSans.ttf
but didn't see FreeSerif. DejaVuSans doesn't seem to render Hindi. Is there
a font for that?
On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 2:12 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo)
wrote:
> No such font exists. You can try DejaVu Sans or FreeSerif for b
No such font exists. You can try DejaVu Sans or FreeSerif for best coverage.
Nemo
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On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 2:06 PM, Pine W wrote:
> Hi Chris M.,
>
> By the way, Wikimedians are a vocal group when there are problems, and I
> take the general quiet of Wikimedia content editors about security and core
> stability to mean that security and core QA are in good hands.
Thank you,
I'm trying to render an image which uses characters from all of the
languages supported by WP. Is there a single font deployed on production
servers that include all scripts? Any simple font would do, preferably TTF
arial-style.
Thanks!
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Wikitech-l mai
Hi Chris M.,
I understand the difference between functional and reporting relationships.
As I understand it, QA is under RelEng in terms of reporting but
functionally works in a matrix envrionment. That seems consistent with the
OP and the WMF Wiki's pseudo-org chart. Is this your understanding as
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 12:25 PM, Chris Steipp
wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Pine W wrote:
> > To clarify, is the QA team now under Release Engineering as Chris'
> comment
> > seems to imply, and how does this org change effect security engineering?
>
> For now, I (the only security
Basically:
[[mw:Wikimedia Release and QA Team]] -> [[mw:Wikimedia Release
Engineering Team]]
From the org perspective, now all of the team members report to me
instead of Rob. That's basically the substance of the change. "QA" and
"Release Engineering" were already the same team (effectively) sin
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Pine W wrote:
> To clarify, is the QA team now under Release Engineering as Chris' comment
> seems to imply, and how does this org change effect security engineering?
For now, I (the only security engineer) am staying in core, although
much of my role spans both
To my understanding this is simply a formalisation of a change that, in
almost every regard, already happened months ago.
Dan
On 29 July 2014 11:58, Pine W wrote:
> To clarify, is the QA team now under Release Engineering as Chris' comment
> seems to imply, and how does this org change effect
To clarify, is the QA team now under Release Engineering as Chris' comment
seems to imply, and how does this org change effect security engineering?
Thanks,
Pine
On Jul 29, 2014 10:53 AM, "Greg Grossmeier" wrote:
>
> > They are broadly responsible for the lifecycle of code from the point
> > th
> They are broadly responsible for the lifecycle of code from the point
> that a developer is ready to check it in through its deployment on our
> site, maintaining the processes and tools that reduce negative user
> impact of site software changes while simultaneously making software
> change dep
Hi everyone,
I’d like to announce an organizational change at Wikimedia Foundation
in the Platform Engineering group. For those that aren't terribly
interested in how WMF's org chart looks, you can skip the rest of this
email. :-)
Yesterday, we formalized “Release Engineering” as a team, and p
At previous job, I've installed and maintained a wiki farm with multiple
sites, interwiki setup and caching while another emploee installed
MediaWiki from repository via single command and told to former boss that
my work is very simple. I hate anything web-related in packages because of
that.
On
Hi all,
I have developed the Mathoid deployment puppet script with great
support of Mwalker and Bryan Davis as far as I could get.
https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/r/#/c/148836/ aims to deploy mathoid on
beta in a first step.
Is there anything I can do to speed up the process beside waiting for
code r
On 7/22/14, 3:09 PM, Mark A. Hershberger wrote:
Max Semenik writes:
However all packages I know of (Debian flavors and not) split MW
directory and put its parts into different places, trying to follow
the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard. The result is [...] outright
breakages because our code ba
Hi again!
That's the nastiest bug I've seen in a long-long time, thanks Alexey for
finding the answer. It's a Virtualbox/Vagrant bug. The solution is to turn
off the sendfile system call in httpd.conf in your apache or nginx[1]:
EnableSendfile off
I hope this will be useful for the developers th
Hello Wikimanaias,
This is Osama Khalid, from the Arabic Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.
I was wondering whether anyone here has a good number of the raw
pagecounts downloaded so I can copy them to a hard disk during
Wikimania 2014. They have been very helpful for me in trying to
determine whic
@John: Extensions are git repositories. Moving it to an extension involves
moving them in their own repo, like any other extension. I guess you're mostly
concerned about it being repositories not under mediawiki/extensions, because
it'll be a repository either way.
@Bartosz:
I'm inclined to ag
Hi!
I have the following setup: I develop on my local machine (PHPstorm) and I
save the files in one of the Vagrant shared folders. I load my js files
like that:
public static function onBeforePageDisplay( OutputPage &$out, Skin
&$skin ) {
$out->addModules("ext.Pydio");
}
The thin
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