By
Richard Thurston
Wednesday, December 20 2006 12:09 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,61976570,00.htm
The upcoming release of Debian is being delayed because of a slowdown by key developers.
Debian GNU/Linux 4.0--the next version of the Linux distribution--was due to be released
by December 4, meaning that it is already more than two weeks late.
Now one of Debian's release managers has started pointing his finger at key
individuals.
In a blog posted on Tuesday, Andreas Barth wrote, "Some people who used to do
good work reduced their involvement drastically. There was nothing I could do
about that, and that happened way before I started full-time on (the) release,
but on the global picture, that still counts."
Barth and his fellow release manager, Steve Langasek, have been at the center
of a controversy over the last few months, having accepted up to $6,000 of
funding each for working full-time on Debian version
4, which is code-named Etch.
The funding for Barth and Langasek has been raised by an "experiment" called
Dunc-Tank, which aims to speed the
release of Etch.
But the establishment of the group may have backfired, as it has angered many
unpaid developers. They argue that Dunc-Tank is turning Debian into a two-class
system, which could have a negative effect on the distribution. Some have called
for the resignation of the two release managers.
A group of 17 developers, led by well-known Debian maintainer Joerg Jaspert,
issued a position statement in October citing its disenchantment with Dunc-Tank.
It read, "This whole affair already hurts Debian more than it can ever achieve.
It already made a lot of people who have contributed a huge amount of time and
work to Debian reduce their work. People left the project, others are orphaning
packages...system administration and security work is reduced, and a lot of
otherwise silent maintainers simply put off Debian work (to) work on something
else."
But Barth insisted that Dunc-Tank isn't entirely to blame. He wrote in his
blog, "I think Dunc-Tank helped us with (the) release of Etch, but the help
could have been greater if some people wouldn't behave as childish as they do."
Barth said he is happy with the involvement of "most" developers, and he
added that there are additional reasons for the delay. He did not elaborate on those reasons.
"I thought, at least within Debian, we don't want to fall (into) the usual
management mistake of only speaking about how great everything is but be honest
to ourselves," Barth added.
Etch is now fully frozen, but no release date has been made public.
Debian has a long history of being late, ever since its first version in
1997. This is one of the reasons why entrepreneur Mark
Shuttleworth launched alternative Linux distribution Ubuntu two years ago.