Difference between revisions of "Features/Feature Template"
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
Owner/Coordinator, other developers, designers, contributors | Owner/Coordinator, other developers, designers, contributors | ||
− | * Champion: [[ | + | * Champion: [[Name | Name]] |
− | * Developers: [[ | + | * Developers: [[Name | Name]], [[Name | Name]] |
== Current status == | == Current status == | ||
* Targeted release: [[Development_Team/Release/Roadmap/0.86| Sugar 0.86]] | * Targeted release: [[Development_Team/Release/Roadmap/0.86| Sugar 0.86]] | ||
− | * Last updated: 2009- | + | * Last updated: 2009-06-20 |
− | * Percentage of completion: | + | * Percentage of completion: 0% |
DeviceKit, DeviceKit-disks, DeviceKit-power and gnome-disk-utility (i.e. palimpsest) packages have been built in rawhide. | DeviceKit, DeviceKit-disks, DeviceKit-power and gnome-disk-utility (i.e. palimpsest) packages have been built in rawhide. | ||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
== Benefit to [[What is Sugar?|Sugar]] == | == Benefit to [[What is Sugar?|Sugar]] == | ||
− | + | Sugar gains a comprehensive graphical disk management tool which provides functionality that so far was | |
almost exclusively available in the partitioning screen of anaconda. The tools integrate nicely into the desktop (by e.g. providing a "Format disk..." menuitem in the nautilus context menu where appropriate). | almost exclusively available in the partitioning screen of anaconda. The tools integrate nicely into the desktop (by e.g. providing a "Format disk..." menuitem in the nautilus context menu where appropriate). | ||
Line 138: | Line 138: | ||
== Release Notes == | == Release Notes == | ||
− | + | Sugar 0.86 features NAME, which is a simpler, modular replacement... | |
− | |||
== Comments and Discussion == | == Comments and Discussion == | ||
Revision as of 07:58, 20 June 2009
<Feature Name>
(Template based on http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/DeviceKit.)
Summary
<Feature Name> is a simple system service that a) can enumerate devices; b) emits signals when devices are added removed; c) provides a way to merge device information / quirks onto devices. It is designed to partially replace hal and overcome some of the design limitiations of hal. DeviceKit functionality is provided in the form of dbus services on the system bus.
Apart from DeviceKit itself, there is DeviceKit-disks, which is a system service to keep track of block devices. The functionality offered by DeviceKit-disks is a superset of what hal provides for block devices.
There is also DeviceKit-power, which takes over the power-management-related parts of hal and the more complex functionality of gnome-power-manager. As a consequence, gnome-power-manager itself becomes much simpler.
The new udev-extra module will provide udev rules that are needed to make the DeviceKit architecture work. Functionality that was provided via .fdi files in hal will eventually be moved to udev rules, and setting acls on devices will also be done here at some point.
DeviceKit-disks comes with a graphical frontend called palimpsest (the package name is gnome-disk-utility). Furthermore, there's a nautilus extension to format disks (nautilus-gdu), accessible from context menu.
Champions
Owner/Coordinator, other developers, designers, contributors
Current status
- Targeted release: Sugar 0.86
- Last updated: 2009-06-20
- Percentage of completion: 0%
DeviceKit, DeviceKit-disks, DeviceKit-power and gnome-disk-utility (i.e. palimpsest) packages have been built in rawhide.
gnome-power-manager 2.25 in rawhide uses DeviceKit-power instead of hal.
The port of gvfs to DeviceKit-disks is in rawhide.
udev-extras is hosted on kernel.org and has been packaged for rawhide.
The nautilus extension for disk formatting is being worked on here. It is called nautilus-gdu. It is available in rawhide.
Still todo:
- remove the properties page from gnome-mount
- add a status icon for smart warnings, critical raid events and delayed write warnings
- bug fixes
Detailed Description
David has written an extensive explanation of the DeviceKit architecture, and the motivation for rewriting hal. Read all about it here
There is a dedicated devkit-devel mailing list now.
Benefit to Sugar
Sugar gains a comprehensive graphical disk management tool which provides functionality that so far was almost exclusively available in the partitioning screen of anaconda. The tools integrate nicely into the desktop (by e.g. providing a "Format disk..." menuitem in the nautilus context menu where appropriate).
Scope
DeviceKit depends on bug fixes and enhancements in the following components: kernel, udev, mdadm, and lvm. These will have to appear in rawhide first.
Also, in order to peacefully coexist with DeviceKit-disks, at a very minimum hal needs to talk to DeviceKit-disks about locking and mounting/unmounting. Medium term, hal functionality such as disk and power-management support will be turned off when all important users have been ported over to the equivalent DeviceKit api.
The core components that we plan to port for F11 are: gvfs, gnome-mount, nautilus and gnome-power-manager.
For completeness, [1] is a list of all packages in Fedora that depend on hal, libhal.so.1 or libhal-storage.so.1. Except where noted, we don't expect to port these to DeviceKit for F11.
How To Test
- yum install gnome-disk-utility. This will pull in DeviceKit-disks and DeviceKit via dependencies.
- Use palimpsest (the graphical frontend) to create, modify and delete partitions and file systems on various media, such as usb sticks, cds, removable hard disks, etc.
- Use palimpsest to encrypt partitions and to change passwords for existing encrypted partitions.
- Use nautilus-gdu to format removable media with various file system types.
- Verify that palimpsest correctly reports smart data from disks which support it.
- Test the raid support
- Test that desktop applications like nautilus and the gedit's file chooser see volumes and mounts
- Check that gnome-power-manager provides the same functionality it had in previous releases
- Similar for other desktop environments and applications, if they are ported to DeviceKit
User Experience
There is a new menu item that brings up palimpsest: Applications → System Tools → Palimpsest Disk Utility
The nautilus context menu offers to format discs/usb sticks and other devices. palimpsest is a graphical interface for all disc-related tasks, from partitioning and file system creation to encryption, raid and lvm.
Here are some screenshots of palimpsest and nautilus-gdu in action:
- The main window
- SMART details
- PolicyKit integration
- The nautilus-gdu dialog
Dependencies
- DeviceKit review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=456032 (Done)
- DeviceKit-disks review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=456033 (Done)
- gnome-disk-utility review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=456034 (Done)
- DeviceKit-power review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=460912 (Done)
- udev-extras review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=480754 (Done)
- nautilus-gdu review: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=483277 (Done)
- udev >= 0.139
- mdadm >= 2.6.5
- device-mapper
- parted
- smartmontools
- util-linux-ng
- sqlite3
- PolicyKit >= 0.9
- dbus-glib >= 0.75
- dbus >= 1.1.20
- a nautilus extension for formatting must be written (Done)
- gvfs needs to be ported to DeviceKit-disks (Done)
- gnome-mount and nautilus must be ported to DeviceKit-disks
- hal needs to be patched to remove block device handling
Contingency Plan
DeviceKit-disks and DeviceKit-power can coexist with the disk and power management parts of hal. If the porting of applications is not complete by F11, we don't strip the functionality out of hal in F11.
Documentation
Sugar API: http://api.sugarlabs.org/
Repository: http://git.sugarlabs.org/projects/webified/
API docs are here: http://hal.freedesktop.org/docs/DeviceKit/
http://hal.freedesktop.org/docs/DeviceKit-disks/
http://hal.freedesktop.org/docs/DeviceKit-power/
End user documentation will take some time to write, and can't really be started before the tools are publicly available.
Release Notes
Sugar 0.86 features NAME, which is a simpler, modular replacement...
Comments and Discussion
See Talk:Development Team/Feature Template