Another preliminary injunction was granted
About one week ago I had to apply for another preliminary injunction.
Unfortunately the respective multi-billion company (name still undisclosed for
strategic reasons) refused to sign a declaration to cease and desist before the
deadline for obtaining injunctive relief has passed.
The injunction was meanwhile granted, basically banning the company from
shipping their product in it's current form. I'm really sad that this
happened, since I expect it to harm their business. However, I really see no
reason why they couldn't just sign a statement "no, we won't do it again, and
we will comply with the GPL from now on".
We're still waiting for their legal staff to get back to us, let's hope they have good news next time.
[ /linux/gpl-violations |
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Work starting on ct_sync active-active
The swiss company dremalab wants to
sponsor me to work on an extension of ct_sync for active-active setups.
More detailed news will appear very soon on the netfilter page and/or on this blog. Stay tuned.
[ /linux/netfilter/ct_sync |
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Allnet donates network switches to CCC Berlin
In very short amount of time, two 19" rack-mountable Ethernet switches went
dead at the Berlin Chaos Communication
Club.
The chairman of the friendly company Allnet
was immediately willing to donate two replacements. Very kind of him :)
[ /ccc |
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Keyframe-accurate mp4 file cutting
I've done some modifications to the mp4clip tool (part of the MPEG4ip software package) to do key frame
accurate cutting/clipping of mp4 files. In general it seems to work, but from
time to time it corrupts the source (!) files. Need to find time for
debugging.
I'll release the patch as soon I consider it to be used safely. Don't want to be responsible for corrupting someones video collection...
[ /linux |
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SDSL line has arrived
About a week ago the QSC SDSL line was activated. This is great news, and I
just cannot describe the amount of difference it makes if you suddenly have eight times the upstream bandwidth.
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Conferences 2005
I'm a bit in planning mood for conferences in the first 6 months of 2005. So
far I'm going to visit FOSDEM (Brussels),
CLUC (Zagreb), CLT (Chemnitz), LinuxTag (Karlsruhe) and obviously OLS (Ottawa).
If you happen to be at any of those conferences and want netfilter T-Shirts, please contact me beforehand so I can make sure to bring the required sizes and quantities.
[ /linux/conferences |
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Coordination with Free Software Foundation Europe
Finally I've had the opportunity (and the time) to talk to Georg Greve of the
Free Software Foundation Europe. It's good
to know that they're very supportive of my GPL enforcement efforts, and it
seems like we're going to coordinate our efforts at some later point this year.
This comes exactly at the right time, since I really want to get more
development done and deal less with those legal issues.. believe me.
[ /linux/gpl-violations |
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[ /linux/gpl-violations |
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Rusty producing more patches than I can review in fast time
There was s sudden surge in netfilter/iptables development in late December and
early January. I'm still reviewing some of the changes, and am not yet
convinced that all of them are the way to go.
[ /linux/netfilter |
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Chaosradio 99 - Telekommunikationsueberwachungsverorndung
After about four months, the first Chaosradio radio show that I was
participating in. Subject of the show was the telecommunications surveillance
act (TKUeV) and the corresponding technical directive. Starting from 1st
January 2005, any "provider of telecommunication services" has to provide
lawful interception interfaces for government and police authorities.
The big issue is that it isn't only about providers, but about anybody who runs
more than 1000 mailboxes on an email server, even if it is non-for-profit.
If you're interested in the full show, you can download it from the usual location on ftp.ccc.de.
[ /ccc |
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New development version of grouter (aka linwrap)
Some time ago I started working on a small embedded Linux distribution. You
will now ask yourself, why yet another one? Well, any free distribution you
can find out there has either not a networking focus strong enough for my
demands, or is using horribly outdated software (and especially no 2.6.x
kernels).
So I'm now running that distro (still not sure whether I'll finally call it
"gnumonks.org router (grouter)" or "Linux Wireless Router Application Platform
(LinWRAP)") on three embedded production systems.
It's main features are
- Linux 2.6.10
- uClibc 0.9.27
- busybox 1.00
- iptables-1.2.11
- dropbear
- quagga
- openvpn
- iptraf
- siproxd
- dhcprelay
- in-kernel PPPoE
- fits in less than 15MB of flash
The only hardware supported so far is the PC
Engines WRAP embedded x86 platform. More hardware support will be added
over time, very likely candidates are IXP42x and probably even some of the
Broadcom/ti/intersil consumer access point platforms.
The current state of the distribution can be followed in this svn repository.
Please note that there is absolutely zero support or documentation.
[ /linux |
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Infrequent blog updates
The regular reader of this blog will have noticed the infrequent updates since
december last year. There's a relatively easy explanation: lack of time. Or
even more detailed: I used to write my blog at the time I went to bed. The
data of the blog only existed on my notebook, and the notebook usually is in
the bedroom.
However, during the last weeks I regularly don't go to bed before 2am to 5am -
a time where my fiance, bound to university day schedule, is already sleeping. This means I cannot write a blog entry from the bed - you get the point.
This is set to change now, since the blog data will be checked into my personal subversion server.
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Frame Accurate Cutting of MPEG2/MPEG4/OGG
Since I now have the job of cutting (cropping/clipping) the A/V recordings
of the more than 200 presentations of 21C3, I've been looking for a
number of days for available free software to do GOP / key frame accurate cutting of MPEG2, mp4 and OGG/Vorbis files.
As for OGG/Vorbis, the vorbis-tools package contains a
program called vcut, which basically does almost the full job. However,
it's a bit clumsy to use, since it always splits a original file into two
halves, before and after the cut position. I've modified it a bit in order to accommodate my needs better.
As for combined audio+video containers such as MP4, it becomes a bit more
difficult, since you need to find key frames for both audio and video as close
as possible to the user-specified cut point.
However, after learning a bit about Apple Quicktime and the MP4 container, plus
the help of libmp4v2 from the MPEG4IP
package, I was able to create a small tool for key-frame accurate cutting, too.
For MPEG2, there is lve (Linux
Video Editor). This program even provides a graphical user interface for
navigation through the video, creating clips and a cut&paste interface.
Unfortunately the UI is not intrusive in any way, and it even seems to use it's
own toolkit. After playing with it for more than 45 minutes, I wasn't able to
actually cut a single video using it :(
Since MPEG2 is not a priority at the moment (we need to make .ogg and .mp4 available for download ASAP), I deferred this problem for now.
Maybe at some point I'll find the time to put together all the pieces and
create some generic media cutting/clipping/cropping tool for any kind of
format. However, judging from the differences of the media formats, there
wouldn't be much more common code than parsing the command-line options ;)
[ /linux |
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Putting together a conference schedule for 2005
After being invited to CLUC in Zagreb,
Croatia and Chemnitzer Linux
Tage 2005 I'm trying to decide which conferences to visit this year.
As usual, I'll be at LinuxTag, Linux Kongress, Ottawa Linux Symposium and Chaos Communication Congress.
Another likely candidate is this years hacker summer camp What the Hack in the Netherlands, even though it quite closely follows OLS.
[ /linux/conferences |
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www.gpl-violations.org was down
If it wasn't for some user sending me email about the gpl-violations.org web-server being
down, I wouldn't have noticed it. Apparently I made a stupid mistake while
adding a new vhost to the apache2 config on that machine that went unnoticed
until apache was restarted.
I'm not going into the embarrassing details here, but I would like to reveal
that it was related to a new web-page called gpl-devices.org which I am about to
launch. Let's see whether I can turn my ideas about it into reality, or if I
never find the time, like with other interesting projects :(
Anyway, I'd like to apologize for the downtime. If someone had sent me an
email earlier... *sigh*.
[ /linux/gpl-violations |
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SDSL is coming
After something like three years with asymmetric connectivity (less upstream
than downstream), I've finally decided to order a SDSL line again. Even though it means I'll have to afford a 200% increase of ISP charges.
Back in Nuernberg almost ten years ago, I used to have an analogue leased line
which ran at mind-blowing 33.600bps. Later I used the same line type with two
Pairgain SDSL modems at about 1.5MBps... this is still the line where some of
my old systems like coruscant.gnumonks.org, sungate.gnumonks.org and
corellia.gnumonks.org are located.
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