libwalter progress
Manette.be - November 6th, 2007

Oliver Ruiz Dorantes, also known as Urnenfeld, recently posted on his blog an update report on the libwalter project (we first posted about the project back in April). This project, started by both him and Darkwyrm, was to create a library to supply all the widgets required for creating an Office suite for the Haiku.

Some classes of the library are starting to be used in real programs (like in Oliver’s OOffice project) so some bugs are being squashed and some points of improvement identified.

There is a screenshot provided and Oliver invites you to check out the code from CVS, JAM it and play with it (R5, Haiku and Zeta are supported). This is the good time to help by providing him with feedback and comments.

More detailed info at his place: http://urnenfeld.blogspot.com/

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Reinventing Haiku
Stephen B. - November 3rd, 2007

Stephan “stippi” Aßmus has posted on the Haiku website detailing some planned changes to the organization of the Haiku project (also posted by ICO). The goal of the changes is, to (block)quote from the post:

This reorganization’s purpose is to better fit Haiku’s needs, such as current developers needing to be able to focus on development and matching non-development needs with members of the community who wish to meet them.

The reorganization will include the creation of two new groups within the Haiku Project’s existing structure: a “Developer Team” and a “Transition Steering Committee.”

The post also contains a link to an article by Michael Phipps where he discusses his departure and offers some advice for Haiku’s future.

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Recently a post made on the Haiku blog called “Why BFS needs chkbfs.” Written by Axel Dörfler, the article has some information on how BFS operates and the problem that the chkbfs tool fixes:

The reason you need this tool is a feature of the VFS and a design problem in BFS: if you delete a file which is still in use by another application, the file’s disk space won’t be freed until the last user closed its reference to it – until then, only the inode is marked as deleted, and removed from the parent directory, so that it can’t be found or opened again anymore.

It’s an informative read, especially if you have an interest in filesystems in general or BFS in particular.

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New Site: BePorts
Stephen B. - October 29th, 2007

Brecht Machiels wrote back in August to let us know about a new site he’s started called “BePorts.” From Brecht’s EMail:

BePorts aims to become a centralized collection of software ported to the BeOS platform. A ‘BePort’ basically consists of the BeOS-specific patches to the original source code. Along with a Subversion repository to store all patches, a Trac site eases cooperation on porting efforts. A wiki stores detailed information about each port. There is also a mailing list.

Since launching, an interesting application called “BePorter” has been released on the site. It’s a python script designed to help simplify the process of compiling ported applications on BeOS – which it does by automatically applying BeOS-specific patches and building the application. While many common UNIX command-line tools will compile “out-of-the-box” on BeOS, it does often require a bit of fiddling with ./configure options and changes to makefiles. This looks like a great way to make the process largely-painless.

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Developer “tigerdog” has posted information about some plans for BeZilla development in the near future – in the form of a Firesign Theatre reference. As we posted earlier, new dependencies added to Firefox in the past year (Cairo, etc) have made it impossible to build the current development code under BeOS.

So tigerdog has decided to revisit some earlier “bleeding-edge” patches written in the days when the Firefox trunk would still compile in BeOS – since many of those patches were never committed or accepted to the trunk. From the BeZilla blog:

I will include tqh’s “lightweight” NSPR, streamlining of nsAppShell, mouse movement improvements and pretty much all of the enhancements that were backported and arrived in 2.0.0.8. When I create something useable, I’ll post to BeBits on the Bleeding Edge page.

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Haiku gets Productive
Stephen B. - October 29th, 2007

There has been yet-another interesting milestone in Haiku’s development this past week: Haikuware admin “karlvd” has reported success running Gobe Productive in recent Haiku builds (also reported by OSNews). From the post:

I’ve played with GoBE Productive for half an hour now, and it seems remarkedly stable. Gobe Productive is a unique piece of software, and one of the darlings of BeOS software. This will surely fill a much needed gap in the office suite department, despite the software’s age! It’s also testament to the vision of enabling backwards compatibility to BeOS application, and how good Haiku is at it.

A minior bugfix was reportedly necessary to get Productive running – and, as a side-effect, another venerable BeOS app now works in Haiku: the FTP client NetPenguin.

The demo of Productive has also been added to Karl’s “Weekly Super Pack” – a regularly-updated VMware image containing the latest Haiku build and a selection of compatible apps.

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Reindexing Files
Stephen B. - October 25th, 2007

Ever attempt to solve a problem – only to realize that you had already solved it several years earlier? While getting my BeOS machine back up and running recently, I ran into that situation. I figured that it was a good time to upgrade the hard drive while I was working on it anyway, and ended up having to reindex some files on the new drive – but I couldn’t remember the proper syntax for the “reindex” app. Fortunately, a few minutes of searching Usenet via Google Groups revealed that some helpful fellow had already posted the answer to comp.sys.be.help back in 2002. And to my amusement, it turns out I had made the post.

For anyone who might find the info useful, here are three examples for reindexing BeMail, Person, and MP3 files (respectively):

reindex -r -v "MAIL:*" mail/
reindex -r -v "META:*" people/
reindex -r -v "AUDIO:*" mp3/

While there’s always the more manual method of duplicating / copying the files and deleting the originals, the reindex app is a bit simpler if you have a large number of files to deal with.

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