Considering that I’d drawn my entire Mediawiki installation from Debian’s repositories, it would have been nice if the system could have handled the configuration change as part of the upgrade. I also would like to have seen the system roll the update script required to upgrade the Mediawiki database into the process. Mediawiki version 1.7 shipped with Etch, and Lenny ships with version 1.12.
Considering the complexity of application level upgrades—particularly ones that involve a chorus of components, as Mediawiki does—it would be great to see the Debian project take on the goal of packaging and offering installation options for entire software appliances, perhaps in a future Debian version.
Live Free, or Not
When it comes to promoting and ensuring the ideals of free software in the applications and components it distributes, the Debian project is among the most strict. For instance, Debian ships rebranded versions of the Firefox Web browser (branded “Iceweasel” in Debian). Also, debate raged among Debian developers whether to excise software encumbered by proprietary firmware from the system.
For all its reputed free-zealotry, however, Debian makes it fairly easy to arrive at a working—if not philosophically pure—Linux installation. For instance, when I installed Lenny on my Thinkpad T60, the installer pointed out that I would need a particular binary firmware file to make my Intel 3945ABG Wi-Fi adapter function. The system told me the name of the required file, and offered me the option of inserting a USB drive from which to load that firmware—which I did, after plucking it from a nearby Ubuntu machine.
Along similar lines, once I’d completed my Lenny installation, I found that a USB hard drive formatted with Microsoft’s NTFS file system did not mount automatically, as it does in other Linux distributions. Undaunted, I opened Debian’s software installation application, searched for the term “ntfs,” and installed the package ntfs-3g. Once the package had installed, an icon for my NTFS drive popped up on my desktop.
Debian 5 ships with the open-source Swfdec Flash player, which worked well for me when playing Youtube videos and viewing Flash-based Web site advertisements. Swfdec didn’t handle all the Flash content I encountered—the music player at Pandora.com being one example. However, I could install Adobe’s own non-free Flash player easily enough by clicking the non-free box in the system’s Software Sources utility, and installing the player through the system’s regular software tools.
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