\input{configpres} \begin{frame} \begin{figure}[ht] \includegraphics[width=1.0\textwidth]{debian.png} \end{figure} Manuel Traut, Linutronix GmbH \end{frame} \subsection{Agenda} \begin{frame} Debian is a community driven distribution, well-known for its high quality standard and a clear focus on Security. We also have a look at the open-source infrastructure of Debian. \end{frame} \subsection{community driven distribution} \begin{frame} The Debian Project is \begin{itemize} \item a worldwide group of volunteers \item an operating system distribution \item composed entirely of free software \end{itemize} \end{frame} \subsection{well-known for} \begin{frame} its huge number of supported architectures \begin{itemize} \item 32-Bit PC/Intel IA-32 (i386) \item 64-Bit PC/Intel EM64T/x86-64 (amd64) \item ARM EABI (armel and armhf for devices with FPU) \item MIPS (mips - Big-Endian and mipsel - Little-Endian) \item Motorola/IBM PowerPC (powerpc) \item Sun/Oracle SPARC (sparc) \item Intel Itanium (ia64) \item IBM S/390 (31 Bit s390 und 64 Bit s390x) \end{itemize} \dots and its huge number of packages (about 35.000 per arch) \end{frame} \subsection{its high quality standard} \begin{frame} There is an extensive set of policies and procedures for packaging and delivering software. These standards are backed up by \begin{itemize} \item tools (dh\_make, lintian, debuild, reprepro) \item automation (wanna\_build, version tracking) \item documentation (http://debian.org/doc/): \begin{itemize} \item New Maintainer Guide \item Debian Policies \item Porting Guide \item Developer Reference \item Securing Debian \end{itemize} \end{itemize} All of Debian's key elements are open and visible. \end{frame} \subsection{and a clear focus on security.} \begin{frame} \begin{itemize} \item Security issues are discussed openly on the debian-security mailing list \item When a security problem arises, the security update is prepared and distributed as fast as possible. \item There is a 'secure by default' policy for service installations which could impose restrictions on their normal use. \item Debian Security Advisories (DSAs) are sent to public mailing lists, are published on http://www.debian.org/security/\#DSAS \end{itemize} \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Security Advisory} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[height=1.0\textheight]{dsa.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Infrastructure} \begin{frame} Debian has a great infrastructure which is also available as open-source. The following slides show a few components of the infrastructure. \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Package Tracking System} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[width=1.0\textwidth]{qa.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Source Repo of a Debian Package} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[width=1.0\textwidth]{x11-git.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Package Build} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[height=1.0\textheight]{x11-buildd.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Bugtracker} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[height=1.0\textheight]{x11-bugs.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Debian Package Informations} \begin{frame} \includegraphics[height=1.0\textheight]{x11-pkg.png} \end{frame} \subsection{Conclusion} \begin{frame} Debian stands for \begin{itemize} \item a huge number of packages and supported architectures \item development is transparent and community driven \item a focus on security \item a strict licence compliance \item good documentation in different languages \end{itemize} \end{frame} \input{tailpres}