Older blog entries for jamesh (starting at number 285)

More Rygel testing

In my last post, I said I had trouble getting Rygel’s tracker backend to function and assumed that it was expecting an older version of the API.  It turns out I was incorrect and the problem was due in part to Ubuntu specific changes to the Tracker package and the unusual way Rygel was trying to talk to Tracker.

The Tracker packages in Ubuntu remove the D-Bus service activation file for the “org.freedesktop.Tracker” bus name so that if the user has not chosen to run the service (or has killed it), it won’t be automatically activated.  Unfortunately, instead of just calling a Tracker D-Bus method, Rygel was trying to manually activate Tracker via a StartServiceByName() call.  This would fail even if Tracker was running, hence my assumption that it was a tracker API version problem.

This problem will be fixed in the next Rygel release: it will call a method on Tracker directly to see if it is available.  With that problem out of the way, I was able to try out the backend.  It was providing a lot more metadata to the PS3 so more files were playable, which was good.  Browsing folders was also much quicker than the folder back end.  There were a few problems though:

  1. Files are exposed in one of three folders: “All Images”, “All Music” or “All Videos”.  With even a moderate sized music collection, this is unmangeable.  It wasn’t clear what order the files were being displayed in either.
  2. There was quite a long delay before video playback starts.

When the folder back end fixes the metadata and speed issues, I’d be inclined to use it over the tracker back end.

Video Transcoding

Getting video transcoding working turned out to require a newer GStreamer (0.10.23), the “unstripped” ffmpeg libraries and the “bad” GStreamer plugins package from multiverse.  With those installed, things worked pretty well.  With these dependencies encoded in the packaging, it’d be pretty painless to get it set up.  Certainly much easier than setting things up in MediaTomb’s configuration file.

Syndicated 2009-06-18 16:06:19 from James Henstridge

Ubuntu packages for Rygel

I promised Zeeshan that I’d have a look at his Rygel UPnP Media Server a few months back, and finally got around to doing so.  For anyone else who wants to give it a shot, I’ve put together some Ubuntu packages for Jaunty and Karmic in a PPA here:

Most of the packages there are just rebuilds or version updates of existing packages, but the Rygel ones were done from scratch.  It is the first Debian package I’ve put together from scratch and it wasn’t as difficult as I thought it might be.  The tips from the “Teach me packaging” workshop at the Canonical All Hands meeting last month were quite helpful.

After installing the package, you can configure it by running the “rygel-preferences” program.  The first notebook page lets you configure the transcoding support, and the second page lets you configure the various media source plugins.

I wasn’t able to get the Tracker plugin working on my system, which I think is due to Rygel expecting the older Tracker D-Bus API.  I was able to get the folder plugin working pretty easily though.

Once things were configured, I ran Rygel itself and an extra icon showed up on my PlayStation 3.  Getting folder listings was quite slow, but apparently this is limited to the folder back end and is currently being worked on.  It’s a shame I wasn’t able to test the more mature Tracker back end.

With LPCM transcoding enabled, I was able to successfully play a Vorbis file on the PS3.  With transcoding disabled, I wasn’t able to play any music — even files in formats the PS3 could handle natively.  This was apparently due to the folder backend not providing the necessary metadata.  I didn’t have any luck with MPEG2 transcoding for video.

It looks like Rygel has promise, but is not yet at a stage where it could replace something like MediaTomb.  The external D-Bus media source support looks particularly interesting.  I look forward to trying out version 0.4 when it is released.

Syndicated 2009-06-17 04:17:58 from James Henstridge

django-openid-auth

Last week, we released the source code to django-openid-auth.  This is a small library that can add OpenID based authentication to Django applications.  It has been used for a number of internal Canonical projects, including the sprint scheduler Scott wrote for the last Ubuntu Developer Summit, so it is possible you’ve already used the code.

Rather than trying to cover all possible use cases of OpenID, it focuses on providing OpenID Relying Party support to applications using Django’s django.contrib.auth authentication system.  As such, it is usually enough to edit just two files in an existing application to enable OpenID login.

The library has a number of useful features:

  • As well as the standard method of prompting the user for an identity URL, you can configure a fixed OpenID server URL.  This is useful for deployments where OpenID is being used for single sign on, and you always want users to log in using a particular OpenID provider.  Rather than asking the user for their identity URL, they are sent directly to the provider.
  • It can be configured to automatically create accounts when new identity URLs are seen.
  • User names, full names and email addresses can be set on accounts based on data sent via the OpenID Simple Registration extension.
  • Support for Launchpad’s Teams OpenID extension, which lets you query membership of Launchpad teams when authenticating against Launchpad’s OpenID provider.  Team memberships are mapped to Django group membership.

While the code can be used for generic OpenID login, we’ve mostly been using it for single sign on.  The hope is that it will help members of the Ubuntu and Launchpad communities reuse our authentication system in a secure fashion.

The source code can be downloaded using the following Bazaar command:

bzr branch lp:django-openid-auth

Documentation on how to integrate the library is available in the README.txt file.  The library includes some code written by Simon Willison for django-openid, and uses the same licensing terms (2 clause BSD) as that project.

Syndicated 2009-04-14 08:25:56 from James Henstridge

Sansa Fuze

On my way back from Canada a few weeks ago, I picked up a SanDisk Sansa Fuze media player.  Overall, I like it.  It supports Vorbis and FLAC audio out of the box, has a decent amount of on board storage (8GB) and can be expanded with a MicroSDHC card.  It does use a proprietary dock connector for data transfer and charging, but that’s about all I don’t like about it.  The choice of accessories for this connector is underwhelming, so a standard mini-USB connector would have been preferable since I wouldn’t need as many cables.

The first thing I tried was to copy some music to the device using Rhythmbox.  This appeared to work, but took longer than expected.  When I tried to play the music, it was listed as having an unknown artist and album name.  Looking at the player’s filesystem, the reason for this was obvious: Rhythmbox had transcoded the music to MP3 and lost the tags.  Copying the ogg files directly worked a lot better: it was quicker and preserved the metadata.

Of course, getting Rhythmbox to do the right thing would be preferable to telling people not to use it.  Rhythmbox depends on information about the device provided by HAL, so I had a look at the relevant FDI files.  There was one section for Sansa Clip and Fuze players which didn’t list Vorbis support, and another section for “Sansa Clip version II”.  The second section was a much better match for the capabilities of my device.  As all Clip and Fuze devices support the extra formats when running the latest firmware, I merged the two sections (hal bug 20616, ubuntu bug 345249).  With the updated FDI file in place, copying music with Rhythmbox worked as expected.

The one downside to this change is that if you have a device with old firmware, Rhythmbox will no longer transcode music to a format the device can play.  There doesn’t seem to be any obvious way to tell if a device has a new enough firmware via USB IDs or similar, so I’m not sure how to handle it automatically.  That said, it is pretty easy to upgrade the firmware following the instructions from their forum, so it is probably best to just do that.

Syndicated 2009-03-24 10:21:05 from James Henstridge

PulseAudio

It seems to be a fashionable to blog about experiences with PulseAudio, I thought I’d join in.

I’ve actually had some good experiences with PulseAudio, seeing some tangible benefits over the ALSA setup I was using before.  I’ve got a cheapish surround sound speaker set connected to my desktop.  While it gives pretty good sound when all the speakers are used together, it sounds like crap if only the front left/right speakers are used.

ALSA supports multi-channel audio with the motherboard’s sound card alright, but apps producing stereo sound would only play out of the front two speakers.  There are some howtos on the internet for setting up a separate ALSA device that routes stereo audio to all the speakers in the right way, but that requires that I know in advance what sort of audio an application is going to generate: something like Totem could produce mono, stereo or surround output depending on the file I want to play.  This is more effort than I was usually willing to do, so I ended up flicking a switch on the amplifier to duplicate the front left/right channels to the rear.

With PulseAudio, I just had to edit the /etc/pulse/daemon.conf file and set default-sample-channels to 6, and it took care of converting mono and stereo output from apps to play on all the speakers while still letting apps producing surround output play as expected.  This means I automatically get the best result without any special effort on my part.

I’m not too worried that I had to tell PulseAudio how many speakers I had, since it is possible to plug in a number of speaker configurations and I don’t think the card is capable of sensing what has been attached (the manual documents manually selecting the speaker configuration in the Windows driver).  It might be nice if there was a way to configure this through the GUI though.

I’m looking forward to trying the “flat volume” feature in future versions of PulseAudio, as it should get the best quality out of the sound hardware (if I understand things right, 50% volume with current PulseAudio releases means you only get 15 bits of quantisation on a 16-bit sound card).  I just hope that it manages to cope with the mixers my sound card exports: one two-channel mixer for the front speakers, one two-channel mixer for the rear two speakers and two single channel mixers for the center and LFE channels.

Syndicated 2009-02-25 12:24:58 from James Henstridge

In Montreal

I’m in Montreal through to the end of next week.  The sub-zero temperatures are quite a change from Perth, where it got up to 39°C on the day I left.

The last time I was here was for Ubuntu Below Zero, so it is interesting seeing the same city covered in snow.

Syndicated 2009-02-24 19:12:16 from James Henstridge

In Hobart

Today was the first day of the mini-conferences that lead up to linux.conf.au later on this week.  I arrived yesterday after an eventful flight from Perth.

I was originally meant to fly out to Melbourne on the red eye leaving on Friday at 11:35pm, but just before I checked in they announced that the flight had been delayed until 4:00am the following day.  As I hadn’t had a chance to check in, I was able to get a pair of taxi vouchers to get home and back.  I only got about 2 hours of sleep though, as they said they would turn off the baggage processing system at 3am.  When I got back to the airport, I could see all the people who had stayed at the terminal spread out with airplane blankets.  A little before the 4:00am deadline, another announcement was made saying the plane would now be leaving at 5:00am.  Apparently they had needed to fly a replacement component in from over east to fix a problem found during maintenance.  Still, it seems it wasn’t the most delayed Qantas flight for that weekend and it did arrive in one piece.

As I had planned to spend a day in Melbourne visiting relatives, it didn’t cause any problems with the flight on to Hobart.  I had been invited to the “Ghosts” dinner, which was to start about an hour after my flight landed, so it was a bit of a rush to get to the university accommodation and then walk down the hill to the restaurant.

The dinner was pretty good, with organisers from all the previous LCA conferences plus the people organising the 2010 conference.  Unfortunately, I was the only one from the 2003 organisers able to attend.  It sounds like the 2010 organisers have things in hand, and the location should be great.

Syndicated 2009-01-19 13:01:21 from James Henstridge

Getting “bzr send” to work with GMail

One of the nice features of Bazaar is the ability to send a bundle of changes to someone via email.  If you use a supported mail client, it will even open the composer with the changes attached.  If your client isn’t supported, then it’ll let you compose a message in your editor and then send it to an SMTP server.

GMail is not a supported mail client, but there are a few work arounds listed on the wiki.  Those really come down to using an alternative mail client (either the editor or Mutt) and sending the mails through the GMail SMTP server.  Neither solution really appealed to me.  There doesn’t seem to be a programatic way of opening up GMail’s compose window and adding an attachment (not too surprising for a web app).

What is possible though is connecting via IMAP and adding messages to the drafts folder (assuming IMAP support is enabled).  So I wrote a small plugin to do just that.  It can be installed with the following command:

bzr branch lp:~jamesh/+junk/bzr-imapclient ~/.bazaar/plugins/imapclient

And then configure the IMAP server, username and mailbox according to the instructions in the README file.  You can then use “bzr send” as normal and then complete and send the draft at your leisure.

One nice thing about the plugin implementation is that it didn’t need any GMail specific features: it should be useful for anyone who has their drafts folder stored on an IMAP server and uses an unsupported mail client.

The main area where this could be improved would be to open up the compose screen in the web browser.  However, this would require knowing the internal message ID for the new message, which I can’t see how to access via IMAP.

Syndicated 2009-01-16 09:19:31 from James Henstridge

Using Twisted Deferred objects with gio

The gio library provides both synchronous and asynchronous interfaces for performing IO.  Unfortunately, the two APIs require quite different programming styles, making it difficult to convert code written to the simpler synchronous API to the asynchronous one.

For C programs this is unavoidable, but for Python we should be able to do better.  And if you’re doing asynchronous event driven code in Python, it makes sense to look at Twisted.  In particular, Twisted’s Deferred objects can be quite helpful.

Deferred

The Twisted documentation describes deferred objects as “a callback which will be put off until later”.  The deferred will eventually be passed the result of some operation, or information about how it failed.

From the consumer side, you can register one or more callbacks that will be run:

def callback(result):
    # do stuff
    return result

deferred.addCallback(callback)

The first callback will be called with the original result, while subsequent callbacks will be passed the return value of the previous callback (this is why the above example returns its argument). If the operation fails, one or more errbacks (error callbacks) will be called:

def errback(failure):
    # do stuff
    return failure

deferred.addErrback(errback)

If the operation associated with the deferred has already been completed (or already failed) when the callback/errback is added, then it will be called immediately. So there is no need to check if the operation is complete before hand.

Using Deferred objects with gio

We can easily use gio’s asynchronous API to implement a new API based on deferred objects.  For example:

import gio
from twisted.internet import defer

def file_read_deferred(file, io_priority=0, cancellable=None):
    d = defer.Deferred()
    def callback(file, async_result):
        try:
            in_stream = file.read_finish(async_result)
        except gio.Error:
            d.errback()
        else:
            d.callback(in_stream)
    file.read_async(callback, io_priority, cancellable)
    return d

def input_stream_read_deferred(in_stream, count, io_priority=0,
                               cancellable=None):
    d = defer.Deferred()
    def callback(in_stream, async_result):
        try:
            bytes = in_stream.read_finish(async_result)
        except gio.Error:
            d.errback()
        else:
            d.callback(bytes)
    # the argument order seems a bit weird here ...
    in_stream.read_async(count, callback, io_priority, cancellable)
    return d

This is a fairly simple transformation, so you might ask what this buys us. We’ve gone from an interface where you pass a callback to the method to one where you pass a callback to the result of the method. The answer is in the tools that Twisted provides for working with deferred objects.

The inlineCallbacks decorator

You’ve probably seen code examples that use Python’s generators to implement simple co-routines. Twisted’s inlineCallbacks decorator basically implements this for generators that yield deferred objects. It uses the enhanced generators feature from Python 2.5 (PEP 342) to pass the deferred result or failure back to the generator. Using it, we can write code like this:

@defer.inlineCallbacks
def print_contents(file, cancellable=None):
    in_stream = yield file_read_deferred(file, cancellable=cancellable)
    bytes = yield input_stream_read_deferred(
        in_stream, 4096, cancellable=cancellable)
    while bytes:
        # Do something with the data.  For this example, just print to stdout.
        sys.stdout.write(bytes)
        bytes = yield input_stream_read_deferred(
            in_stream, 4096, cancellable=cancellable)

Other than the use of the yield keyword, the above code looks quite similar to the equivalent synchronous implementation.  The only thing that would improve matters would be if these were real methods rather than helper functions.

Furthermore, the inlineCallbacks decorator causes the function to return a deferred that will fire when the function body finally completes or fails. This makes it possible to use the function from within other asynchronous code in a similar fashion. And once you’re using deferred results, you can mix in the gio calls with other Twisted asynchronous calls where it makes sense.

Syndicated 2009-01-06 01:18:53 from James Henstridge

Red Bull Air Race

Yesterday, I went to see the finals of the Red Bull Air Race here in Perth.  This was my first time watching the event, since I was over seas at the times it was held the previous two years.

The weather was good, and gave me a good opportunity to play with my camera a bit.  Sometimes you can miss out on the action by trying to take photos, but in this case the camera made it a lot easier to see the planes from the shore.

As the overall winner was decided by points scored over the full series, it wasn’t necessary for the series winner to win the Perth race.  This turned out to be the case, with Hans Arch coming third but winning the series.

Hannes Arch passing through one of the gates in front of the WACA

Hannes Arch passing through one of the gates in front of the WACA

The Perth final ended up being between two English pilots: Nigel Lamb and Paul Bonhomme, with Bonhomme winning the race.

Paul Bonhomme passing through the finishing pylons

Paul Bonhomme passing through the finishing gate

After the race, there was a display by the RAAF Roulettes formation flying team, and a fly over by an F/A-18 Hornet.

F/A-18 Hornet

F/A-18 Hornet

Overall, it was a pretty good day.  I don’t know if I’d have been up for watching the entire two days worth, but the finals were entertaining.  Hopefully I’ll be around for next year’s race.

Syndicated 2008-11-03 07:42:56 from James Henstridge

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