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HOWTO contribute

Contributing to ProjectNews is easy but depends on your skills and the amount of time you can spare.

Send interesting news

The easiest way to help us is to inform us about interesting things happening in the Debian universe. Debian is quite a big project, and we don't have the manpower to monitor every mailing list, blog, news site for content we might want to add to our ProjectNews. So tell us, if you noticed something interesting happening. You can usually do this by sending an E-Mail to debian-publicity@lists.debian.org .

What you should send

Generally speaking: everything which might have a noticeable impact on the Debian Project at large and its user base is special.

Some ideas:

Things you don't need to report

Of course the above list is far from being complete. We would especially like to point out, that we can't monitor other media, web sites, blogs and everything else. So it's very valuable to report anything you think fitting to the ProjectNews to our mailing lists debian-publicity@lists.debian.org .

Keep in mind, that one of the main purposes from our side, beside keeping our users informed, is to show them that we are a living, working community! I.e. to show that Debian is thriving, that Debian is alive!

Help from native speakers

Currently the main editor is not a native English speaker. He knows it, and you probably have noticed it, too. So one thing you can help as a native speaker is to fix his en_DE to proper English. The issues are drafted in a Subversion repository. Details on how to access using a Subversion client are listed below in the "Becoming an editor yourself" section. Even if you are unfamiliar with Subversion, you can always download the current issue, review, and mail comments to the debian-publicity mailing list. We would prefer to receive your changes as diff or wdiff, if possible: Just make a copy of the downloaded file, edit it, and send us the output of diff -u <oldfile> <newfile>.

Becoming an editor yourself

If you want to contribute directly and want to add small articles for the ProjectNews yourself, feel free to join the team:

Accessing the subversion repository

Before accessing the subversion repository, you might want to read ?Setting up SSH the first time to use the subversion repository on alioth more conveniently.

You can now edit the Debian Project News. Don't worry if you unexperienced with subversion or the Website Meta Language / HTML (which is used for Debian's website). Nothing you do will directly appear on the website and all errors you might do can be revoked relatively painlessly.

Editing

Also note, that there are several graphical front ends for subversion. But as the writer lacks experience with any of them, he can't recommend them.

Two more other guidelines for committing your changes:

  1. Please use a useful commit message (the description of your changes behind the "-m" Parameter).
  2. Try not to make to long lines. Tracking changes / viewing diffs is easier, when the line length is shorter then ~80 characters. Most Editors can be configured to automatically break the line for you.

Some hints for subversion usage

Keyword expansion and subversion

To use the translation check header (which makes it possible for translators to mark which revision of a file they followed when translating) the wml-Files must be have the respective svn keywords properties set. So you can place $Id:$ in a document, and subversion will automatically replace it with some information about who did when the last changes and which revision is this document now.

So before committing a new wml file to the repository, please use the following to allow the keyword expansion: svn propset svn:keywords "Date Author Id Rev" <yourfile>.

You can also add the following the [auto-props] section of your ~/.subversion/config and uncomment the enable-auto-props = yes entry which should take care of that automatically:

*.wml = svn:keywords="Author Date Id Rev URL";

Format of the index.wml file

The Debian Project News are available in three formats:

All these formats are generated from the index.wml file. Debian's website use the website meta language (WML) to create the web pages. Roughly speaking is WML HTML with embedded macros (e.g. for common elements on various sited) and the possibility to embed perl scripts, e.g. to create a list of DPN issues based on the files available. But don't worry: you don't need to know WML or perl (and only basic HTML) to contribute to the DPN. Luckily nearly everything is already in place and we just need to create the content with minimal HTML markup.

If you look at an empty index.wml (you can look at this one which is used as template) you'll notice that it starts as follows:

#use wml::debian::projectnews::header PUBDATE="2010-XX-XX" SUMMARY=""
#use wml::debian::acronyms

The first line says to the wml compiler that it should use the project-news template for the header. It also sets two variables for the publishing date and a small summary. The summary is used for example at the index page for recent issues. It should be to long.

The acronyms line allows the use of specific acronyms, which will show the explanation as a hover text over the acronym.

At the end you'll see something similar:

#use wml::debian::projectnews::footer editor="XXX, XXX, Alexander Reichle-Schmehl"

That tells the wml compiler to add the normal footer to the web page. With the editor variable, it will also add the names of the contributors listed there.

Everything between these lines, is regular HTML, which in our case mostly means: some headlines (<h2>...</h2>), some paragraphs (<p>...</p>) and some lists (<ul><li>...</li><li>...</li></ul>).

Every article should start with a headline:

<a name="1"></a>
<h2>This is the headline of my small article</h2>

The stuff between the <h2> and </h2> is the actual headline. The <a name="x"></a> creates a so called anchor used to directly jump to a specific entry. It's for example used in the RSS-feed.

After that follows the actual article between <p> and </p>. You may use several of these paragraphs, but note that only the first one will appear in the RSS-feed. (Which might be a bug worth fixing, if you know enough perl...)

As explained, you may use normal HTML in these paragraphs. This means:

As the Project News is also read by users not very familiar with the Debian internal jargon and acronyms, please also use the <acronym ...> </acronym> tag (not part of HTML but one of our wml templates). See the following example:

One topic discussed was: <q>Race against <acronym lang="en" title="None of the above">NOTA</acronym>.</q>

While it won't work in the text version for e-mails, at least the HTML version for the websites and the RSS feed will mark the acronym so, that when the user moves the mouse cursor over the acronym the explanation is displayed. You can see an example on http://www.debian.org/News/project/2009/02/ (search for DPL).

Translating the Debian Project News

Feel free to use the subversion repository for your translation work, too. In these cases it is easier to just check out the complete DPN hierarchy of the subversion repository by doing:

#use wml::debian::projectnews::footer editor="Moritz Muehlenhoff, Andre Felipe Machado, Alexander Reichle-Schmehl" translator="Benedikt Beckmann"

Using Translation check to track original document versions

If you use the publicities subversion repository you can use the script in scripts/trans-check to track which of your translations are up to date. Your translations need a translation check for this to work. For example:

#use wml::debian::translation-check translation="45"

This will tell the script (and later Debian's website), that your translation was based upon revision 45 of the original document.

The only parameter it takes is the language to be checked or to be more precise: the folder it should compare against the en/ folder. See the following example:

alex@rusalka:publicity/dpn$ scripts/trans-check fr
Found 'fr/current/index.wml' is outdated!
  Please run 'svn diff -r 9:18 "en/current/index.wml"' to review the changes to the original document.

Getting your translation published

As shortly explained in section ?Format of the index.wml, the Debian Project News are published in three ways:

To get your translation published on Debian's website, it will need to be added to the CVS repository. See http://www.debian.org/devel/website/ for more details about that.

To send your translation out as e-mail on one of our user mailing lists, note that the debian-news-language lists are moderated, so please get in contact with the respective moderators / your translation team (e.g. via the debian-l10n-language lists). If there's no debian-news-language list for your language, but a debian-user-language list, you may send your translation to that list (depending on how the members of that list think about it).

Regardless of where you send it, you will find the script scripts/DPNhtml2mail.pl quite handy: when your translation is available on the website, you can just run it, and it will create the text version for you. You can call it similar to scripts/DPNhtml2mail.pl -d -l en -i 2008/06. It doesn't work perfect, yet, but it makes it very easy to create a "good looking" text version.