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      Aryan Kaushik: Open Forms is now 0.4.0 - and the GUI Builder is here

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 2 months from now • 3 minutes

    Open Forms is now 0.4.0 - and the GUI Builder is here

    A quick recap for the newcomers

    Ever been to a conference where you set up a booth or tried to collect quick feedback and experienced the joy of:

    • Captive portal logout
    • Timeouts
    • Flaky Wi-Fi drivers on Linux devices
    • Poor bandwidth or dead zones

    Meme showcasing wifi fails when using forms

    This is exactly what happened while setting up a booth at GUADEC. The Wi-Fi on the Linux tablet worked, we logged into the captive portal, the chip failed, Wi-Fi gone. Restart. Repeat.

    Meme showing a person giving their child a book on 'Wifi drivers on linux' as something to cry about

    We eventually worked around it with a phone hotspot, but that locked the phone to the booth. A one-off inconvenience? Maybe. But at any conference, summit, or community event, at least one of these happens reliably.

    So I looked for a native, offline form collection tool. Nothing existed without a web dependency. So I built one.

    Open Forms is a native GNOME app that collects form inputs locally, stores responses in CSV, works completely offline, and never touches an external service. Your data stays on your device. Full stop.

    Open Forms pages

    What's new in 0.4.0 - the GUI Form Builder

    The original version shipped with one acknowledged limitation: you had to write JSON configs by hand to define your forms.

    Now, I know what you're thinking. "Writing JSON to set up a form? That's totally normal and not at all a terrible first impression for non-technical users." And you'd be completely wrong, to me it was normal and then my sis had this to say "who even thought JSON for such a basic thing is a good idea, who'd even write one" which was true. I knew it and hence it was always on the roadmap to fix, which 0.4.0 finally fixes.

    Open Forms now ships a full visual form builder.

    Design a form entirely from the UI - add fields, set labels, reorder things, tweak options, and hit Save. That's it. The builder writes a standard JSON config to disk, same schema as always, so nothing downstream changes.

    It also works as an editor. Open an existing config, click Edit, and the whole form loads up ready to tweak. Save goes back to the original file. No more JSON editing required.

    Open forms builder page

    Libadwaita is genuinely great

    The builder needed to work well on both a regular desktop and a Linux phone without me maintaining two separate layouts or sprinkling breakpoints everywhere. Libadwaita just... handles that.

    The result is that Open Forms feels native on GNOME and equally at home on a Linux phone, and I genuinely didn't have to think hard about either. That's the kind of toolkit win that's hard to overstate when you're building something solo over weekends.


    The JSON schema is unchanged

    If you already have configs, they work exactly as before. The builder is purely additive, it reads and writes the same format. If you like editing JSON directly, nothing stops you. I'm not going to judge, but my sister might.

    Also thanks to Felipe and all others who gave great ideas about increasing maintainability. JSON might become a technical debt in future, and I appreciate the insights about the same. Let's see how it goes.

    Install

    Snap Store

    snap install open-forms
    

    Flatpak / Build from source

    See the GitHub repository for build instructions. There is also a Flatpak release available .

    What's next

    • A11y improvements
    • Maybe and just maybe an optional sync feature
    • Hosting on Flathub - if you've been through that process and have advice, please reach out

    Open Forms is still a small, focused project doing one thing. If you've ever dealt with Wi-Fi pain while collecting data at an event, give it a try. Bug reports, feature requests, and feedback are all very welcome.

    And if you find it useful - a star on GitHub goes a long way for a solo project. 🙂

    Open Forms on GitHub

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      Felipe Borges: RHEL 10 (GNOME 47) Accessibility Conformance Report

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 10:00

    Red Hat just published the Accessibility Conformance Report (ACR) for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 .

    Accessibility Conformance Reports basically document how our software measures up against accessibility standards like WCAG and Section 508 . Since RHEL 10 is built on GNOME 47, this report is a good look at how our stack handles various accessibility things from screen readers to keyboard navigation.

    Getting a desktop environment to meet these requirements is a huge task and it’s only possible because of the work done by our community in projects like: Orca, GTK, Libadwaita, Mutter, GNOME Shell, core apps, etc…

    Kudos to everyone in the GNOME project that cares about improving accessibility . We all know there’s a long way to go before desktop computing is fully accessible to everyone, but we are surely working on that.

    If you’re curious about the state of accessibility in the 47 release or how these audits work, you can find the full PDF here .

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      Thibault Martin: TIL that Animated AVIFs make lightweight videos

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 7:00

    Sometimes in my posts I need to show a screen recording. Videos can get heavy rapidly and take a lot of time to load.

    I also write my posts in markdown which has syntax to include images:

    ![Alt text describing the image](path to the image)
    

    Using that syntax for videos doesn't work though. Since html is valid markdown, it's possible to manually add <video> tags, but it's a bit more tedious.

    It's also possible to use ffmpeg to convert a mp4 video into a looping animated AVIF. The command to do it is

    $ ffmpeg -i demo.mp4 -loop 0 demo.avif
    

    AVIF also compresses very well, without loosing too much detail.

    $ ls -lh
    total 1.8M
    -rw-r--r--. 1 thib thib 566K Apr 11 09:26 typst-live-preview.avif
    -rw-r--r--. 1 thib thib 1.2M Apr  8 22:02 typst-live-preview.mp4
    

    The support for AVIF in browsers is excellent , sitting at more than 94% as of writing.

    My only remaining gripe is that Astro chokes on AVIF images when trying to optimize images in Markdown posts. A workaround for it is to store the AVIFs as static assets so Astro doesn't try to optimize them.

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      Peter Hutterer: Huion devices in the desktop stack

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 6:47 • 13 minutes

    This post attempts to explain how Huion tablet devices currently integrate into the desktop stack. I'll touch a bit on the Huion driver and the OpenTablet driver but primarily this explains the intended integration[1]. While I have access to some Huion devices and have seen reports from others, there are likely devices that are slightly different. Huion's vendor ID is also used by other devices (UCLogic and Gaomon) so this applies to those devices as well.

    This post was written without AI support, so any errors are organic artisian hand-crafted ones. Enjoy.

    The graphics tablet stack

    First, a short overview of the ideal graphics tablet stack in current desktops. At the bottom is the physical device which contains a significant amount of firmware. That device provides something resembling the HID protocol over the wire (or bluetooth) to the kernel. The kernel typically handles this via the generic HID drivers [2] and provides us with an /dev/input/event evdev node, ideally one for the pen (and any other tool) and one for the pad (the buttons/rings/wheels/dials on the physical tablet). libinput then interprets the data from these event nodes, passes them on to the compositor which then passes them via Wayland to the client. Here's a simplified illustration of this:

    Unlike the X11 api, libinput's API works both per-tablet and per-tool basis. In other words, when you plug in a tablet you get a libinput device that has a tablet tool capability and (optionally) a tablet pad capability. But the tool will only show up once you bring it into proximity. Wacom tools have sufficient identifiers that we can a) know what tool it is and b) get a unique serial number for that particular device. This means you can, if you wanted to, track your physical tool as it is used on multiple devices. No-one [3] does this but it's possible. More interesting is that because of this you can also configure the tools individually, different pressure curves, etc. This was possible with the xf86-input-wacom driver in X but only with some extra configuration, libinput provides/requires this as the default behaviour.

    The most prominent case for this is the eraser which is present on virtually all pen-like tools though some will have an eraser at the tail end and others (the numerically vast majority) will have it hardcoded on one of the buttons. Changing to eraser mode will create a new tool (the eraser) and bring it into proximity - that eraser tool is logically separate from the pen tool and can thus be configured differently. [4]

    Another effect of this per-tool behaviour is also that we know exactly what a tool can do. If you use two different styli with different capabilities (e.g. one with tilt and 2 buttons, one without tilt and 3 buttons), they will have the right bits set. This requires libwacom - a library that tells us, simply: any tool with id 0x1234 has N buttons and capabilities A, B and C. libwacom is just a bunch of static text files with a C library wrapped around those. Without libwacom, we cannot know what any individual tool can do - the firmware and kernel always expose the capability set of all tools that can be used on any particular tablet. For example: wacom's devices support an airbrush tool so any tablet plugged in will announce the capabilities for an airbrush even though >99% of users will never use an airbrush [5].

    The compositor then takes the libinput events, modifies them (e.g. pressure curve handling is done by the compositor) and passes them via the Wayland protocol to the client. That protocol is a pretty close mirror of the libinput API so it works mostly the same. From then on, the rest is up to the application/toolkit.

    Notably, libinput is a hardware abstraction layer and conversion of hardware events into others is generally left to the compositor. IOW if you want a button to generate a key event, that's done either in the compositor or in the application/toolkit. But the current versions of libinput and the Wayland protocol do support all hardware features we're currently aware of: the various stylus types (including Wacom's lens cursor and mouse-like "puck" devices) and buttons, rings, wheels/dials, and touchstrips on pads. We even support the rather once-off Dell Canvas Totem device.

    Huion devices

    Huion's devices are HID compatible which means they "work" out of the box but they come in two different modes, let's call them firmware mode and tablet mode. Each tablet device pretends to be three HID devices on the wire and depending on the mode some of those devices won't send events.

    Firmware mode

    This is the default mode after plugging the device in. Two of the HID devices exposed look like a tablet stylus and a keyboard. The tablet stylus is usually correct (enough) to work OOTB with the generic kernel drivers, it exports the buttons, pressure, tilt, etc. The buttons and strips/wheels/dials on the tablet are configured to send key events. For example, the Inspiroy 2S I have sends b/i/e/Ctrl+S/space/Ctrl+Alt+z for the buttons and the roller wheel sends Ctrl-/Ctrl= depending on direction. The latter are often interpreted as zoom in/out so hooray, things work OOTB. Other Huion devices have similar bindings, there is quite some overlap but not all devices have exactly the same key assignments for each button. It does of course get a lot more interesting when you want a button to do something different - you need to remap the key event (ideally without messing up your key map lest you need to type an 'e' later).

    The userspace part is effectively the same, so here's a simplified illustration of what happens in kernel land:

    Any vendor-specific data is discarded by the kernel (but in this mode that HID device doesn't send events anyway).

    Tablet mode

    If you read a special USB string descriptor from the English language ID, the device switches into tablet mode. Once in tablet mode, the HID tablet stylus and keyboard devices will stop sending events and instead all events from the device are sent via the third HID device which consists of a single vendor-specific report descriptor (read: 11 bytes of "here be magic"). Those bits represent the various features on the device, including the stylus features and all pad features as buttons/wheels/rings/strips (and not key events!). This mode is the one we want to handle the tablet properly. The kernel's hid-uclogic driver switches into tablet mode for supported devices, in userspace you can use e.g. huion-switcher . The device cannot be switched back to firmware mode but will return to firmware mode once unplugged.

    Once we have the device in tablet mode, we can get true tablet data and pass it on through our intended desktop stack. Alas, like ogres there are layers.

    hid-uclogic and udev-hid-bpf

    Historically and thanks in large parts to the now-discontinued digimend project , the hid-uclogic kernel driver did do the switching into tablet mode, followed by report descriptor mangling (inside the kernel) so that the resulting devices can be handled by the generic HID drivers. The more modern approach we are pushing for is to use udev-hid-bpf which is quite a bit easer to develop for. But both do effectively the same thing: they overlay the vendor-specific data with a normal HID report descriptor so that the incoming data can be handled by the generic HID kernel drivers. This will look like this:

    Notable here: the stylus and keyboard may still exist and get event nodes but never send events[6] but the uclogic/bpf-enabled device will be proper stylus/pad event nodes that can be handled by libinput (and thus the rest), with raw hardware data where buttons are buttons.

    Challenges

    Because in true manager speak we don't have problems, just challenges. And oh boy, we collect challenges as if we'd be organising the olypmics.

    hid-uclogic and libinput

    First and probably most embarrassing is that hid-uclogic has a different way of exposing event nodes than what libinput expects. This is largely my fault for having focused on Wacom devices and internalized their behaviour for long years. The hid-uclogic driver exports the wheels and strips on separate event nodes - libinput doesn't handle this correctly (or at all). That'd be fixable but the compositors also don't really expect this so there's a bit more work involved but the immediate effect is that those wheels/strips will likely be ignored and not work correctly. Buttons and pens work.

    udev-hid-bpf and huion-switcher

    hid-uclogic being a kernel driver has access to the underlying USB device. The HID-BPF hooks in the kernel currently do not, so we cannot switch the device into tablet mode from a BPF, we need it in tablet mode already. This means a userspace tool (read: huion-switcher) triggered via udev on plug-in and before the udev-hid-bpf udev rules trigger. Not a problem but it's one more moving piece that needs to be present (but boy, does this feel like the unix way...).

    Huion's precious product IDs

    By far the most annoying part about anything Huion is that until relatively recently (I don't have a date but maybe until 2 years ago) all of Huion's devices shared the same few USB product IDs. For most of these devices we worked around it by matching on device names but there were devices that had the same product id and device name. At some point libwacom and the kernel and huion-switcher had to implement firmware ID extraction and matching so we could differ between devices with the same 0256:006d usb IDs. Luckily this seems to be in the past now with modern devices now getting new PIDs for each individual device. But if you have an older device, expect difficulties and, worse, things to potentially break after firmware updates when/if the firmware identification string changes. udev-hid-bpf (and uclogic) rely on the firmware strings to identify the device correctly.

    udev-hid-bpf and hid-uclogic

    Because we have a changeover from the hid-uclogic kernel driver to the udev-hid-bpf files there are rough edges on "where does this device go". The general rule is now: if it's not a shared product ID (see above) it should go into udev-hid-bpf and not the uclogic driver. Easier to maintain, much more fire-and-forget. Devices already supported by udev-hid-bpf will remain there, we won't implement BPFs for those (older) devices, doubly so because of the aforementioned libinput difficulties with some hid-uclogic features.

    Reverse engineering required

    The newer tablets are always slightly different so we basically need to reverse-engineer each tablet to get it working. That's common enough for any device but we do rely on volunteers to do this. Mind you, the udev-hid-bpf approach is much simpler than doing it in the kernel, much of it is now copy-paste and I've even had quite some success to get e.g. Claude Code to spit out a 90% correct BPF on its first try. At least the advantage of our approach to change the report descriptor means once it's done it's done forever, there is no maintenance required because it's a static array of bytes that doesn't ever change.

    Plumbing support into userspace

    Because we're abstracting the hardware, userspace needs to be fully plumbed. This was a problem last year for example when we (slowly) got support for relative wheels into libinput, then wayland, then the compositors, then the toolkits to make it available to the applications (of which I think none so far use the wheels). Depending on how fast your distribution moves, this may mean that support is months and years off even when everything has been implemented. On the plus side these new features tend to only appear once every few years. Nonetheless, it's not hard to see why the "just sent Ctrl=, that'll do" approach is preferred by many users over "probably everything will work in 2027, I'm sure".

    So, what stylus is this?

    A currently unsolved problem is the lack of tool IDs on all Huion tools. We cannot know if the tool used is the two-button + eraser PW600L or the three-button-one-is-an-eraser-button PW600S or the two-button PW550 (I don't know if it's really 2 buttons or 1 button + eraser button). We always had this problem with e.g. the now quite old Wacom Bamboo devices but those pens all had the same functionality so it just didn't matter. It would matter less if the various pens would only work on the device they ship with but it's apparently quite possible to use a 3 button pen on a tablet that shipped with a 2 button pen OOTB. This is not difficult to solve (pretend to support all possible buttons on all tools) but it's frustrating because it removes a bunch of UI niceties that we've had for years - such as the pen settings only showing buttons that actually existed. Anyway, a problem currently in the "how I wish there was time" basket.

    Summary

    Overall, we are in an ok state but not as good as we are for Wacom devices. The lack of tool IDs is the only thing not fixable without Huion changing the hardware[7]. The delay between a new device release and driver support is really just dependent on one motivated person reverse-engineering it (our BPFs can work across kernel versions and you can literally download them from a successful CI pipeline ). The hid-uclogic split should become less painful over time and the same as the devices with shared USB product IDs age into landfill and even more so if libinput gains support for the separate event nodes for wheels/strips/... (there is currently no plan and I'm somewhat questioning whether anyone really cares). But other than that our main feature gap is really the ability for much more flexible configuration of buttons/wheels/... in all compositors - having that would likely make the requirement for OpenTabletDriver and the Huion tablet disappear.

    OpenTabletDriver and Huion's own driver

    The final topic here: what about the existing non-kernel drivers?

    Both of these are userspace HID input drivers which all use the same approach: read from a /dev/hidraw node, create a uinput device and pass events back. On the plus side this means you can do literally anything that the input subsystem supports, at the cost of a context switch for every input event. Again, a diagram on how this looks like (mostly) below userspace:

    Note how the kernel's HID devices are not exercised here at all because we parse the vendor report, create our own custom (separate) uinput device(s) and then basically re-implement the HID to evdev event mapping. This allows for great flexibility (and control, hence the vendor drivers are shipped this way) because any remapping can be done before you hit uinput. I don't immediately know whether OpenTabletDriver switches to firmware mode or maps the tablet mode but architecturally it doesn't make much difference.

    From a security perspective: having a userspace driver means you either need to run that driver daemon as root or (in the case of OpenTabletDriver at least) you need to allow uaccess to /dev/uinput , usually via udev rules. Once those are installed , anything can create uinput devices, which is a risk but how much is up for interpretation.

    [1] As is so often the case, even the intended state does not necessarily spark joy
    [2] Again, we're talking about the intended case here...
    [3] fsvo "no-one"
    [4] The xf86-input-wacom driver always initialises a separate eraser tool even if you never press that button
    [5] For historical reasons those are also multiplexed so getting ABS_Z on a device has different meanings depending on the tool currently in proximity
    [6] In our udev-hid-bpf BPFs we hide those devices so you really only get the correct event nodes, I'm not immediately sure what hid-uclogic does
    [7] At which point Pandora will once again open the box because most of the stack is not yet ready for non-Wacom tool ids

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      Jakub Steiner: release.gnome.org refactor

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 0:00 • 1 minute

    After successfully moving this blog to Zola , doubts got suppressed and I couldn't resist porting the GNOME Release Notes too.

    The Proof

    The blog port worked better than expected. Fighting CI github action was where most enthusiasm was lost. The real test though was whether Zola could handle a site way more important than my little blog — one hosting release notes for GNOME.

    What Changed

    The main work was porting the templates from Liquid to Tera, the same exercise as the blog. That included structural change to shift releases from Jekyll pages to proper Zola posts . This enabled two things that weren't possible before:

    • RSS feed — With releases as posts, generating a feed is native. Something I was planning to do in the Jekyll world … but there were roadblocks .
    • The archive — Old release notes going back to GNOME 2.x have been properly ported over. They're now part of the navigable archive instead of lost to the ages. I'm afraid it's quite a cringe town if you hold nostalgic ideas how amazing things were back in the day.

    The Payoff

    The site now has a working RSS feed — years of broken promises finally fulfilled. The full archive from GNOME 2.x through 50 is available. And perhaps best of all: zero dependency management and supporting people who "just want to write a bit of markdown". Just a single binary.

    I'd say it's another success story and if I were a Jekyll project in the websites team space , I'd start to worry.

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      Bilal Elmoussaoui: goblin: A Linter for GObject C Code

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 2 days ago • 2 minutes

    Over the past week, I’ve been building goblin , a linter specifically designed for GObject-based C codebases.

    If you know Rust’s clippy or Go’s go vet , think of goblin as the same thing for GObject/GLib.

    Why this exists

    A large part of the Linux desktop stack (GTK, Mutter, Pango, NetworkManager) is built on GObject. These projects have evolved over decades and carry a lot of patterns that predate newer GLib helpers, are easy to misuse, or encode subtle lifecycle invariants that nothing verifies.

    This leads to issues like missing dispose / finalize / constructed chain-ups (memory leaks or undefined behavior), incorrect property definitions, uninitialized GError* variables, or function declarations with no implementation.

    These aren’t theoretical. This GTK merge request recently fixed several missing chain-ups in example code.

    Despite this, the C ecosystem lacks a linter that understands GObject semantics. goblin exists to close that gap.

    What goblin checks

    goblin ships with 35 rules across different categories:

    • Correctness : Real bugs like non-canonical property names, uninitialized GError* , missing PROP_0
    • Suspicious : Likely mistakes like missing implementations or redundant NULL checks
    • Style : Idiomatic GLib usage ( g_strcmp0 , g_str_equal() )
    • Complexity : Suggests modern helpers ( g_autoptr , g_clear_* , g_set_str() )
    • Performance : Optimizations like G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS or g_object_notify_by_pspec()
    • Pedantic : Consistency checks (macro semicolons, matching declare/define pairs)

    23 out of 35 rules are auto-fixable. You should apply fixes one rule at a time to review the changes:

    goblin --fix --only use_g_strcmp0
    goblin --fix --only use_clear_functions
    

    CI/CD Integration

    goblin fits into existing pipelines.

    GitHub Actions

    - name: Run goblin
      run: goblin --format sarif > goblin.sarif
    
    - name: Upload SARIF results
      uses: github/codeql-action/upload-sarif@v3
      with:
        sarif_file: goblin.sarif
    

    Results show up in the Security tab under "Code scanning" and inline on pull requests.

    GitLab CI

    goblin:
      image: ghcr.io/bilelmoussaoui/goblin:latest
      script:
        - goblin --format sarif > goblin.sarif
      artifacts:
        reports:
          sast: goblin.sarif
    

    Results appear inline in merge requests.

    Configuration

    Rules default to warn , and can be tuned via goblin.toml :

    min_glib_version = "2.40"  # Auto-disable rules for newer versions
    
    [rules]
    g_param_spec_static_name_canonical = "error"  # Make critical
    use_g_strcmp0 = "warn"  # Keep as warning
    use_g_autoptr_inline_cleanup = "ignore"  # Disable
    
    # Per-rule ignore patterns
    missing_implementation = { level = "error", ignore = ["src/backends/**"] }
    

    You can adopt it gradually without fixing everything at once.

    Try it

    # Run via container
    podman run --rm -v "$PWD:/workspace:Z" ghcr.io/bilelmoussaoui/goblin:latest
    
    # Install locally
    cargo install --git https://github.com/bilelmoussaoui/goblin goblin
    
    # Usage
    goblin              # Lint current directory
    goblin --fix        # Apply automatic fixes
    goblin --list-rules # Inspect available rules
    

    The project is early, so feedback is especially valuable (false positives, missing checks, workflow issues, etc.).

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      Thibault Martin: TIL that Kubernetes can give you a shell into a crashing container

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 3 days ago • 1 minute

    When a container crashes, it can be for several reasons. Sometimes the log won't tell you much about why the container crashed, and you can't get a shell into that container because... it has already crashed. It turns out that kubectl debug can let you do exactly that.

    I was trying to ship Helfertool on our Kubernetes cluster. The firs step was to get it to work locally in my Minikube. The container I was deploying kept crashing, with an error message that put me on the right track: Cannot write to log directory. Exiting.

    The container expected me to mount a volume on /log so it could write logs, which I did. I wanted to run a quick test from within the container to see if I could create a file in that directory. But when your container has already crashed you can't get a shell into it.

    My better informed colleague Quentin told me about kubectl debug , a command that lets me create a copy of the crashing container but with a different COMMAND .

    So instead of running its normal program, I can ask the container to run sh with the following command

    $ kubectl debug mypod -it \
        --copy-to=mypod-debug \
        --container=my-pods-image \
        -- sh
    

    And just like that I have shell inside a similar container. Using this trick I could confirm that I can't touch a file in that /log directory because it belongs to root while my container is running unprivileged.

    That's a great trick to troubleshoot from within a crashing container!

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      This Week in GNOME: #244 Recognizing Hieroglyphs

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 3 days ago • 4 minutes

    Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from April 03 to April 10.

    GNOME Core Apps and Libraries

    Blueprint

    A markup language for app developers to create GTK user interfaces.

    James Westman reports

    blueprint-compiler is now available on PyPI. You can install it with pip install blueprint-compiler .

    GNOME Circle Apps and Libraries

    Hieroglyphic

    Find LaTeX symbols

    FineFindus reports

    Hieroglyphic 2.3 is out now. Thanks to the exciting work done by Bnyro, Hieroglyphic can now also recognize Typst symbols (a modern alternative to LaTeX). Hardware-acceleration will now be preferred, when available, reducing power-consumption.

    Download the latest version from FlatHub .

    hieroglyphic_typst_symbols.wOxbuouY_Z2f6K8J.webp

    Amberol

    Plays music, and nothing else.

    Emmanuele Bassi says

    Amberol 2026.1 is out, using the GNOME 50 run time! This new release fixes a few issues when it comes to loading music, and has some small quality of life improvements in the UI, like: a more consistent visibility of the playlist panel when adding songs or searching; using the shortcuts dialog from libadwaita; and being able to open the file manager in the folder containing the current song. You can get Amberol on Flathub .

    amberol-2026-1.P7qMWOfZ_ZEOvUr.webp

    Third Party Projects

    Alexander Vanhee says

    A new version of Bazaar is out now. It features the ability to filter search results via a new popover and reworks the add-ons dialog to include a page that shows more information about a specific entry. If you try to open an add-on via the AppStream scheme, it will now display this page, which is useful when you want to redirect users to install an add-on from within your app.

    Also, please take a look at the statistics dialog — it now features a cool gradient.

    Check it out on Flathub

    bazaar_filter.BEY1Y2IA_Z2ct3wc.webp

    bazaar_addon.CpggJJ7h_1ucB0G.webp

    bazaar_gradient.Bo85-k8K_Z1FCB1D.webp

    dabrain34 reports

    GstPipelineStudio 0.5.1 is out now. It’s a great pleasure to announce this new version allowing to deal with DOT files directly. Check the project web page for more information or the following blog post for more details about the release.

    gps_screenshot.CLpepb66_Z1zRPBI.webp

    Anton Isaiev announces

    RustConn (connection manager for SSH, RDP, VNC, SPICE, Telnet, Serial, Kubernetes, MOSH, and Zero Trust protocols)

    Versions 0.10.9–0.10.14 landed with a solid round of usability, security, and performance work.

    Staying connected got easier. If an SSH session drops unexpectedly, RustConn now polls the host and reconnects on its own as soon as it’s back. Wake-on-LAN works the same way: send the magic packet and RustConn connects automatically once the machine boots. You can also right-click any connection to check if the host is online, and a new “Connect All” option opens every connection in a folder at once. For RDP there’s a Mouse Jiggler that keeps idle sessions alive.

    Terminal Activity Monitor is a new per-session feature that watches for output activity or silence, which is handy for long-running jobs. You get notifications as tab icons, toasts, and desktop alerts when the window is in the background.

    Security got a lot of attention. RDP now defaults to trust-on-first-use certificate validation instead of blindly accepting everything. Credentials for Bitwarden and 1Password are no longer visible in the process list. VNC passwords are zeroized on drop. Export files are written with owner-only permissions. Dangerous custom arguments are blocked for both VNC and FreeRDP viewers.

    Hoop.dev joins as the 11th Zero Trust provider. There’s also a new custom SSH agent socket setting that lets Flatpak users connect through KeePassXC, Bitwarden, or GPG-based SSH agents, something the Flatpak sandbox previously made difficult.

    Smoother on HiDPI and 4K. RDP frame rendering skips a 33 MB per-frame copy when the data is already in the right format. Highlight rules, search, and log sanitization patterns are compiled once instead of on every keystroke or terminal line.

    GNOME HIG polish. Success notifications now use non-blocking toasts instead of modal dialogs. Sidebar context menus are native PopoverMenus with keyboard navigation and screen reader support. Translations completed for all 15 languages.

    Project: https://github.com/totoshko88/RustConn Flatpak: https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.github.totoshko88.RustConn

    rustconn.B0H0ecFv_Z8nore.webp

    Phosh

    A pure wayland shell for mobile devices.

    Guido announces

    Phosh 0.54 is out:

    There’s now a notification when an app fails to start, the status bar can be extended via plugins, and the location quick toggle has a status page to set the maximum allowed accuracy.

    On the compositor side we improved X11 support, making docked mode (aka convergence) with applications like emacs or ardour more fun to use.

    The on screen keyboard Stevia now supports Japanese and Chinese input via UIM, has a new us+workman layout and automatic space handling can be disabled.

    There’s more - see the full details here .

    phosh-app-failed-to-start-notification.cQ6G-QDG_Z2u7AWC.webp

    Documentation

    Emmanuele Bassi announces

    The GNOME User documentation project has been ported to use Meson for its configuration, build, and installation. The User documentation contains the desktop help and the system administration guide, and gets published on the user help website , as well as being available locally through the Help browser . The switch to Meson improved build times, and moved the tests and validation in the build system. There’s a whole new contribution guideline as well. If you want to help writing the GNOME documentation, join us in the Docs room on Matrix !

    Shell Extensions

    Weather O’Clock

    Display the current weather inside the pill next to the clock.

    Cleo Menezes Jr. reports

    Weather O’Clock 50 released with fluffier animations: smooth fades between loading, weather and offline states; instant temperature updates; first-fetch spinner; offline indicator; GNOME Shell 45–50 support; and various bug fixes.

    Get it on GNOME Extensions

    Follow development

    That’s all for this week!

    See you next week, and be sure to stop by #thisweek:gnome.org with updates on your own projects!

    • Pl chevron_right

      Jakub Steiner: Moving to Zola

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 3 days ago • 3 minutes

    Zola

    I've finally gotten around to porting this blog over to Zola . I've been running on Jekyll for years now, after originally conceiving this blog in Middleman (and PHP initially). But time catches up with everything, and the friction of maintaining Ruby dependencies eventually got to me.

    The Speed

    I can't stress this enough — Zola is fast . Not "for a static site generator" fast. Just fast. My old Jekyll setup needed a good few seconds to rebuild after a change. Zola builds in milliseconds. The entire site rebuilds almost before I can release the key. It's not critical for a site that gets updated 5 times a year, but it's still impressive.

    No Dependencies

    This is the big one. Every time you leave a project alone for a few months and come back, you know it's not just going to magically work. The gem versions drift, Bundler gets confused, and suddenly you're down a rabbit hole of version conflicts. The only reason all our Jekyll projects were reasonably easy to work with was locking onto Ruby 3.1.2 using rvm . But at some point the layers of backwardism catch up with you.

    Zola is a single binary. That's it. No bundle install , no Gemfile, no "works on my machine" prayers. Download, run, done. It even embeds everything — syntax highlighting, image processing, Sass compilation (if you haven't embraced the modern CSS light yet) — all built-in. The site builds the same on any machine with zero setup.

    The Heritage

    Zola started life as Gutenberg in 2015/2016, a learning project for Rust by Vincent Prouillet . He was using Hugo before, but hated the Go template engine. That spawned Tera , the Jinja2-inspired template engine that Zola uses.

    The project got renamed to Zola in 2018 when the name conflicts with Project Gutenberg got too annoying. It's pure Rust, which means it's fast, memory-safe, and ships as a tiny static binary.

    Asset Colocation

    One thing I've always focused on for this blog architecture wise is the structure — images and media live right alongside the post, not stuffed into some shared /images/ folder somewhere like most Jekyll sites seem to do. Zola calls this "asset colocation," and it's a first-class feature. No plugins needed. Just put your images in the same folder as your index.md , reference them directly, and Zola handles the rest.

    This is how I'd already been running things with Jekyll, so the port was refreshingly painless on that front.

    The Templating

    The main work was porting the templates. It was the main shostopper when Bilal suggested Zola a couple of years ago. I was hoping something with liquid to pop up, but it seems like people running their own blogs is not a Tik Tok trend. Zola uses Tera instead of Liquid. The syntax is similar enough to get by, but there's enough branches in your path to stumble on. The error messages actually make sense though and point you at the problem, which is a refreshing change from debugging broken Liquid includes.

    The Improvements

    Beyond speed, I've been cleaning up things the old theme dragged along:

    • Dark mode without JavaScript : The original Klise theme injected a script to toggle themes. The new setup uses CSS-only theming via custom properties, no flash of wrong theme, no JS required.
    • Legibility : I'm getting older, and apparently so are my readers. Font sizes bumped up, contrast dialled in. What looked crisp at 30 looks muddy at 50.

    The site's cleaner now, light by default, faster to build, and I don't need to invoke Ruby just to write a blog post. The experience was so damn good, it motivated me to jump at a much larger project I'm hopefully going to post about next.

    Previously .