28 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Christian Hergert: Libdex Futures from asyncio
One of my original hopes for Libdex was to help us structure complex asynchronous code in the GNOME platform. If my work creating Foundry and Sysprof are any indicator, it has done leaps and bounds for my productivity and quality in that regard.
Always in the back of my mind I hoped we could make those futures integrate with language runtimes.
This morning I finally got around to learning enough of Python's asyncio module to write the extremely minimal glue code. Here is a commit that implements integration as a PyGObject introspection override. It will automatically load when you from gi.repository import Dex.
This only integrates with the asyncio side of things so your application is still responsible for integrating asyncio and GMainContext or else nothing will be pumping the DexScheduler. But that is application toolkit specific so I must leave that to you.
I would absolutely love it if someone could work on the same level of integration for GJS as I have even less experience with that platform.
28 Nov 2025 9:18pm GMT
Allan Day: GNOME Foundation Update, 2025-11-28
Welcome to another GNOME Foundation update; an overview of everything that's been happening at the Foundation. There was no update last week, due to me being away from my computer last Friday, so this post covers a two week period rather than the usual single week.
Many thanks to everyone who responded to my request for feedback in my previous post! It was great to hear your views on these posts, and it was extremely motivating to get positive feedback on the blog series.
Budget report
In case you didn't see it, last week Rob posted a detailed breakdown of the Foundation's current operating budget. This is the second year in a row that we have provided a budget report for the community, and I'm thrilled that we've been able to keep up the momentum around financial transparency. I'd encourage you to give it a read if you haven't already.
Community travel
One positive aspect of the current budget is that we have a healthy community travel budget, and I really want to encourage members to make use of the fund. The travel budget is there to be spent, and we absolutely want to see community members applying for travel. If you have been interested in organising a hackfest, or attending a GNOME conference, and finances have been a barrier, please do make use of the funding that is available. Information about how to apply can be found in the handbook.
Also on travel: we are currently looking to recruit additional volunteers to help administer the travel budget, as part of the Travel Committee. So, if you are interested in helping with GNOME and would like to get involved, please do get in touch using the comments below, or by messaging the Travel Committee.
Outreachy
The Foundation has a proud history of funding outreach efforts, and has regularly supported interns through Outreachy. The December to March round is almost upon us, and the Internship Committee has coordinated the selection of an intern who we will be sponsoring. We were pleased to release the funding for this internship this week. More details about the internship itself will follow.
Banking and finance systems
As mentioned in recent updates, we have been working through a round of improvements to our banking setup, which will give us enhanced fraud protection, as well as automatic finance management features. This week we had a training session with our bank, the fraud protection features were turned on, and I signed the last of the paperwork. As a result, this round of work is now complete.
I have also been going through the process of signing up for the new financial system that Dawn our new finance advisor will be setting up for us.
Bookkeeping meetings
Our regular monthly bookkeeping meeting happened last week, and we had another follow-up call more recently. We are still working through the 2024-25 financial year end accounts, which primarily involves resolving a list of small questions, to make sure that the accounts are 100% complete and accurate. Our bookkeeper has also been very patiently answering questions from Deepa, our treasurer, and myself as we continue to familiarise ourselves with the finance and accounting setup (thank you!)
Board meeting
The Board had a regular meeting this week. The topics under discussion included:
- Setting goals for the upcoming fundraising campaign, in particular what the fundraising target should be, and what programs we want to fund with the proceeds.
- Improving our minutes to meet the needs of different audiences (directors, auditors, the IRS, members, and so on). We also worked on a plan to clear the backlog of unapproved minutes.
- Planning for a Board hackfest prior to next FOSDEM.
We came away with a healthy list of action items, and I'm looking forward to making progress in each of these areas.
GNOME.Asia
Our upcoming conference is Tokyo continues to be a focus, and Kristi is busy putting the final arrangements together. The event is just 15 days away! A reminder: if you want to participate, please do head over to the site and register.
Flathub
There has been some good progress around Flathub over the past two weeks. Bart has done quite a bit of work to improve the performance of the Flathub website, which I'm sure users will appreciate. We also received some key pieces of legal work, which are required as part of the roadmap to establish Flathub as its own financial/legal entity. With those legal documents in place we have turned our attention to planning Flathub's financial systems; discussions about this are ongoing.
Digital Wellbeing
There was another review call this week to check on progress as the current phase of the program reaches its final stages. The main focus right now is making sure that the new screen time limits feature is in good shape before we use up the remaining funding.
Progress is looking good in general: the main changes for GNOME Shell and Settings have all been merged. There are two more pieces of work to land before we can say that we are in a feature complete state. After that we will circle back to UX review and papercut fixing. If you want more information about these features, I would recommend Ignacy's recent post on the topic.
Philip has also published a fantastic post on the web filtering functionality that has been implemented as part of this program.
That's it for this week! Thanks for reading, and see you next week.
28 Nov 2025 7:26pm GMT
27 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Philip Withnall: Parental controls web filtering backend
In my previous post I gave an overview of the backend for the screen time limits feature of parental controls in GNOME. In this post, I'll try and do the same for the web filtering feature.
We haven't said much about web filtering so far, because the user interface for it isn't finished yet. The backend is, though, and it will get plumbed up eventually. Currently we don't have a GNOME release targeted for it yet.
When is web filterings? What is web filtering?
(Apologies to Radio 4 Friday Night Comedy.)
Firstly, what is the aim of web filtering? As with screen time limits, we've written a design document which (hopefully) covers everything. But the summary is that it should allow parents to filter out age-inappropriate content on the web when it's accessed by child accounts, while not breaking the web (for example, by breaking TLS for websites) and not requiring us (as a project) to become curators of filter lists. It needs to work for all apps on the system (lots of apps other than web browsers can show web content), and needs to be able to filter things differently for different users (two different children of different ages might use the same computer, as well as the parents themselves).
After looking at various different possible ways of implementing it, the best solution seemed to be to write an NSS module to respond to name resolution (i.e. DNS) requests and potentially block them according to a per-user filter list.
A brief introduction to NSS
NSS (Name Service Switch) is a standardised name lookup API in libc. It's used for hostname resolution, but also for user accounts and various other things. Names are resolved by various modules which are dlopen()ed into your process by libc and queried in the order given in /etc/nsswitch.conf. So for hostname resolution, a typical configuration in nsswitch.conf would cause libc to query the module which looks at /etc/hosts first, then the module which checks your machine's hostname, then the mDNS module, then systemd-resolved.
So, we can insert our NSS module into /etc/nsswitch.conf, have it run somewhere before systemd-resolved (which in this example does the actual DNS resolution), and have it return a sinkhole address for blocked domains. Because /etc/nsswitch.conf is read by libc within your process, this means that the configuration needs to be modified for containers (flatpak) as well as on the host system.
Because the filter module is loaded into the name lookup layer, this means that content filtering (as opposed to domain name filtering) is not possible with this approach. That's fine - content filtering is hard, I'm not sure it gives better results overall than domain name filtering, and means we can't rely on existing domain name filter lists which are well maintained and regularly updated. We're not planning on adding content filtering.
It also means that DNS-over-HTTPS/-TLS can be supported, as long as the app doesn't implement it natively (i.e. by talking HTTPS over a socket itself). Some browsers do that, so the module needs to set a canary to tell them to disable it. DNS-over-HTTPS/-TLS can still be used if it's implemented by one of the NSS modules, like systemd-resolved.
Nothing here stops apps from deliberately bypassing the filtering if they want, perhaps by talking DNS over UDP directly, or by calling secret internal glibc functions to override nsswitch.conf. In the future, we'd have to implement per-app network sandboxing to prevent bypasses. But for the moment, trusting the apps to cooperate with parental controls is fine.
Filter update daemon
So we have a way of blocking things; but how does it know what to block? There are a lot of filter lists out there on the internet, targeted at existing web filtering software. Basically, a filter list is a list of domain names to block. Some filter lists allow wildcards and regexps, others just allow plain strings. For simplicity, we've gone with plain strings.
We allow the parent to choose zero or more filter lists to build a web filtering policy for a child. Typically, these filter lists will correspond to categories of content, so the parent could choose a filter list for advertising, and another for violent content, for example. The web filtering policy is basically the set of these filter lists, plus some options like "do you want to enforce safe search". This policy is, like all other parental controls policies, stored against the child user in accounts-service.
Combine these filter lists, and you have the filter list to give to NSS in the child's session, right? Not quite - because the internet unfortunately keeps changing, filter lists need to be updated regularly. So actually what we need is a system daemon which can regularly check the filter lists for updates, combine them, and make them available as a compiled file to the child's NSS module - for each user on the system.
This daemon is malcontent-webd. It has a D-Bus interface to allow the parent to trigger compiling the filter for a child when changing the parental controls policy for that child in the UI, and to get detailed feedback on any errors. Since the filter lists come from third parties on the internet, there are various ways they could have an error.
It also has a timer unit trigger, malcontent-webd-update, which is what triggers it to periodically check the filter lists for all users for updates.
And that's it! Hopefully it'll be available in a GNOME release once we've implemented the user interface for it and done some more end-to-end testing, but the screen time limits work is taking priority over it.
27 Nov 2025 1:25pm GMT
Sam Thursfield: Bollocks to Github
I am spending the evening deleting my Github.com account.
There are plenty of reasons you might want to delete your Github account. I'd love to say that this is a coherently orchestrated boycott on my part, in sympathy with the No Azure for Apartheid movement. Microsoft, owner of Github, is a big pile of cash happy to do business with an apartheid state. That's a great reason to delete your Github.com account.
I will be honest with you though, the thing that pushed me over the edge was a spam email they sent entitled "GitHub Copilot: What's in your free plan
". I was in a petty mood this morning.
Offering free LLM access is a money loser. The long play is this: Microsoft would like to create a generation of computer users hooked on GitHub Copilot. And, I have to hand it to them, they have an excellent track record in monopolising how we interact with our PCs.
Deleting my Github.com account isn't going to solve any of that. But it feels good to be leaving, anyway. The one billionth Github repository was created recently and it has a single line README containing the word "shit". I think that summarizes the situation more poetically than I could.
I had 145 repositories in the ssssam/ namespace to delete. The oldest was Iris; forked in 2011.

Quite a story to that one. A fork of a project by legendary GNOME hacker Christian Hergert. In early 2011, I'd finished university, had no desire to work in the software industry, and was hacking on a GTK based music player app from time to time. A rite of passage that every developer has to go through, I suppose. At some point I decided to overcomplicate some aspect of the app and ended up integrating libiris, a library to manage concurrent tasks. Then I started working professionally and abandoned the thing.
Its fun to look at that with 13 years perspective. I since learned, largely thanks to Rust, that I cannot possibly ever write correct concurrent thread-based C code. (All my libiris changes had weird race conditions). I met Christian various times. Christian created libdex which does the same thing, but much better. I revived the music player app as a playlist generation toolkit. We all lived happily ever after.
Except for the Github fork, which is gone.
What else?

This guy was an early attempt at creating a sort of GObject mapping for SPARQL data as exposed by Localsearch (then Tracker). Also created around 2011. Years later, I did a much better implementation in TrackerResource which we still use today.
The Sam of 2011 would be surprised to hear that we organized GUADEC in Manchester only 6 years later. Back in those days we for some reason maintained our own registration system written in Node.js. I spent the first few weeks of 2017 hacking in support for accommodation bookings.

I discovered another 10 year old gem called "Software Integration Ontology." Nowadays we'd call that an SBOM. Did that term exist 10 years ago? I have spent too much time working on software integration.
Various other artifacts research into software integration and complexity. A vestigal "Software Dependency Visualizer" project. (Which took on a life of its own, and many years later the idea is alive in KDE Codevis). A fork of Aboriginal Linux, which we unwittingly brought to an end back in 2016. Bits of Baserock, which never went very far but also led to the beginning of BuildStream.
A fork of xdg-app, which is the original name of Flatpak. A library binding GLib to the MS RPC API on Windows, from the 2nd professional project I ever did. These things are now dust.
I had over 100 repositories on github.com. I sponsored one person, who I can't sponsor any more as they only accept Github money. (I sponsor plenty of people in other platforms)
Anyway, lots of nice people use Github, you can keep using Github. I will probably have to create the occasional burner account to push PRs where projects haven't migrated away. Some of my projects are now in Gitlab.com and in GNOME's Gitlab. Others are gone!
It's a weird thing but in 2025 I'm actually happy knowing that there's a little bit less code in the world.
27 Nov 2025 12:27am GMT
26 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Michael Meeks: a new & beautiful Collabora Office
Just a short personal note to say how super excited I am to get our very first release of a new Collabora Office out that brings Collabora Online's lovely UX - created by the whole team to the desktop. You can read all about it in the press release. Please note - this is a first release - we expect all manner of unforseen problems, but still - it edits documents nicely.
The heros behind the scenes
There has been a huge amount of work behind the scenes, and people to say thank-you to. Let me try to get some of them:
- First off - thanks to Jan 'Kendy' Holesovsky and Tor Lillqvist (who came out of retirement to create yet another foundational heavy-lift for FLOSS Office. I can't say how grateful we are for your hard work here on Mac and Windows respectively.
- Then after the allotropia merger we had Thorsten Behrens to lead the project, and Sarper Akdemir to drive the Linux front-end.
- Towards the end of the project we were thrilled to expand things to include a dream-team of FLOSS engineers to fix bugs and add features ...
- Thanks to Rashesh Padia for the lovely first-start WebGL slideshow presentation added to Richard Brock's content skills.
- Thanks to Vivek Javiya for building a new file creation UI with Pedro Silva's design skills here and elsewhere.
- Lots of bug fix and polishing work from Parth Raiyani, and Jeremy Whiting (who also did multi-tabbed interface on Mac), and to Stephan Bergmann for digging out and clobbering the most hard-core races and horror bugs that we had hidden, Caolán McNamara too who made multiple documents work, and fixed crashes and multi-screen bits.
- With Hubert Figuière making the flatpak beautiful, and of course the indomitable Andras Timar doing so much amazing work getting all of the CI, release-engineering, app-store, translation pieces and also bug-fixing done and completed in time.
- Thanks too to our marketing team: from Chris Thornett getting the press briefing into a good state and multiplexing quotes left and right, to Richard Brock creating beautiful blog output, to Asja Čandić socializing it all, with Naomi Obbard leading the charge.
- Thanks also to Darshan Upadhyay for packing the community website with hard-working-beaver goodness, updated community page, as well as new build instructions, FAQ, supported pages, and much more.
- Thanks to all of our supporters who say nice things about us, and of course to so many translators who contribute to making Collabora Online great - hopefully now the strings are all public it should be easy to expand coverage.
This is an outstanding result from so many - thank you!
What is next technically ?
There are lots of things we plan to do next, but there is so much that can be done. First - merging the work into our main product branches - and at the same time sharing much more of the code across platforms. We have some features in the pipeline already - starting to take more advantage of platform APIs for much improved slideshow / multi-screen presentation pieces that need merging and releasing, and ultimately better printing APIs, and better copy/paste. Then we need to make sure that all of the new features are present on all platforms - multi-tabbed UI, the new file creation UI, and of course much more polish and bug fixing - as well as better automated testing.
Its exciting to have a big new release - but in general - we work really quite hard to avoid having big-bang deadlines, and a more steady development cadence. We will be trying to get the feature conveyer belt working alongside the Collabora Online development process - reasonably quickly - but now with another three platforms.
Then over the next months - there are various fairly obvious directions to take the code in - one amusing feature was the ability to apparently collaborate with yourself when loading the same document on the same machine, that can be extended.
Conclusion
It has been really exciting to get feedback from many partners, customers and community members about the need for this. Again - this is a very first release - we plan to do lots of iteration and improvement around it. But, thank you again to the whole team and community for making Collabora Online something that people really want us to bring to the desktop. If you'd like to get involved (or just see pretty artwork of hard working animals) - why not head to community website, or our forum or code.
Rock on =)
26 Nov 2025 9:00pm GMT
25 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Sam Thursfield: Status update — 23/11/2025
Bo día.
I am writing this from a high speed train heading towards Madrid, en route to Manchester. I have a mild hangover, and a two hundred page printout of "The STPA Handbook"… so I will have no problem sleeping through the journey. I think the only thing keeping me awake is the stunning view.
Sadly I havent got time to go all the way by train, in Madrid i will transfer to Easy Jet. It is indeed easy compared to trying to get from Madrid into France by train. Apparently this is mainly the fault of France's SNCF.
On the Spain side, fair play. The ministro de fomento (I think this translates as "Guy in charge of trains?") just announced major works in Barcelona, including a new station in La Sagrera with space for more trains than they have now, and a more direct access from Madrid, and a speed boost via some new type of railway sleeper, which would make the top speed 350km/h instead of 300km/h as it is now. And some changes in Madrid, which would reduce the transfer time when arriving from the west and heading out further east. You can argue with many things about the trains in Spain… perhaps it would be useful if the regional trains here ran more than once per day… but you cant argue with the commitment to fast inter-city travel.
If only we had similar investment to fix the cross border links between Spain and France, which are something of a joke. Engineers around the world will know this story. The problem is social: two different organizations, who speak different languages, have to agree on something. There is already a perfectly usable modern train line across the border. How many trains per day? Uh… two. Hope you planned your trip in advance because they're fully booked next week.
Anyway, this isn't meant to be a post on the status of the railways of western Europe.
Digital Resilience Forum
Last month I hopped on another Madrid-bound train to attend the Digital Resilience Forum. It's a one day conference organized by Bitergia who you might know as world leaders in open source community analysis.
I have mixed feelings about "community metrics" projects. As Nick Wellnhofer said regarding libxml, when you participate as a volunteer in a project that is being monitored, its easy to feel like you're being somehow manipulated by the corporations who sponsor these things. How come you guys will spend time and money analyzing my project's development processes and Git history, but you won't spend time actually fixing bugs and improvements upstream? As the ffmpeg developers said: How come you will pay top calibre security researchers to read our code and find very specific exploits, but then wait for volunteers to fix them?
The Bitergia team are great people who genuinely care about open source, and I really enjoyed the conference. The main themes were: digital sovereignty, geopolitics, the rise of open source, and that XKCD where all our digital
infrastructure depends on a single unpaid volunteer in Nebraska. (https://xkcd.com/2347/). (Coincidentally, one of the Bitergia guys actually does live in Nebraska).
It was a day in a world where I am not used to participating: less engineering, more politics and campaigning. Yes, the Sovereign Tech Agency were around. We played a cool role play game simulating various hypothetical software crisis that might happen in the year 2027 (spoiler: in most cases a vendor-neutral, state-funded organization focused on open source was able to save the day : -). It is amazing what they've done so far with a relatively small investment, but it is a small organization and they maintain that citizens of every country should be campaigning and organizing to setting up an equivalent. Let's not tie the health of open source infrastructure too closely to German politics.
Also present, various campaign groups with "Open" at the start of their name: OpenForum Europe, OpenUK, OpenIreland, OpenRail. When I think about the future of Free Software platforms, such as our beloved GNOME, my mind always goes to funding contributors. There's very little money here and meanwhile Apple and Microsoft have nearly all of the money and I feel like still GNOME succeeds largely thanks to the evenings and weekends of a small core of dedicated hackers; including some whose day job involves working on some other part of GNOME. It's a bit depressing sometimes to see things this way, because the global economy gets more unequal every day, and how do you convince people who are already squeezed for cash to pay for something that's freely available online? How do you get students facing a super competitive job market to hack on GTK instead of studying for university exams?
There's another side which I talk about less, and that's education. There are more desktop Linux users than ever - apparently 5% of all desktop users or something - but there's still very little agreement or understanding what "open source" is. Most computer users couldn't tell you what an "operating system" does, and don't know why "source code" can be an interesting thing to share and modify.
I don't like to espouse any dogmatic rule that the right way to solve any problem is to release software under the GPLv3. I think the problems society has today with technology come from over-complexity and under-study. (See also, my rant from last month. ). To tackle that, it is important to have software infrastructure like drivers and compilers available under free software licenses. The Free Software movement has spent the last 40 years doing a pretty amazing job of that, and I think its surprising how widely software engineers accept that as normal and fight to maintain it. Things could easily be worse. But this effort is one part of a larger problem, of helping those people who think of themselves as "non-technical" to understand the fundamentals of computing and not see it as a magic box. Most people alive today have learned to read and write one or more languages, to do mathematics, to operate a car, to build spreadsheets, and operate a smartphone. Most people I know under 45 have learned to prompt a large language model in the last few years.
With a basic grounding in how a computer operates, you can understand what an operating system does. And then you can see that whoever controls your OS has complete control over your digital life. And you will start to think twice about leaving that control to Apple, Google and Microsoft - big piles of cash where the concept of "ethics" barely has a name.
Reading was once a special skill reserved largely for monks. And it was difficult: we only started spaces between the words later on. Now everyone knows what a capital letter is. We need to teach how computers work, we need to stop making them so complicated, and the idea of open development will come into focus for everyone.
(and yes i realize this sounds a bit like the permacomputing manifesto).
Codethink work
This is a long rant, isn't it? My train only just left Zamora and I didnt fall asleep yet, so there's more to come.
I had a nice few months hacking on Endless OS 7, which has progressed from an experiment to a working system, bootable on bare metal, albeit with a various open issues that would block a stable release as yet. The overview docs in the repo tell you how to play with it.
This is now fully in the hands of the team at Endless, and my next move is going to be in some internal research that has been ongoing for a number of years. Not much of it is secret, in fact quite a lot is being developed in the open, and it relates in part to regulatory compliance and safety-critical softare systems.
Codethink dedicates more to open source than most companies its size. We never have trouble getting sponsorship for events like GUADEC. But I do wish I could spend more time maintaining open infrastructure that I use every day, like, you know, GNOME.
This project isn't going to solve that tomorrow, but it does occupy an interesting space in the intersection between industry and open source. The education gap I talked to you above is very much present in some industries where we work. Back in February a guy in a German car firm told me, "Nobody here wants open source. What they want is somebody to blame when the thing goes wrong."
Open source software comes with a big disclaimer that says, roughly, that if it breaks you get to keep both pieces. You get to blame yourself.
And that's a good thing! The people who understand a final, integrated system are the only people who can really define "correct behaviour". If you've worked in the same industries I have you might recognise a common anti-pattern: teams who spend all their time arguing about ownership of a particular bug, and team A are convinced it's a misbehaviour of component B and team B will try to prove the exact opposite. Meanwhile nobody actually spends the 15 minutes it would take to actually fix the bug. Another anti-pattern: team A would love to fix the bug in component B, but team B won't let them even look at the source code. This happens muuuuuuuch more than you might think.
So we're not trying to teach the world how computers work, on this project, but we are trying to increase adoption and understanding at least in the software industry. There are some interesting ideas. Looking at software systems from new angles. This is where STPA comes in, by the way - it's a way of breaking a system down not into components but rather into one or more control loops. Its going to take a while to make sense of everything in this new space… but you can expect some more 1500 word blog posts on the topic.
25 Nov 2025 12:03am GMT
24 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Christian Hergert: Status Week 47
Ptyxis
-
Issue filed about highlight colors. Seems like a fine addition but again, I can't write features for everyone so it will need a MR.
-
Walk a user through changing shortcuts to get the behavior they want w/ ctrl+shift+page up/down. Find a bug along the way.
-
Copy GNOME Terminal behavior for placement of open/copy links from the context menu.
-
Add a
ptyxis_tab_grab_focus()helper and use that everywhere instead ofgtk_widget_grab_focus()on the tab (which then defers to theVteTerminal). This may improve some state tracking of keyboard shift state, which while odd, is a fine enough workaround. -
Issue about adding
waypipeto the list of "network" command detection. Have to nack for now just because it is so useful in situations without SSH. -
Issue about growing size of terminal window (well shrinking back) after changing foreground. Triaged enough to know this is still a GDK Wayland issue with too-aggressively caching toplevel sizes and then re-applying them even after first applying a different size. Punted to GTK for now since I don't have the cycles for it.
Foundry
-
Make progress icon look more like
AdwSpinnerso we can transition between the two paintables for progress based on if we get any sort of real fractional value from the operation. -
Paintable support for
FoundryTreeExpanderwhich is getting used all over Foundry/Builder at this point. -
Now that we have working progress from LSPs we need to display it somewhere. I copied the style of Nautilus progress operations into a new
FoundryOperationBaywhich sits beneath the sidebar content. It's not a perfect replicate but it is close enough for now to move on to other things.Sadly, we don't have a way with the Language Server Protocol to tie together what operation caused a progress object to be created so cancellation of progress is rather meaningless there.
-
Bring over the whole "snapshot rewriting" we do in Ptyxis into the
FoundryTerminalsubclass of VTE to make it easy to use in the various applications getting built on Foundry. -
Fix
FoundryJsonrpcDriverto better handle incoming method calls. Specifically those lacking aparamsfield. Also update things to fix reading from LF/Nil style streams where the underlying helper failed to skip bytes afterread_upto(). -
It can't be used for much but there is a
foundry mcpserver now that will expose available tools. As part of this make a new Resources type that allows providing context in an automated fashion. They can be listed, read, track changes to list, subscribe to changes in a resource, etc.There are helpers for JSON style resources.
For example, this makes the build diagnostics available at a
diagnostics://URI. -
Make
PluginFlatpakSdkexplicitly skip usingflatpak buildbefore theflatpak build-initcommand in the pipeline should have run. -
Allow locating
PluginDevhelpBookby URI so that clicking on the header link in documentation can properly update path navigators. -
Make
FoundryPtyDiagnosticsauto-register themselves with theFoundryDiagnosticManagerso that things likefoundry_diagnostic_manager_list_all()will include extracted warnings that came from the build pipeline automatically rather than just files with diagnostic providers attached. -
Support for "linked pipelines" which allows you to insert a stage into your build pipeline which then executes another build pipeline from another project.
For example, this can allow you to run a build pipeline for GTK or GtkSourceView in the early phase of your projects build. The goal here is to simplify the effort many of us go through working on multiple projects at the same time.
Currently there are limitations here in that the pipeline you want to link needs to be setup correctly to land in the same place as your application. For
jhbuildor any sort of--prefix=install prefix this is pretty simple an works.For the
flatpakcase we need more work so that we can install into a separateDESTDIRwhich is the staging directory of the app we're building. I prefer this over setting up incremental builds just for this project manually as we have no configuration information to key off. -
Add new
FoundryVcsDiffHunkandFoundryVcsDiffLineobjects and API necessary access them viaFoundryVcsDelta. Implement the git plugin version of these too. -
Add a new
FoundryGitCommitBuilderhigh-level helper class to make writing commit tooling easier. Provides access to the delta, hunk, and lines as well as commit details. Still needs more work though to finish off the process of staging/unstaging individual lines and try to make the state easy for the UI side.Add a
print-project-difftest program to test that this stuff works reasonably well.
Builder
-
Lots of little things getting brought over for the new editor implementation. Go to line, position tracking, etc.
-
Searchable diagnostics page based on build output. Also fix up how we track PTY diagnostics using the DiagnosticManager now instead of only what we could see from the PTY diagnostics.
Manuals
-
Merge support for back/forward mouse buttons from @pjungkamp
-
Merge support for updating pathbar elements when navigating via the WebKit back/forward list, also from @pjungkamp.
Systemd
-
Libdex inspired fiber support for systemd which follows a core design principle which is that fibers are just a future like any other.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/39771
CentOS
-
Merge vte291/libadwaita updates for 10.2
GTK
-
Lots of digging through GdkWayland/GtkWindow to see what we can do to improve the situation around resizing windows. There is some bit of state getting saved that is breaking our intent to have a window recalculate it's preferred size.
GNOME Settings Daemon
-
Took a look over a few things we can do to reduce periodic IO requests in the housekeeping plugin.
Submitted a few merge requests around this.
GLib
-
Submitted a merge request adding some more file-systems to those that are considered "system file system types". We were missing a few that resulted in extraneous checking in gsd-housekeeping.
While researching this, using a rather large /proc/mounts I have on hand, and modifying my GLib to let me parse it rather than the system mounts, I verified that we can spend double-digit milliseconds parsing this file. Pretty bad if you have a system where the mounts can change regularly and thus all users re-parse them.
Looking at a Sysprof recording I made, we spend a huge amount of time in things like
strcmp(),g_str_hash(), and in hashtable operations likeg_hash_table_resize().This is ripe for a better data-structure instead of
strcmp().I first tried to use
gperfto generate perfect hashes for the things we care about and that was a 10% savings. But sometimes low-tech is even better.In the end I went with
bsearch()which is within spitting distance of the faster solutions I came up with but a much more minimal change to the existing code-base at the simple cost of keeping lists sorted.There is likely still more that can be done on this with diminishing returns. Honestly, I was surprised a single change would be even this much.
Red Hat
This week also had me spending a significant amount of time on Red Hat related things.
24 Nov 2025 7:17pm GMT
Jussi Pakkanen: 3D models in PDF documents
PDF can do a lot of things. One them is embedding 3D models in the file and displaying them. The user can orient them freely in 3D space and even choose how they should be rendered (wireframe, solid, etc). The main use case for this is engineering applications.
Supporting 3D annotations is, as expected, unexpectedly difficult because:
- No open source PDF viewer seems to support 3D models.
- Even though the format specification is available, no open source software seems to support generating files in this format (by which I mean Blender does not do it by default). [1]
But, again, given sufficient effort and submitting data to not-at-all-sketchy-looking 3D model conversion web sites, you can get 3D annotations to work. Almost.
As you can probably tell, the picture above is not a screenshot. I had to take it with a cell phone camera, because while Acrobat Reader can open the file and display the result, it hard crashes before you can open the Windows screenshot tool.
[1] Update: apparently KiCad nightly can export U3D files that can be used in PDFs.
24 Nov 2025 6:13pm GMT
21 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Jakub Steiner: 12 months instead of 12 minutes
Hey Kids! Other than raving about GNOME.org being a static HTML, there's one more aspect I'd like to get back to in this writing exercise called a blog post.

I've recently come across an apalling genAI website for a project I hold deerly so I thought I'd give a glimpse on how we used to do things in the olden days. It is probably not going to be done this way anymore in the enshittified timeline we ended up in. The two options available these days are - a quickly generated slop website or no website at all, because privately owned social media is where it's at.
The wanna-be-catchy title of this post comes from the fact the website underwent numerous iterations (iterations is the core principle of good design) spanning over a year before we introduced the redesign.
So how did we end up with a 3D model of a laptop for the hero image on the GNOME website, rather than something generated in a couple of seconds and a small town worth of drinking water or a simple SVG illustration?
The hero image is static now, but used to be a scroll based animation at the early days. It could have become a simple vector style illustration, but I really enjoy the light interaction of the screen and the laptop, especially between the light and dark variants. Toggling dark mode has been my favorite fidget spinner.
Creating light/dark variants is a bit tedious to do manually every release, but automating still a bit too hard to pull off (the taking screenshots of a nightly OS bit). There's also the fun of picking a theme for the screenshot rather than doing the same thing over and over. Doing the screenshooting manually meant automating the rest, as a 6 month cycle is enough time to forget how things are done. The process is held together with duct tape, I mean a python script, that renders the website image assets from the few screenshots captured using GNOME OS running inside Boxes. Two great invisible things made by amazing individuals that could go away in an instant and that thought gives me a dose of anxiety.

This does take a minute to render on a laptop (CPU only Cycles), but is a matter of a single invocation and a git commit. So far it has survived a couple of Blender releases, so fingers crossed for the future.
Sophie has recently been looking into translations, so we might reconsider that 3D approach if translated screenshots become viable (and have them contained in an SVG similar to how os.gnome.org is done). So far the 3D hero has always been in sync with the release, unlike in our Wordpress days. Fingers crossed.
21 Nov 2025 7:44am GMT
This Week in GNOME: #226 Exporting Events
Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from November 14 to November 21.
GNOME Core Apps and Libraries
Calendar ↗
A simple calendar application.
Hari Rana | TheEvilSkeleton (any/all) 🇮🇳 🏳️⚧️ says
Thanks to FineFindus, who previously worked on exporting events as
.icsfiles, GNOME Calendar can now export calendars as.icsfiles, courtesy of merge request !615! This will be available in GNOME 50.
Hari Rana | TheEvilSkeleton (any/all) 🇮🇳 🏳️⚧️ says
After two long and painful years, several design iterations, and more than 50 rebases later, we finally merged the infamous, trauma-inducing merge request !362 on GNOME Calendar. This changes the entire design of the quick-add popover by merging both pages into one and updating the style to conform better with modern GNOME designs. Additionally, it remodels the way the popover retrieves and displays calendars, reducing 120 lines of code.
The calendars list in the quick-add popover has undergone accessibility improvements, providing a better experience for assistive technologies and keyboard users. Specifically: tabbing from outside the list will focus the selected calendar in the list; tabbing from inside the list will skip the entire list; arrow keys automatically select the focused calendar; and finally, assistive technologies now inform the user of the checked/selected state.
Admittedly, the quick-add popover is currently unreachable via keyboard because we lack the resources to implement keyboard focus for month and week cells. We are currently trying to address this issue in merge request !564, and hope to get it merged for GNOME 50, but it's a significant undertaking for a single unpaid developer. If it is not too much trouble, I would really appreciate some donations, to keep me motivated to improve accessibility throughout GNOME and sustain myself: https://tesk.page/#donate
This merge request allowed us to close 4 issues, and will be available in GNOME 50.
Files ↗
Providing a simple and integrated way of managing your files and browsing your file system.
Peter Eisenmann says
Files landed two big changes by Khalid Abu Shawarib this week.
The first change adds a bunch of tests, bringing the total coverage of the huge code base close to 30%. This will prevent regressions in previously uncovered areas such as bookmarking or creating files.
The second change is more noticeable as the way thumbnails are loaded was largely rewritten to finally make full use of GTK4's recycling views. It took a lot of code detangling to get thumbnails to load asynchronously, but the result is a great speedup, making thumbnails show as fast as never before. 🚀
Attached is a comparison of reloading a folder before and after the change
Libadwaita ↗
Building blocks for modern GNOME apps using GTK4.
Alice (she/her) 🏳️⚧️🏳️🌈 announces
as of today, libadwaita has support for the new reduced motion preference, both supporting the
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)query from CSS, and using simple crossfade transitions where appropriate (e.g. inAdwDialog,AdwNavigationViewandAdwTabOverview
Alice (she/her) 🏳️⚧️🏳️🌈 reports
libadwaita has deprecated the
style-dark.css,style-hc.cssandstyle-hc-dark.cssresources thatAdwApplicationautomatically loads. They still work, but will be removed in 2.0. Applications are recommended to switch tostyle.cssand media queries for dark and high contrast styles
GTK ↗
Cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces.
Matthias Clasen reports
This weeks GTK 4.21.2 release includes initial support for the CSS backdrop-filter property. The GSK APIs enabling this are new copy/paste and composite render nodes, which allow flexible reuse of the 'background' at any point in the scene graph. We are looking forward to your experiments with this!
GLib ↗
The low-level core library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK and GNOME.
Philip Withnall says
Luca Bacci has dug into an intermittent output buffering issue with GLib on Windows, which should fix some CI issues and opt various GLib utilities into more modern features on Windows - https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/4788
Third Party Projects
Alain announces
Planify 4.16.0 - Natural dates, smoother flows, and smarter task handling
This week, Planify released version 4.16.0, bringing several improvements that make task management faster, more intuitive, and more predictable on GNOME.
The highlight of this release is natural language date parsing, now enabled by default in Quick Add. You can type things like "tomorrow 3pm", "next Monday", "25/12/2024", or "ahora", and Planify will automatically convert it into a proper scheduled date. Spanish support has also been added, including expressions like mañana, pasado mañana, próxima semana, and more.
Keyboard navigation got a boost too:
- Ctrl + D now opens the date picker instantly
- Ctrl + K toggles "Keep adding" mode
- And several shortcuts were cleaned up for more predictable behavior
Planify also adds label management in the task context menu, making it easier to add or remove labels without opening the full editor.
For calendar users, event items now open a richer details popover, with automatic detection of Google Meet and Microsoft Teams links, making online meetings just one click away.
As always, translations, bug fixes, and general UI refinements round out the update.
Planify 4.16.0 is available now on Flathub
Jan-Willem reports
This week I released Java-GI version 0.13.0, a Java language binding for GNOME and other libraries that support GObject-Introspection, based on OpenJDK's new FFM functionality. Some of the highlights in this release are:
- Bindings for LibRsvg, GstApp (for GStreamer) and LibSecret have been added
- The website for Java-GI has its own domain name now: java-gi.org, and this is also used in all module- and package names
- Thanks to GObject-Introspection's extensive testsuite, I've implemented over 900 testcases to test the Java bindings, and fixed many bugs along the way.
I hope that Java-GI will help Java (or Kotlin, Scala, Clojure, …) developers to create awesome new GNOME apps!
Quadrapassel ↗
Fit falling blocks together.
Will Warner says
Quadrapassel 49.2 is out! Here is whats new:
- Updated translations: Ukrainian, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese (China), Slovenian, Georgian
- Made the 'P' key pause the game
- Replaced the user help docs with a 'Game Rules' dialog
- Stopped the menu button taking focus
- Fixed a bug where the game's score would not be recorded when the app was quit
- Added total rows and level information to scores
Phosh ↗
A pure wayland shell for mobile devices.
Guido announces
Phosh 0.51.0 is out:
There's a new quick setting that allows to toggle location services on/off and the ☕ quick setting can now disable itself after a certain amount of time (check here on how to configure the intervals). We also add added a toggle to enable automatic brightness from the top panel and when enabled the brightness slider acts as an offset to the current brightness value.
The minimum brightness of the 🔦 brightness slider can now be configured via
hwdb/udevallowing one go to lower values then the former hard coded 40%. The configuration is maintained in gmobile.If you're using Phosh on a Google Pixel 3A XL you can now enjoy haptic feedback when typing on the on screen keyboard (like users on other devices) and creating notch configurations for new devices should now be simpler as our tooling can take screen shots of the resulting UI element layout in Phosh for you.
There's more, see the full details at here
GNOME Websites
Emmanuele Bassi says
After a long time, the new user help website is now available and up to date with the latest content. The new help website replaces the static snapshot of the old library-web project, but it is still a work in progress, and contributions are welcome. Just like in the past, the content is sourced from each application, as well as from the gnome-user-docs repository. If you want to improve the documentation of GNOME components and core applications, make sure to join the #docs:gnome.org room.
Shell Extensions
Pedro Sader Azevedo announces
Foresight is a GNOME Shell extension that automatically enters the activities view on empty workspaces, making it faster to open apps and start using your computer!
This week, it gained support for GNOME 49, courtesy of gabrielpalassi. This is the second time in a row that Foresight gained support for a newer GNOME Shell version thanks to community contributions, which I'm immensely grateful for. I'm also very grateful to Just Perfection, who single-handedly holds so many responsibilities in the GNOME Shell extensions ecosystem.
The latest version of Foresight is available at EGO: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/7901/foresight/
Happy foretelling 🔮👣
Miscellaneous
revisto reports
The Persian GNOME community was featured at the Debian 13 Release Party at Sharif University in Iran. The talk introduced GNOME, explained how the Persian community came together, highlighted its contributions (GTK/libadwaita apps, GNOME Circle involvement, translations, and fa.gnome.org), and invited newcomers to participate and contribute.
Recording available (Farsi): https://youtu.be/UPmNNygNQuc
GNOME Foundation
ramcq reports
The GNOME Foundation board has shared details about our recently-approved balanced budget for 2024-25, as well as a note to share our thanks to Karen Sandler, as she has decided to step down from the board.
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!
21 Nov 2025 12:00am GMT
19 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Philip Withnall: Parental controls screen time limits backend
Ignacy blogged recently about all the parts of the user interface for screen time limits in parental controls in GNOME. He's been doing great work pulling that all together, while I have been working on the backend side of things. We're aiming for this screen time limits feature to appear in GNOME 50.
High level design
There's a design document which is the canonical reference for the design of the backend, but to summarise it at a high level: there's a stateless daemon, malcontent-timerd, which receives logs of the child user's time usage of the computer from gnome-shell in the child's session. For example, when the child stops using the computer, gnome-shell will send the start and end times of the most recent period of usage. The daemon deduplicates/merges and stores them. The parent has set a screen time policy for the child, which says how much time they're allowed on the computer per day (for example, 4h at most; or only allowed to use the computer between 15:00 and 17:00). The policy is stored against the child user in accounts-service.
malcontent-timerd applies this policy to the child's usage information to calculate an 'estimated end time' for the child's current session, assuming that they continue to use the computer without taking a break. If they stop or take a break, their usage - and hence the estimated end time - is updated.
The child's gnome-shell is notified of changes to the estimated end time and, once it's reached, locks the child's session (with appropriate advance warning).
Meanwhile, the parent can query the child's computer usage via a separate API to malcontent-timerd. This returns the child's total screen time usage per day, which allows the usage chart to be shown to the parent in the parental controls user interface (malcontent-control). The daemon imposes access controls on which users can query for usage information. Because the daemon can be accessed by the child and by the parent, and needs to be write-only for the child and read-only for the parent, it has to be a system daemon.
There's a third API flow which allows the child to request an extension to their screen time for the day, but that's perhaps a topic for a separate post.
So, at its core, malcontent-timerd is a time range store with some policy and a couple of D-Bus interfaces built on top.
Per-app time limits
Currently it only supports time limits for login sessions, but it is built in such a way that adding support for time limits for specific apps would be straightforward to add to malcontent-timerd in future. The main work required for that would be in gnome-shell - recording usage on a per-app basis (for apps which have limits applied), and enforcing those limits by freezing or blocking access to apps once the time runs out. There are some interesting user experience questions to think about there before anyone can implement it - how do you prevent a user from continuing to use an app without risking data loss (for example, by killing it)? How do you unambiguously remind the user they're running out of time for a specific app? Can we reliably find all the windows associated with a certain app? Can we reliably instruct apps to save their state when they run out of time, to reduce the risk of data loss? There are a number of bits of architecture we'd need to get in place before per-app limits could happen.
Wrapping up
As it stands though, the grant funding for parental controls is coming to an end. Ignacy will be continuing to work on the UI for some more weeks, but my time on it is basically up. With the funding, we've managed to implement digital wellbeing (screen time limits and break reminders for adults) including a whole UI for it in gnome-control-center and a fairly complex state machine for tracking your usage in gnome-shell; a refreshed UI for parental controls; parental controls screen time limits as described above; the backend for web filtering (but more on that in a future post); and everything is structured so that the extra features we want in future should bolt on nicely.
While the features may be simple to describe, the implementation spans four projects, two buses, contains three new system daemons, two new system data stores, and three fairly unique new widgets. It's tackled all sorts of interesting user design questions (and continues to do so). It's fully documented, has some unit tests (but not as many as I'd like), and can be integration tested using sysexts. The new widgets are localisable, accessible, and work in dark and light mode. There are even man pages. I'm quite pleased with how it's all come together.
It's been a team effort from a lot of people! Code, design, input and review (in no particular order): Ignacy, Allan, Sam, Florian, Sebastian, Matthijs, Felipe, Rob. Thank you Endless for the grant and the original work on parental controls. Administratively, thank you to everyone at the GNOME Foundation for handling the grant and paperwork; and thank you to the freedesktop.org admins for providing project hosting for malcontent!
19 Nov 2025 11:39pm GMT
18 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Lennart Poettering: Mastodon Stories for systemd v258
Already on Sep 17 we released systemd v258 into the wild.
In the weeks leading up to that release I have posted a series of serieses of posts to Mastodon about key new features in this release, under the #systemd258 hash tag. It was my intention to post a link list here on this blog right after completing that series, but I simply forgot! Hence, in case you aren't using Mastodon, but would like to read up, here's a list of all 37 posts:
- Post #1: systemctl start -v
- Post #2: Home areas
- Post #3: systemd-resolved delegate zones
- Post #4: Foreign UID range
- Post #5: /etc/hostname ??? wildcards
- Post #6: Quota on /tmp/
- Post #7: ConcurretnySoftMax= + ConcurrencyHardMax=
- Post #8: Product UUID in ConditionHost=
- Post #9: Context OSC terminal sequences
- Post #10: uki-url Boot Loader Spec Type #1 fields
- Post #11: rd.break= boot breakpoints
- Post #12: Factory Reset Rework
- Post #13: systemd-resolved DNS Configuration Change IPC Subscription API
- Post #14: io.systemd.boot-entries.extra= SMBIOS Type #11 Key
- Post #15: Bring Your Own Firmware
- Post #16: userdb record aliases
- Post #17: systemd-validatefs and its xattrs
- Post #18: Offline Signing of Artifacts
- Post #19: PAMName= in services hooked up to ask-password protocol
- Post #20: x-systemd.graceful-option= mount option
- Post #21: systemd-userdb-load-credentials.service
- Post #22: systemd-vmspawn --grow-image=a
- Post #23: systemd-notify --fork
- Post #24: $TERM auto-discovery
- Post #25: Rebooting/Powering off systemd-nspawn containers via hotkey
- Post #26: ExecStart= | modifier
- Post #27: systemctl reload reloads confexts
- Post #28: Server side userdb filtering
- Post #29: Quota on StateDirectory= and friends
- Post #30: systemd-analyze unit-shell
- Post #31: /etc/issue.d/ drop-in for AF_VSOCK CID
- Post #32: fsverity in systemd-repart
- Post #33: AcceptFileDescriptor= + PassPIDFD=
- Post #34: Tab completion in interactive systemd-firstboot
- Post #35: rd.systemd.pull= kernel command line option/Boot into tarball
- Post #36: ConditionKernelModuleLoaded=
- Post #37: systemd-analyze chid
- Post #38: homectl list-signing-keys/get-signing-key/add-signing-key/remove-signing-key
- Post #39: DDI Image Filters
- Post #40: Android USB Debugging udev rules
- Post #41: systemd-vmspawn's --smbios11= switch
- Post #42: $MAINPIDFDID + $MANAGERPIDFDID
- Post #43: $DEBUG_INVOCATION=1 Respected by all systemd services
- Post #44: LoaderDeviceURL EFI Variable and systemd.pull='s origin kernel command line switch
- Post #45: cgroupv1 removal
- Post #46: ProtectHostname=private
- Post #47: homectl adopt + homectl register
- Post #48: systemd-machined Varlink APIs
- Post #49: DeferTrigger and "lenient" job mode
- Post #50: Automatic Removal of foreign UID owned delegate subgroups in the per-user service manager
- Post #51: Per-user ask-password protocol
- Post #52: PrivateUsers=full
- Post #53: LoadCredentialEncrypted= in the per-user service manager
- Post #54: dissect_image builtin in systemd-udevd
- Post #55: BPF Delegation via Tokens
I intend to do a similar series of serieses of posts for the next systemd release (v259), hence if you haven't left tech Twitter for Mastodon yet, now is the opportunity.
We intend to shorten the release cycle a bit for the future, and in fact managed to tag v259-rc1 already yesterday, just 2 months after v258. Hence, my series for v259 will begin soon, under the #systemd259 hash tag.
In case you are interested, here is the corresponding blog story for systemd v257, and here for v256.
18 Nov 2025 12:00am GMT
15 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Code of Conduct Committee: Transparency report for May 2025 to October 2025
GNOME's Code of Conduct is our community's shared standard of behavior for participants in GNOME. This is the Code of Conduct Committee's periodic summary report of its activities from May 2025 to October 2025.
The current members of the CoC Committee are:
- Anisa Kuci
- Carlos Garnacho
- Christopher Davis
- Federico Mena Quintero
- Michael Downey
- Rosanna Yuen
All the members of the CoC Committee have completed Code of Conduct Incident Response training provided by Otter Tech, and are professionally trained to handle incident reports in GNOME community events.
The committee has an email address that can be used to send reports: conduct@gnome.org as well as a website for report submission: https://conduct.gnome.org/
Reports
Since May 2025, the committee has received reports on a total of 25 possible incidents. Many of these were not actionable; all the incidents listed here were resolved during the reporting period.
- Report on a conspiracy theory, closed as not actionable.
- Report that was not actionable.
- Report about a blog post; not a CoC violation and not actionable.
- Report about interactions in GitLab; not a CoC violation and not actionable.
- Report about a blog post; not a CoC violation and not actionable.
- Question about an Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) for GDM; redirected to discourse.gnome.org.
- Report about a reply in GitLab; not a CoC violation; pointed out resources about unpaid/volunteer work in open source.
- Report about a reply in GitLab; not a CoC violation but using language against the community guidelines; sent a reminder to the reported person to use non-violent communication.
- Two reports about a GNOME Shell extension; recommended actions to take to the extension reviewers.
- Report about another GNOME Shell extension; recommended actions to take to the extension reviewers.
- Multiple reports about a post on planet.gnome.org; removed the post from the feed and its site.
- Report with a fake attribution; closed as not actionable.
- Report with threats; closed as not actionable.
- Report with a fake attribution; closed as not actionable.
- Report that was not actionable.
- Support request; advised reporter to direct their question to the infrastructure team.
- Report closed due to not being actionable; gave the reporter advice on how to deal with their issue.
- Report about a reply in GitLab; reminded both the reporter and reported person how to communicate appropriately.
- Report during GUADEC about an incident during the conference; in-person reminder to the reported individual to mind their behavior.
- Report about a long-standing GitLab interaction; sent a request for a behavior change to the reported person.
- Report on a conspiracy theory, closed as not actionable.
- Report about a Mastodon post, closed as it is not a CoC violation.
- Report closed due to not being actionable, and not a CoC violation.
- Report closed due to not being actionable, and not a CoC violation.
- Report closed due to not being actionable, and not a CoC violation.
Meetings of the CoC committee
The CoC committee has two meetings each month for general updates, and weekly ad-hoc meetings when they receive reports. There are also in-person meetings during GNOME events.
Ways to contact the CoC committee
- https://conduct.gnome.org - contains the GNOME Code of Conduct and a reporting form.
- conduct@gnome.org - incident reports, questions, etc.
15 Nov 2025 6:19pm GMT
14 Nov 2025
Planet GNOME
Allan Day: GNOME Foundation Update, 2025-11-14
This post is another in my series of GNOME Foundation updates, each of which provides an insight into what's happened at the GNOME Foundation over the past week. If you are new to these posts I would encourage you to look over some of the previous entries - there's a fair amount going on at the Foundation right now, and my previous posts provide some useful background.
Old business
It has been another busy week at the GNOME Foundation. Here's a quick summary:
- We had a regular Board meeting (as in, the meeting was part of our regular schedule), where we discussed details about the annual report, some financial policy questions, and partnerships.
- There was another planning meeting for the Digital Wellbeing program, which is close to wrapping up. If you haven't seen it already, Ignacy gave a great overview of the work that's been done on this!
- There have been more meetings with Dawn Matlak, our new finance advisor and systems guru. We are now at the stage where our new finance system is being setup, which is exciting! The plan is to consolate our payments processing on this new platform, which will reduce operational complexity. Invoice processing in future will also be highly automated, and we are going to get additional capabilities around virtual credit cards, which we already have plans for.
- Preparations continued for GNOME.Asia 2025, which is happening in Tokyo next month. Assisting attendees with visas and travel has been a particular focus.
Most of these items are a continuation of activities that I've described in more detail in previous posts, and I'm a bit light on new news this week, but I think that's to be expected sometimes!
Post #10
This is the tenth in my series of GNOME Foundation updates, and this seems like a good point to reflect on how they are going. The weekly posting cadance made sense in the beginning, and wrapping up the week on a Friday afternoon is quite enjoyable, but I am unsure if a weekly post is too much reading for some.
So, I'd love to hear feedback: do you like the weekly updates, or do you find it hard to keep up? Would you prefer a higher-level monthly update? Do you like hearing about background operational details, or are you more interested in programs, events and announcements? Answers to these questions would be extremely welcome! Please let me know what you think, either in the comments or by reaching out on Matrix.
That's it from me for now. Thanks for reading, and have a great day.
14 Nov 2025 6:09pm GMT
Gedit Technology blog: Mid-November News
Misc news about the gedit text editor, mid-November edition!
Website: new design
Probably the highlight this month is the new design of the gedit website.
If it looks familiar to some of you, it's normal, it's because it's an adaptation of the previous GtkSourceView website that was developed in the old gnomeweb-wml repository. gnomeweb-wml (projects.gnome.org) is what predates all the wiki pages for Apps and Projects. The wiki has been retired, so another solution had to be found.
For the timeline, projects.gnome.org was available until 2013/2014 where all the content had been migrated to the wiki. Then the wiki has been retired in 2024.
Note that there are still rough edges on the gedit website, and more importantly some efforts still need to be done to bring the old CSS stylesheet forward to the new(-ish) responsive web design world.
For the most nostalgic of you:
-
gedit website in 2013 (
projects.gnome.org/gedit/on web.archive.org) -
GtkSourceView website in 2013 (
projects.gnome.org/gtksourceview/on web.archive.org)
And for the least nostalgic of you:
What we can say is that the gedit project has stood the test of time!
Enter TeX: improved search and replace
Some context: I would like some day to unify the search and replace feature between Enter TeX and gedit. It needs to retain the best of each.
In Enter TeX it's a combined horizontal bar, something that I would like in gedit too to replace the dialog window that occludes part of the text.
In gedit the strengths include: the search-as-you-type possibility, and a history of past searches. Both are missing in Enter TeX. (These are not the only things that need to be retained; the same workflows, keyboard shortcuts etc. are also an integral part of the functionality).
So to work towards that goal, I started in Enter TeX. I merged around 50 commits in the git repository for this change already, rewriting in C (from Vala) some parts and improving the UI along the way. The code needs to be in C because it'll be moved to libgedit-tepl so that it can be consumed by gedit easily.
Here is how it looks:
Internal refactoring for GeditWindow and its statusbar
GeditWindow is what we can call a god class. It is too big, both in the number of lines and the number of instance variables.
So this month I've continued to refactor it, to extract a GeditWindowStatus class. There was already a GeditStatusbar class, but its features have now been moved to libgedit-tepl as TeplStatusbar.
GeditWindowStatus takes up the responsibility to create the TeplStatusbar, to fill it with the indicators and other buttons, and to make the connection with GeditWindow and the current tab/document.
So as a result, GeditWindow is a little less omniscient ;-)
As a conclusion
gedit does not materialize out of empty space; it takes time to develop and maintain. To demonstrate your appreciation of this piece of software and help its future development, remember that you can fund the project. Your support is critical and much appreciated.
14 Nov 2025 10:00am GMT
This Week in GNOME: #225 Volume Levels
Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from November 07 to November 14.
GNOME Core Apps and Libraries
Settings ↗
Configure various aspects of your GNOME desktop.
Zoey Ahmed 🏳️⚧️ 💙💜🩷 reports
GNOME Settings volume levels page received a change to fix applications inputs and outputs being hard to distinguish. This change separates the applications with outputs and inputs streams into separate lists, and adds a microphone icon to the inputs list.
Thank you to Hari Rana and Matthijs Velsink for helping me with my first MR, and Jeff Fortin for nudging me to persue this change!
Files ↗
Providing a simple and integrated way of managing your files and browsing your file system.
Tomasz Hołubowicz says
Nautilus now supports Ctrl+Insert and Shift+Insert for copying and pasting files, matching the behavior of other GTK applications, browsers, and file managers like Dolphin and Thunar. These CUA keybindings were previously only functional in Nautilus's location bar, creating an inconsistency. The addition also benefits users with keyboards that have dedicated copy/paste keys, which typically emit these key combinations. These shortcuts are particularly useful for left-handed users and also allow the same bindings to work across applications, file managers, and terminal emulators, where Ctrl+Shift+C/V are typically required. The Ctrl+V paste shortcut is now also visible in the context menu.
GLib ↗
The low-level core library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK and GNOME.
Philip Withnall announces
In https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/4900, Philip Chimento has added a
G_GNUC_FLAG_ENUMmacro to GLib, which can be used in anenumdefinition to tell the compiler it's for a flag type (i.e. enum values which can be bitwise combined). This allows for better error reporting, particularly when building with-Wswitch(which everyone should be using!).So now we can have enums which look like this, for example:
typedef enum { G_CONVERTER_NO_FLAGS = 0, /*< nick=none >*/ G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END = (1 << 0), /*< nick=input-at-end >*/ G_CONVERTER_FLUSH = (1 << 1) /*< nick=flush >*/ } G_GNUC_FLAG_ENUM GConverterFlags;
GNOME Circle Apps and Libraries
Gaphor ↗
A simple UML and SysML modeling tool.
Dan Yeaw announces
Gaphor, the simple modeling tool, version 3.2.0 is now out! Some highlights include:
- Troubleshooting info can now be found in the About dialog
- Introduction of CSS classes: .item for all items you put on the diagram
- Improved updates in Model Browser for attribute/parameter types
- macOS: native window decorations and window menu
Grab the new version on Flathub.
Third Party Projects
Haydn reports
Typesetter, a minimalist desktop application for creating beautiful documents with Typst, is now available on Flathub.
Features include:
- Adaptive, user-friendly interface: Focus on writing. Great for papers, reports, slides, books, and any structured writing.
- Powered by Typst: A modern markup-based typesetting language, combining the simplicity of Markdown with the power of LaTeX.
- Local-first: Your files stay on your machine. No cloud lock-in.
- Package support: Works offline, but can fetch and update packages online when needed.
- Automatic preview: See your rendered document update as you write.
- Click-to-jump: Click on a part of the preview to jump to the corresponding position in the source file.
- Centered scrolling: Keeps your writing visually anchored as you type.
- Syntax highlighting: Makes your documents easier to read and edit.
- Fast and native: Built in Rust and GTK following the GNOME human interface guidelines.
Get Typesetter on Flathub
Vladimir Kosolapov announces
Lenspect 1.0.2 has just been released on Flathub
This version features some quality-of-life improvements:
- Improved drag-and-drop design
- Increased file size limit to 650MB
- Added more result items from VirusTotal
- Added notifications for background scans
- Added file opener integration
- Added key storage using secrets provider
Check out the project on GitHub
GNOME Websites
Sophie (she/her) reports
The API to access information about GNOME projects has moved from
apps.gnome.orgtostatic.gnome.org/catalog. Everything based on the old API links has to move to the new links. The format of the API also slightly changed.Pages like apps.gnome.org, welcome.gnome.org, developer.gnome.org/components/, and others are based on the API data. The separation will help with maintainability of the code.
More information can be found in the catalog's git repository.
Shell Extensions
Dudu Maroja reports
The 2 Wallpapers GNOME extension is a neat tool that changes your wallpaper whenever you open a window. You can choose to set a darker, blurry, desaturated, or completely different image, whatever suits your preference. This extension was designed to help you focus on your active windows while letting your desktop shine when you want it.
The main idea behind this extension is to allow the use of transparent windows without relying on heavy processing or on-the-fly effects like blur, which can consume too much battery or GPU resources.
Grab it here: 2 Wallpapers Extension
dagimg-dot says
I have been working on Veil - a modern successor to the Hide items extension. which lets you hide all or chosen items on the gnome panel with auto-hide feature and smooth animations. you can check out the demo on GNOME's reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/gnome/comments/1orr1co/veil_a_cleaner_quieter_gnome_panel_hide_items/
Dmy3k announces
Adaptive Brightness Extension
This week the extension received a big update to preferences UI.
Interactive Brightness Configuration
- You can now customize how your screen brightness responds to different lighting conditions using an easy-to-use graphical interface
- Configure brightness levels for 5 different light ranges (from night to bright outdoor)
- See a visual graph showing your brightness curve
Improved Settings Layout
- Settings are now organized into 3 clear tabs: Calibration, Preview, and Keyboard
- Each lighting condition can be expanded to adjust its range and brightness level
- Live preview shows you exactly how brightness will respond to ambient light
Better Keyboard Backlight Control
Choose specific lighting conditions where keyboard backlight turns on (instead of just on/off)
Available at extensions.gnome.org and github.
Miscellaneous
GNOME OS ↗
The GNOME operating system, development and testing platform
Ada Magicat ❤️🧡🤍🩷💜 reports
Tulip Blossom from Project Bluefin has been working on building bootc images of different Linux systems, including GNOME OS. To ensure bootc users have the best experience possible with our system, Jordan Petridis and Valentin David from the GNOME OS team are working on building an OCI image that can be directly used by bootc. It is currently a work in progress, but we expect to land it soon. This collaboration is a great opportunity to expand our community, contributor base and share our vision for how to build operating systems.
Note that this does not represent a change in our plans for GNOME OS itself; It will continue using the same systemd tools for deploying and updating the system.
Ada Magicat ❤️🧡🤍🩷💜 reports
In Ignacy's update on his Digital Wellbeing work this week, you might have noticed he shared the progress of his work in a complete system image. That image is based on GNOME OS and built on the same infrastructure as our main images.
This shows the power of GNOME OS as a development platform, especially for features that involve changes in many different parts of our stack. It also allows anyone with a machine, virtual or physical, to test these new features easier than ever before.
We hope to further improve our tools so that they are useful to more developers and make it easier and more convenient to test changes like this.
GNOME Foundation
Allan Day says
Another weekly Foundation update is available this week, with a summary of everything that's been happening at the GNOME Foundation. It's been a mixed week, with a Board meeting, ongoing finance work, GNOME.Asia preparations, and digital wellbeing planning.
Digital Wellbeing Project ↗
Ignacy Kuchciński (ignapk) announces
As part of the Digital Wellbeing project, sponsored by the GNOME Foundation, there is an initiative to redesign the Parental Controls to bring it on par with modern GNOME apps and implement new features such as Screen Time monitoring, Bedtime Schedule and Web Filtering. Recently the child account overview gained screen time usage information, the Screen Time page was added with session limits controls, the wellbeing panel in Settings was integrated with parental controls, and screen limits were introduced in the Shell. There's more to come, see https://blogs.gnome.org/ignapk/2025/11/10/digital-wellbeing-contract-screen-time-limits/ for more information.
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!
14 Nov 2025 12:00am GMT














