News and Editorials
There was a
Fedora
Summit this week to discuss a public roadmap for Fedora 7 and other
Fedora-centric topics. The summit was still in progress at press time.
The meeting was partly face-to-face, with additional people chiming in via
IRC and telephone.
Your editor was not able to attend the summit, so this is based on wiki
pages and IRC logs. First and foremost though, it seems that Fedora Core
packages will move into the community infrastructure currently used for
Fedora Extras. Opening
Core will make it easier for outside contributors and encourage more
community participation. One side effect of that might be a smaller Fedora
base platform. Dare we hope for a single install CD? A new build
system was proposed to support the more open infrastructure.
There was considerable discussion about the role of Fedora Legacy and the
possibility of extending Fedora support from the current ~9 months to about
13 months, so that users could reasonably move from FCn to FCn+2. Fedora
Legacy would disappear, or be reabsorbed into the main Fedora project.
Jesse Keating has some details about this proposal in this blog post.
Suffice to say that this sparked some
discussion on the Fedora Legacy mailing list.
A policy
for secondary architectures was proposed. Fedora currently focuses on
x86 and x86_64, but this proposal would support other architectures such as
PPC or Sparc. The proposal comes from Tom Callaway from the Aurora Sparc Project.
Overall, Fedora 7 will likely be a different beast than previous releases.
More like the community oriented distribution that Red Hat promised.
Comments (12 posted)
New Releases
EnGarde
Secure Linux 3.0.10 is now available. The most significant new
feature, perhaps, is the "SELinux Control Console," which provides a
graphical interface for some SELinux management tasks.
Comments (none posted)
The Debian Installer team has announced the first release candidate (RC1)
of the installer for Debian GNU/Linux Etch. Click below for a look at the
many improvements and known problems.
Full Story (comments: none)
The
NetBSD project has released a live CD
based on 4.4BSD-Lite. See the
release
notes for more information.
Comments (3 posted)
The second beta of openSUSE 10.2 (codename Basilisk Lizard) is out. It
contains a large number of enhancements and updates done by the open source
community and Novell's development teams. There was a problem with
openSUSE-10.2-Beta2-Addon-Lang-i386.iso and
openSUSE-10.2-Beta2-Addon-Lang-i386.torrent, although corrected versions
should have hit the mirrors by now. You'll find the MD5SUMS of the new
files
here.
Full Story (comments: none)
Pardus has
announced
the release of Pardus Linux 2007 beta. "
Pardus operating system's latest beta version, codenamed "ATA", is out for download and testing. This beta version will be followed by the stable version Pardus 2007, to be released on December 18th, 2006. Pardus is a Linux based operating system, developed under the auspices of TUBITAK (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey) UEKAE (National Electronic and Cryptography Research Institute)." Pardus "ATA" comes as a single CD with Dutch, English, German and Turkish support on the desktop.
Comments (none posted)
The Ubuntu Customization Kit (UCK) 1.3 is out with many fixes and
improvements, including built-in support for Edgy. UCK is a tool that
helps you customizing official Ubuntu Live CDs (including Kubuntu/Xubuntu
and Edubuntu) to your needs. You can add any package to the live system,
for example language packs, or applications.
Full Story (comments: none)
Distribution News
Anonymous read-only CVS and SVN services for Gentoo repositories are now
available for use. "
The anonymous services are primarily intended
help our non-dev contributors easily produce patches and modifications (cvs
diff/svn diff), and provide easier access to the source for gentoo-hosted
projects."
Full Story (comments: none)
Mailing lists at suse.com have migrated to lists with new names at
opensuse.org. Click below to find the new lists.
Full Story (comments: none)
Slackware -current is undergoing renovations to the toolchain (gcc, glibc,
binutils, etc.). "
In addition, these things aren't going as smoothly
as anticipated. I'd like to put the NPTL version of glibc into /lib and
the LinuxThreads version into /lib/obsolete/linuxthreads (since some old
binaries are going to need them), but doing this prevents the use of a 2.4
kernel. Perhaps it's finally time to drop support for Linux 2.4?
Personally, I'd rather not as 2.4 is more forgiving of flaky hardware and
thus tends to get better uptimes (at least on the servers I run ;-).
Comments about this issue are welcomed."
Full Story (comments: none)
Ubuntu has announced a
release schedule
for the Feisty Fawn. According to the schedule we can expect the first
Herd CD on November 30. The final Feisty release is currently set for
April 19, 2007.
Full Story (comments: none)
Terrasoft Solutions has announced that Yellow Dog Linux (YDL) 5.0 for the
Sony Computer Entertainment, Inc. PLAYSTATION(R)3 will be made available
via YDL.net Enhanced accounts on Monday, November 27, 2006.
Full Story (comments: none)
Distribution Newsletters
The
Fedora
Weekly News covers Fedora Summit Preparations, Fedora Ambassadors Day,
Fedora Directory Server 1.0.4 is released, Announcing pungi-0.1.0, Why
every child deserves a laptop, OLPC taps 2.6.19 kernel, plus Fedora reviews
and more.
Comments (none posted)
The
Gentoo
Weekly Newsletter for November 6, 2006 covers things heard in the
community, Linux Day in Italy, tips on searching overlays and running
32-bit mplayer with 64-bit kmplayer and several other topics.
The Gentoo
Weekly Newsletter for November 13, 2006 is also available. This
edition covers anonymous CVS and SVN services, Gentoo-based Ruby on Rails
service, summaries from gentoo-user and more.
Comments (none posted)
The
DistroWatch
Weekly for November 13, 2006 is out. "
As Novell continues to
endure the wrath of the open source developer and user community, many
people are wondering whether they should boycott Novell's products. In the
meantime, openSUSE continues its 10.2 development process unabated and on
target for the early December release. Also in the news: a war of words
erupts between Fedora and Ubuntu, Feisty Fawn's new features attract fresh
controversy, Debian prepares a new set of kernels for "etch", and Slackware
introduces modern features into its "current" tree. We'll bring you the
results of our Mandriva Linux 2007 PowerPack competition and continue our
discussion on DistroWatch's Page Hit Ranking statistics."
Comments (none posted)
Package updates
Updates for
Fedora Core 6:
librsvg2
(update to 2.16.1),
gcalctool (update to
5.8.25),
libxklavier (bug fix),
speex (update to 1.2beta1),
cairo (update to 1.2.6),
libX11 (bug fixes),
gnome-panel (update to 2.16.1),
jwhois (use the new upstream config),
system-config-printer (bug fix update to
0.7.35),
redhat-menus (pick up missing
translations),
mikmod (bug fix),
policycoreutils (bump for FC6),
selinux-policy (bump for FC6),
perl-DateManip (bug fixes),
gaim (bug fixes),
gnome-vfs2 (update to 2.16.2),
eel2 (update to 2.16.1),
nautilus (bug fixes),
nautilus-cd-burner (pass joliet flag when
using growisofs),
gnome-python2-extras
(rebuild against Firefox),
xorg-x11-xinit
(bug fixes),
gnome-pilot-conduits ($libdir
change),
pygobject2 (multilib bug fixes),
system-config-kickstart (bug fix),
gnome-python2 (update to 2.16.2),
man-pages-fr (change in spec file),
nautilus (bug fixes),
nfs-utils (upgrade to 1.0.10),
sysstat (add NFS mount statistics),
libsoup (update to 2.2.97),
hal-cups-utils (fix the 'select printer model'
dialog),
openoffice.org (bug fixes),
foomatic (database update),
oprofile (add Intel Core 2 support, AMD64
event names),
nfs-utils (upgrade to
1.0.10),
iscsi-initiator-utils (rebase to
upstream open-iscsi-2.0-730).
Updates for Fedora Core 5: jwhois
(use the new upstream config), mikmod (bug
fix), arts (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdelibs (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeaccessibility (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeaddons (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeadmin (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeartwork (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdebase (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdebindings (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeedu (KDE 3.5.5 release), tcpdump (bug fixes), kdegames (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdegraphics (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdemultimedia (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdenetwork (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdepim (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdesdk (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdeutils (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdevelop (KDE 3.5.5 release), kdewebdev (KDE 3.5.5 release), kde-i18n (KDE 3.5.5 release), iscsi-initiator-utils (rebase to upstream
open-iscsi-2.0-730).
Comments (none posted)
Updates for
Mandriva Linux 2007.0:
gnuplot (fix a segmentation fault),
desktop-common-data (fix menu problems),
ical (bug fixes),
webmin (bug fix),
opensc (smart card bug fix).
Comments (none posted)
Updates for
rPath Linux 1:
conary
(Conary 1.0.38 maintenance release),
rmake
(function correctly with Conary 1.0.38).
Comments (none posted)
Updates for
Trustix Secure Linux 2.2 & 3.0:
clamav, freetds, gettext (various bug fixes).
Comments (none posted)
Updates for
Ubuntu 6.10:
debootstrap_0.3.3.0ubuntu8~edgy1,
brasero_0.5.0-0ubuntu1~edgy1.
Updates for Ubuntu 6.06: gnome-commander_1.2.0-3.1~dapper1, debootstrap_0.3.3.0ubuntu8~dapper1, mpd_0.12.1-1ubuntu1~dapper1, eagle_4.16-2~dapper1, scorched3d_40-1ubuntu1~dapper1.
Comments (none posted)
Newsletters and articles of interest
Linux.com has
this report
from the latest Ubuntu Developers Summit. "
The announcement that
Ubuntu will ship binary drivers by default in Feisty is getting a lot of
negative commentary from users and Ubuntu members alike. Of course, there's
also a vocal contingent that complains that Ubuntu and other distros are
unsuitable for general users because they don't ship with Nvidia or other
binary drivers enabled. There's no position here that will satisfy all
users."
Comments (43 posted)
HowtoForge
sets up
OpenVZ on CentOS. "
In this HowTo I will describe how to prepare a
CentOS 4.4 server for OpenVZ virtual machines. With OpenVZ you can create
multiple Virtual Private Servers (VPS) on the same hardware, similar to Xen
and the Linux Vserver project. OpenVZ is the open-source branch of
Virtuozzo, a commercial virtualization solution used by many providers that
offer virtual servers."
Comments (none posted)
Debian Admin has a
howto
article on setting up a server on Ubuntu 6.10. "
Automatic LAMP
(Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP) In about 15 minutes, the time it takes to
install Ubuntu Edgy Server Edition, you can have a LAMP server up and ready
to go. This feature, exclusive to Ubuntu Server Edition, is available at
the time of installation."
Comments (none posted)
HowtoForge
builds a custom
kernel on Fedora. "
Each distribution has some specific tools to
build a custom kernel from the sources. This article is about compiling a
kernel on Fedora systems. It describes how to build a custom kernel using
the latest unmodified kernel sources from www.kernel.org (vanilla kernel)
so that you are independent from the kernels supplied by your
distribution. It also shows how to patch the kernel sources if you need
features that are not in there. I have tested this on Fedora Core
6."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution reviews
Linux.com
reviews
Fedora Core 6. "
The FC6 schedule slipped a bit at the last minute
due to a handful of serious issues, such as an Ext3 data corruption bug,
but the Fedora team managed to get the final release out pretty close to
schedule. Unfortunately, it's still a bit buggy in some scenarios. It might
have been better to hold off releasing FC6 for another week or two to fix
the problems, but it is a good release if you're willing to be careful
during the install."
Comments (none posted)
CRN
reviews
and compares Linspire, Xandros and SLED. "
System builders
considering a Linux desktop are faced with a dizzying array of choices.
There are dozens, if not hundreds, of Linux distributions to choose from.
Narrowing the field of contenders basically comes down to what works best
for both the system builder and its customers. Finding that fit often
leads system builders to pursue a commercial distribution over an
open-source one. Today's commercial desktop Linux distributions make a lot
of sense for system builders, mostly because of three factors: recurring
revenue, licensing and support. With that in mind, the CRN Test Center set
out to compare commercial versions of Linux that are aimed at the channel,
specifically the custom-system channel."
Comments (none posted)
openaddict.com
compares
Xandros Home Edition Premium and Linspire Five-O. "
Today I'm taking
a look at two ultra-userfriendly Linux distributions: Xandros Home Edition
Premium and Linspire Five-O. I'm comparing these two against each other for
their technical merits, ease of installation, look/feel, available software
and ease of use. Are these two commercial Linux distros easy enough for
your Grandmother? Read on to find out."
Comments (none posted)
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
Next page: Development>>