|
|
Log in / Subscribe / Register

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

From:  Dennis Gilmore <dennis-AT-ausil.us>
To:  announce-AT-lists.fedoraproject.org
Subject:  Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha!!
Date:  Tue, 24 Aug 2010 09:15:34 -0500
Message-ID:  <201008240915.37463.dennis@ausil.us>
Archive‑link:  Article

The Fedora 14 "Laughlin" Alpha release is available! This release offers a 
preview of some of the best free and open source technology currently under 
development. Catch a glimpse of the future:

http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease

== What is the Alpha release? ==

The Alpha release contains all the features of Fedora 14 in a form that anyone 
can help test. This testing, guided by the Fedora QA team, helps us target and 
identify bugs. When these bugs are fixed, we make a Beta release available. A 
Beta release is code-complete, and bears a very strong resemblance to the 
third and final release. The final release of Fedora 14 is due in November.

We need your help to make Fedora 14 the best release yet, so please take a 
moment of your time to download and try out the Alpha and make sure the things 
that are important to you are working. If you find a bug, please report it -- 
every bug you uncover is a chance to improve the experience for millions of 
Fedora users worldwide. Together, we can make Fedora a rock-solid 
distribution.  (Read down to the end of the announcement for more information 
on how to help.)

Fedora 14 is named in honor of distinguished physicist Robert B. Laughlin, 
whose fields of research have included, among other things, the topic of 
emergence. Emergence is the process by which a group of individual components 
interact to produce a system that is more complex than the sum of its parts - 
a perfect description of an open source community.

==Features==

This release of Fedora includes a variety of features both over and under the 
hood that show off the power and flexibility of the advancing state of free 
software.  Examples include:

* '''System and session management.''' Fedora 14 introduces '''systemd''', a 
smarter, more efficient way of starting up and managing the background daemons 
that services we all use every day - such as '''NetworkManager''' and 
'''PulseAudio''' - rely on.
* '''Desktop virtualization'''. High-quality access to QEMU virtual machines 
moves a step closer with the introduction of '''Spice''', a complete open 
source solution for interaction with virtualized desktops.
* '''Faster JPEG compression/decompression'''. The replacement of 
'''libjpeg''' with '''libjpeg-turbo''' brings speed improvements to a wide 
range of applications when handling images in JPEG format, including photo 
managers, video editors and PDF readers.
* '''New and updated programming languages'''. Fedora 14 sees the introduction 
of '''D''', a systems programming language combining power and high 
performance with programmer productivity, as well as updates to '''Python''', 
'''Erlang''', and '''Perl'''.
* '''Better tools for developers'''. Simpler, faster debugging with '''gdb''' 
indexing and new commands for finding and fixing memory leaks, as well as new 
versions of '''NetBeans''' and '''Eclipse'''.
* '''The latest desktop environments'''. '''KDE 4.5''' introduces window 
tiling and better notification features, along with many stability 
improvements. '''Sugar 0.90''' features major usability improvements and 
support for 3G networks.
* '''Improved netbook experience with MeeGo?'''. The '''MeeGo? Netbook UX 
1.0''' provides a user interface tailored specifically for netbooks, building 
on the foundations laid by '''Moblin''' in previous Fedora releases.
* '''Fedora on the cloud'''. From Fedora 14 onward images for EC2 will be 
provided for each new release, allowing users of Amazon's on-demand cloud 
computing platform to use the latest Fedora.
* '''IPMI server management made simple'''. New to Fedora 14 is 
'''ipmiutil''', an easy-to-use, fully-featured IPMI server management utility 
that allows a wide range of management functions to be performed with just a 
few commands.
* '''Support for SCAP'''. Fedora 14 introduces an open source framework for 
the Security Content Automation Protocol (SCAP), allowing users to 
automatically scan their system to check whether it complies with a defined 
security configuration.
* '''Perl 6 support with Rakudo'''. Fedora 14 comes with Rakudo Perl, an 
implementation of the Perl 6 specification based on the Parrot virtual machine, 
which enables developers to write new applications or port existing ones to 
Perl 6.   
* '''More powerful data analysis'''. Given that Fedora 14 is named after one 
of the giants of modern theoretical physics, it seems appropriate that 
Laughlin sees the introduction to Fedora of '''ROOT''', an obejct-oriented, 
open-source platform for data acquisition, simulation and data analysis 
developed by CERN. Support for the increasingly popular '''R''' statistical 
programming language is also broadened with a range of new addons.  
  
These and many other improvements provide a wide and solid base for future 
releases, further increasing the range of possibilities for developers and 
helping to maintain Fedora's position at the leading edge of free and open 
source technology.

A more complete list and details of each new cited feature is available here:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/14/FeatureList 

We have nightly composes of alternate spins available here:

http://alt.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/nightly-composes/

== Issues and Details ==

For more information including common and known bugs, tips on how to report 
bugs, and the official release schedule, please refer to the release notes:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_14_Alpha_release_notes 

ATI/AMD Radeon|In particular, if a blank screen is presented during 
installation, especially with ATI/AMD Radeon video, please review 
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F14_bugs#radeon-ana...

== Contributing ==

Bug reports are helpful, especially for Alpha.  If you encounter any issues 
please report them and help make this release of Fedora the best ever.

Thank you, and we hope to see you in the Fedora project!
-- 
announce mailing list
announce@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/announce


to post comments

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 24, 2010 18:11 UTC (Tue) by vv (guest, #69729) [Link] (6 responses)

Pity I didn't wait one day longer before installing F13. Oh well, the new additions listed in the release notes are enough to convince me that I should wipe that install and try this alpha instead. A (slightly) faster boot and a newer kernel will hopefully make up for any inevitable snags...

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Aug 24, 2010 18:58 UTC (Tue) by pizza (subscriber, #46) [Link] (5 responses)

For someone like me that does a ton of automated image processing, MMX/SSE-accelerated libjpeg-turbo's speed improvements will make one heck of a difference. It's typically 2-4x faster than the old IJG libjpeg code.

Now if if we can only get a FOSS OpenCL GPU compute stack..

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Aug 25, 2010 3:02 UTC (Wed) by vv (guest, #69729) [Link]

You're definitely not the only one who's looking forward to the turbo-charged libjpeg... it's one area where I've noticed Windows, for example, is a hell of a lot faster. Not that that in any way answers your question, mind. ;)

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Aug 25, 2010 7:47 UTC (Wed) by pabs (subscriber, #43278) [Link] (3 responses)

I wonder why libjpeg-turbo couldn't have been folded directly into libjpeg.

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Aug 25, 2010 10:30 UTC (Wed) by epa (subscriber, #39769) [Link] (2 responses)

As I understand it the libjpeg upstream maintainers are not particularly responsive. It's an old piece of software, similar in some ways to Info-ZIP, so it's understandable that upstream is more focused on stability and does development in a somewhat more closed manner than we've become accustomed to.

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Aug 26, 2010 1:43 UTC (Thu) by pabs (subscriber, #43278) [Link]

Hmmmm, interesting thread. Sounds like there is a licensing issue as well that prevents libjpeg-turbo from being merged back. Seems there are patent issues with newer versions of libjpeg too.

I'm personally slightly annoyed at all these forks to core functionality (gzip/pigz, bzip2/pbzip2, libjpeg/libjpeg-turbo/libjpeg.sf.net, libpng/firefox, glibc/eglibc, linux/android) and wish upstreams and downstreams of such core functionality would behave more responsibly in development of the software. This is the FLOSS movement, we can do better.

Is it sad the feature that excites me the most is 'libjpeg-turbo'?

Posted Sep 3, 2010 17:32 UTC (Fri) by nix (subscriber, #2304) [Link]

"More focused on stability"? They've broken API and ABI twice in two years!

libjpeg *used* to be API-stable, but no longer.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 24, 2010 19:33 UTC (Tue) by jengelh (subscriber, #33263) [Link] (2 responses)

ssh f-14 "yum install tomcat".

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 25, 2010 0:19 UTC (Wed) by michich (guest, #17902) [Link] (1 responses)

If your point is that Fedora does not include tomcat, you are mistaken. It includes two versions, they are called tomcat5 and tomcat6. But I cannot really be sure if that's what you meant by your comment.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 25, 2010 2:52 UTC (Wed) by mattdm (subscriber, #18) [Link]

No; it's an attempt at humor. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grumman_F-14_Tomcat.

please help test systemd

Posted Aug 24, 2010 21:44 UTC (Tue) by mattdm (subscriber, #18) [Link]

Please particularly test systemd and related service configuration and activation scripts.

The decision whether or not to ship F14 with this (frankly, exciting and cool) new core subsystem will be made based issues discovered during alpha and beta testing, and since it is both young code and a significant change from the previous init system (which used upstart but almost exclusively as a sysvinit drop-in replacement), it needs lot of testing.

Punctuation

Posted Aug 25, 2010 9:00 UTC (Wed) by epa (subscriber, #39769) [Link] (2 responses)

What's with all the '''triple''' quotation marks? Haven't seen that before.

Punctuation

Posted Aug 25, 2010 9:10 UTC (Wed) by alexl (guest, #19068) [Link]

Wiki markup i think

Punctuation

Posted Aug 25, 2010 9:48 UTC (Wed) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link]

It is media markup. The announcement was written in it so that everyone can collaborate in writing it up. I supposed the person who sent it just copy pasted it.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 25, 2010 18:14 UTC (Wed) by Ed_L. (guest, #24287) [Link] (2 responses)

Hmmm. Anybody got checksums for those ISO's? Inquiring minds want to know...

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 25, 2010 22:08 UTC (Wed) by michich (guest, #17902) [Link] (1 responses)

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 26, 2010 1:10 UTC (Thu) by Ed_L. (guest, #24287) [Link]

Thanks! Getting there from the http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease link is less than intuitively obvious. Epic html-fu fail...

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 29, 2010 16:54 UTC (Sun) by Tet (subscriber, #5433) [Link] (4 responses)

If you find a bug, please report it -- every bug you uncover is a chance to improve the experience for millions of Fedora users worldwide.

A chance, yes, but realistically, if the bug is in certain areas, it's a negligible one. I know the developers have limited time, but if you log a bug against X11 or PulseAudio in Fedora, there's a very real chance it'll sit there without being looked at for a year until that release goes EOL when it'll be automatically closed.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 29, 2010 17:00 UTC (Sun) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link] (3 responses)

Often these bugs are hardware specific and if it is not and blocks the release criteria, Fedora 14 won't be released without fixing that bug. Literally hundreds of bug reports come in for something like X11. Among the distros, Red Hat by far is the largest contributor to Xorg and does fix many bugs in Fedora but it is impossible to fix everything.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 29, 2010 17:21 UTC (Sun) by Tet (subscriber, #5433) [Link] (2 responses)

I'm not disputing any of that, apart from the release blocking comment. I'm merely commenting on the reality of the situation. Which is that even non-hardware specific bugs simply aren't getting fixed (the inability of system-config-display to handle multiple monitors, for example, which didn't block the F13 release, or if memory serves the F12 release before it).

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Aug 29, 2010 18:17 UTC (Sun) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link] (1 responses)

Of course, noone is claiming that every possible bug is going to block the release. For one, system-config-display is deprecated tool and even orphaned for the next release. If anyone cares enough, they should pick it up and work on it. Even if it was not the case, bugs in that tool doesn't meet anything close to the release criteria.

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/ReleaseCriteria

So if your point was that Fedora like every distribution prioritizes and fixes some bugs and leaves others unfixed, that isn't news. I am not sure why you singled out X11 bugs for example because bugzilla stats would show a very large number of them getting filed and fixed during the development cycle. I would say, the chances are actually higher than some other components.

Announcing the release of Fedora 14 Alpha

Posted Sep 1, 2010 11:30 UTC (Wed) by Tet (subscriber, #5433) [Link]

For one, system-config-display is deprecated tool and even orphaned for the next release

Ye gods. I struggle to keep up with all the changes that seem to be going on. What's the replacement tool (bearing in mind I don't use GNOME, which AFAIK is still a supported configuration)?

I am not sure why you singled out X11 bugs for example because bugzilla stats would show a very large number of them getting filed and fixed

Maybe I've just been unlucky, then, because not a single one of mine has ever been fixed. I keep reporting them anyway, because it's the right thing to do, but it's hard to keep up the motivation when nothing ever happens. Indeed in the last day or two, arlied has reassigned all of my X11 bugs to nobody. I'm not exactly hopeful that they'll be fixed. Sigh.


Copyright © 2010, Eklektix, Inc.
Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds