From poelstra at redhat.com Thu Oct 1 00:10:42 2009 From: poelstra at redhat.com (John Poelstra) Date: Wed, 30 Sep 2009 17:10:42 -0700 Subject: Final Review of Incomplete Fedora 12 Features Message-ID: <4AC3F382.7020207@redhat.com> Hi FESCo, With the passing of Beta Freeze we are now at the point in our release process where we expect all features to be at 100% completion. After requesting status updates, including direct email to the feature owners, the following feature pages do not have a current status. https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-devel-announce/2009-September/msg00008.html https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/DisplayPort https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/LowerProcessCapabilities https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/NFSv4Default In accordance with our recorded policy of requiring that all features be at 100% at Beta Freeze, I am proposing these features for your review to determine what their disposition should be. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/Policy/Dropping Thank you, John p.s. I'm going based solely on the information on the feature page. p.s.s. Feature owners are also being bcc'd on this message and a copy is also being sent to fedora-devel-announce. From peter at thecodergeek.com Fri Oct 2 03:23:28 2009 From: peter at thecodergeek.com (Peter Gordon) Date: Thu, 01 Oct 2009 20:23:28 -0700 Subject: Heads-up: rb_libtorrent bump (Rawhide), rebuilds required Message-ID: <1254453808.9471.39.camel@localhost> Hi, all. I just pushed an update to rb_libtorrent 0.14.16 in rawhide (F13+), which bumps the library soname from "libtorrent-rasterbar.so.3" to "libtorrent-rasterbar.so.5". Because of this change, applications which use this library will need to be rebuilt. According to repoquery, these are qbittorrent and springlobby (maintainers CC-ed). I've successfully rebuilt these two packages locally (from their CVS devel/ branches) with this update earlier today and did not see any problems, so I don't expect any issues in updating. Packages such as Deluge and Miro which use rb_libtorrent through its Python bindings remain unaffected by this change. Please let me know if there are any related problems or questions as they arise. Thanks. -- Peter Gordon (codergeek42) Who am I? :: http://thecodergeek.com/about-me -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: From ian at ianweller.org Mon Oct 5 21:52:42 2009 From: ian at ianweller.org (Ian Weller) Date: Mon, 5 Oct 2009 16:52:42 -0500 Subject: Docs preparing to convert to Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 Unported license Message-ID: <20091005215242.GA10890@deathray.l.ianweller.org> Today, the Docs team finalized the conversion of the licensing of our documentation and project content from the Open Publication License (OPL) to a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). Docs originally reached a consensus to change the license in June 2009, and after answering questions raised by the community, the Docs team decided to go ahead with the transition. While OPL is a free and open documentation license, moving to a more widely known and adopted license and the one used by the likes of Wikipedia and GNOME Project helps us share our content more easily with the rest of the Free software community. Additional information can be found at: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Relicensing_OPL_to_CC_BY_SA We'd like to thank Tom 'spot' Callaway, Fedora's legal ninja, and Richard Fontana of Red Hat Legal for their help with the conversion. We look forward to continue working with the community and share our documentation freely. -- Ian Weller "Why, a four-year-old could understand this report. Find me a four-year-old child. I can't make head or tail out of it." -- Groucho Marx, "Duck Soup" -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 197 bytes Desc: not available URL: From poelstra at redhat.com Tue Oct 6 03:50:00 2009 From: poelstra at redhat.com (John Poelstra) Date: Mon, 05 Oct 2009 20:50:00 -0700 Subject: Fedora 12 Beta Release Rescheduled to 2009-10-20 Message-ID: <4ACABE68.8090005@redhat.com> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/12/Schedule At the Release Engineering meeting today https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-devel-list/2009-October/msg00244.html it was noted that we still do not have a beta RC composed because a few blocker bugs remain. The decision was made to move the Fedora 12 Beta Release date to 2009-10-20 instead of its scheduled date of 2009-10-13 (one week from Tuesday). The original intention was also to move the final release date of Fedora 12 to 2009-11-17, but that decision has been deferred until Thursday while the Infrastructure team researches some issues related to an upcoming data center move. The next meeting to determine the final release date for Fedora 12 will be this Thursday, 2009-10-08 at 18:00 UTC (2 PM EDT) in #fedora-meeting. After that meeting all of the detailed Fedora 12 team schedules will be fully updated to reflect the plan of record. REMINDER: we are in and will remain in FINAL FREEZE for Fedora 12. This is not a new opportunity for more time to continue development work or squeeze more bug fixes into Fedora 12. A new branch is already open where this work can continue for Fedora 13. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Beta_Freeze_Policy John From poelstra at redhat.com Thu Oct 8 21:44:35 2009 From: poelstra at redhat.com (John Poelstra) Date: Thu, 08 Oct 2009 14:44:35 -0700 Subject: Fedora 12 Final Release Date Rescheduled to 2009-11-17 Message-ID: <4ACE5D43.5050305@redhat.com> Update from the previous announcement on changes to the Fedora 12 schedule described here: https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-devel-announce/2009-October/msg00003.html The deadline affecting the data center move which was putting a final release date if 2009-11-17 into question has been extended. As a result we are now able to go forward with the original decision from the 2009-10-05 Release Engineering meeting to move the final release date of Fedora 12 to 2009-11-17. All of the schedules have been updated to reflect these changes. Key milestones: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/12 Detailed team schedules and ics (calendar) files: http://poelstra.fedorapeople.org/schedules/f-12/ John From jkeating at redhat.com Tue Oct 20 13:56:32 2009 From: jkeating at redhat.com (Jesse Keating) Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 06:56:32 -0700 Subject: Fedora 12 Beta now available! Message-ID: <1256046992.4242.24.camel@localhost.localdomain> Fedora is a leading edge, free and open source operating system that continues to deliver innovative features to many users, with a new release every six months. We have reached the Fedora 12 Beta, the last important development milestone of Fedora 12. Only critical bug fixes will be pushed as updates leading up to the general release of Fedora 12, scheduled to be released in mid-November. We invite you to join us and participate in making Fedora 12 a solid release by downloading, testing, and providing us your valuable feedback. http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease Of course, this is a beta release, some problems may still be lurking. Should you trip across one of them, be sure it gets fixed before release by reporting your discovery at: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/ Thank you! What's New in Fedora 12? * Optimized performance - All software packages on 32-bit (x86_32) architecture have been compiled for i686 systems with special optimization for Intel Atom processors used in many netbooks but without losing compatibility with the overwhelming majority of CPUs. There is a list of the rare CPUs which will no longer be supported. * Smaller and faster updates - In Fedora 11, the optional yum-presto plugin, developed by Fedora contributor Jonathan Dieter, reduced update size by transmitting only the changes in the updated packages. Now, the plugin is installed by default. Also, RPMs now use XZ rather than gzip for compression, providing smaller package sizes without the memory and CPU penalties associated with bzip2. This lets us fit more software into each Fedora image, and uses less space on mirrors, making their administrators' lives a little easier. Thanks to the Fedora infrastructure team for their work in generating delta RPMs. * NetworkManager broadband and other enhancements - NetworkManager, originally developed by Red Hat's Dan Williams, was introduced in Fedora 7 and has become the de facto network configuration solution for distributions everywhere. Enhancements to NetworkManager make both system-wide connections and mobile broadband connections easier than ever. Signal strength and network selection are available for choosing the best mobile broadband connection when you're on the road. Bluetooth PAN support offers a simple click through process to access the Internet from your mobile phone. NetworkManager can now configure always-on and static address connections directly from the desktop. PolicyKit integration has been added so configuration management can be done via central policy where needed. IPv6 support has also been improved. * Next-generation (Ogg) Theora video - For several years, Theora, the open and free format not encumbered by known patents has provided a way for freedom-loving users to share video. Fedora 12 includes the new Theora 1.1, which achieves near-H.264 quality, meeting the expectations of demanding users with crisp, vibrant media in both streaming and downloadable form. Thanks to the work of the Xiph.Org Foundation's Christopher "Monty" Montgomery, sponsored by Red Hat, other Xiph developers, and the contribution of Mozilla.org, Firefox 3.5 can deliver free media on the web out of the box, using the Theora video and Vorbis audio formats even better than the previous release of Fedora. * Graphics support improvements - Fedora 12 introduces experimental 3D support for AMD Radeon HD 2400 and later graphics cards. To try it out, install the mesa-dri-drivers-experimental package. On many cards, this support should allow desktop effects to be used. Kernel mode setting (KMS) support, which was introduced on AMD hardware in Fedora 10 and extended to Intel hardware in Fedora 11, is now extended to NVIDIA hardware as well, meaning the great majority of systems now benefit from the smooth, fully-graphical startup sequence made possible by KMS. The Fedora graphical startup sequence now works better on systems with multiple monitors. Also on multiple monitor systems, the desktop will now automatically be spread across all monitors by default, rather than having all monitors display the same output, including on NVIDIA chips (where multiple monitor spanning was not possible without manual configuration changes in Fedora 11). Systems with NVIDIA graphics chips also gain initial support for suspend and resume functionality via the default Nouveau driver. Initial support for the new DisplayPort display connector has been added for Intel graphics chips. Support for Nvidia and ATI systems is already under rapid development and will be included in the next release of Fedora. Thanks to the Red Hat Xorg team including Adam Jackson (X server), Kristian H?gsberg (Intel driver), Dave Airlie and Jerome Glisse (Radeon driver for AMD), and Ben Skeggs (Nouveau driver for NVIDIA). * Virtualization improvements - Not content with all the improvements in Fedora 11, we've kicked virtualization based on KVM up another notch in Fedora 12. There are extensive improvements in performance, management, resource sharing, and still more security enhancements. A new library (libguestfs) and an interactive tool (guestfish) are now available for directly accessing and modifying virtual machine disk images. * Automatic reporting of crashes and SELinux issues - Abrt, a tool to help non-power users report crashes to Bugzilla with a few mouse clicks, is now enabled by default. Abrt collects detailed information automatically and helps developers identify and resolve issues faster, improving the quality of individual upstream components and Fedora. The SELinux alert monitoring tool has also added the ability to report SELinux issues to Bugzilla quickly and easily with just a couple of clicks. * New Dracut initrd generation tool - Up until Fedora 11, the boot system (initial ram disk or initrd) used to boot Fedora was monolithic, very distribution specific and didn't provide much flexibility. This has been replaced with Dracut, an initial ram disk generation tool with an event-based framework designed to be distribution-independent thanks to the Dracut team including Harald Hoyer, Jeremy Katz, Dave Jones and many others. It has been also adopted by OLPC which uses Fedora; OLPC modules for Dracut are available in the Fedora repository. * PackageKit plugins - PackageKit now has a plugin which can install an appropriate package when a user tries to run a command from a missing package. Another new plugin allows installation of software packages from a web browser. Thanks to Red Hat's Richard Hughes and the PackageKit team. * Bluetooth on-demand - Bluetooth services are automatically started when needed and stopped 30 seconds after last device use, reducing initial startup time and resource use when Bluetooth is not in active use. Thanks to Red Hat's Bastien Nocera. * Moblin graphical interface for netbooks - The Moblin graphical interface and applications are fully integrated thanks to Peter Robinson, a Fedora Project volunteer, and others. To use it, just install the Moblin Desktop Environment package group using yum or the graphical software management tools, and choose Moblin from the login manager. A F12 Moblin Fedora Remix (installable Live CD) will also be available. * PulseAudio enhancements - Red Hat's Lennart Poettering and several others have made significant improvements to the PulseAudio system. Improved mixer logic makes volume control more fine-grained and reliable. Integration with the Rygel UPnP media server means you can stream audio directly from your system to any UPnP / DLNA client, such as a Playstation 3. Hotplug support has been made more intelligent, so if you configure a device as the default output for a stream, unplug that device -- causing the stream(s) to be moved to another output device -- and later replug it, the stream is moved back to the preferred device. Finally, Bluetooth audio support means pairing with any Bluetooth audio device makes it available for use through PulseAudio. * Lower process privileges - In order to mitigate the impact of security vulnerabilities, permissions have been hardened for many files and system directories and process privileges have been lowered for a number of core components that require super user privileges. Red Hat's Steve Grubb has developed a new library, libcap-ng, and integrated it into many core system components to improve the security of Fedora. * SELinux sandbox - It is now possible to confine applications' access to the system and run them in a secure sandbox that takes advantage of the sophisticated capabilities of SELinux. Dan Walsh, SELinux developer at Red Hat, explains the details at http://danwalsh.livejournal.com/31146.html * Open Broadcom firmware - The openfwwf open source Broadcom firmware is included by default. This means wireless networking will be available out of the box on some Broadcom chipsets. * Hybrid live images - The Live images provided in this release can be directly imaged onto a USB stick using dd (or any equivalent tool) to create bootable Live USB keys. The Fedora Live USB Creator for Windows and the livecd-tools for Fedora are still recommended for data persistence and non-destructive writes. Thanks to Jeremy Katz. * Better webcam support - While Fedora 11 improved webcam support, in Fedora 12 you can expect even better video quality, especially for less expensive webcams. Red Hat's Hans de Goede, developer of the libv4l library, has more details on his continuous upstream webcam support enhancements at http://hansdegoede.livejournal.com/6989.html. * GNOME 2.28 - The latest version of the GNOME desktop includes the lighter Gnote replacement for Tomboy as the default note application, and Empathy replaces Pidgin as the default instant messenger. The new volume control application, first seen in Fedora 11, has been improved to restore some of the popular functionality from earlier releases without making the interface too complex. * GNOME Shell preview - Fedora 12 includes an early version of GNOME Shell, which will become the default interface for GNOME 3.0 and beyond. To try it, install the gnome-shell package, and use the Desktop Effects configuration tool to enable it. It will only work correctly from the GNOME desktop environment, not others such as KDE or Xfce. This is a preview technology, and some video cards may not be supported. * KDE 4.3 - The new KDE features an updated "Air" theme and fully configurable keyboard shortcuts in Plasma, improved performance and new desktop effects in the window manager, a new bug reporting tool, and a configuration tool for the LIRC infra-red remote control system. * Cool new stuff for developers beginning with Eclipse Galileo, which includes more plugins than ever before. Perl 6 is now included, along with PHP 5.3. For Haskell developers, the Haskell Platform now provides a standardized set of libraries and tools. But one of the biggest changes for developers is that most of the nice new features of Fedora 12, from Bluetooth to WebCams is implemented through underlying libraries, and many of the improvements will be included simply by relinking your application. Also available in this release are SystemTap 1.0 for improved instrumenting and debugging of binaries, complete with Eclipse integration, and the newest NetBeans IDE for Java development. * Cool new stuff for sysadmins includes added functionality for clustered Samba services (including active/active configurations) over GFS2; and the ability to boot a cluster of Fedora systems from a single, shared root file system. * Multi-Pointer X - The update to X.Org server 1.7 introduces the X Input Extension version 2.0 (XI2), with much work contributed by Red Hat's Peter Hutterer. This extension provides a new client API for handling input devices and also Multi-Pointer X (MPX) functionality. MPX functionality allows X to cope with many inputs of arbitrary types simultaneously, a prerequisite for (among others) multitouch-based desktops and multi-user interaction on a single screen. This is low-level work that applications and desktop environments will incrementally take advantage of in future releases. More details are available in the Release Notes and in the XI2 tag of Peter Hutterer's blog at http://who-t.blogspot.com/search/label/xi2 A full feature list is available on the wiki at http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/12/FeatureList OK, go get it. You know you can't wait. http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease Draft release notes and guides for several languages are available at http://docs.fedoraproject.org/drafts.html -- Jesse Keating Fedora -- Freedom? is a feature! identi.ca: http://identi.ca/jkeating -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: From wtogami at redhat.com Tue Oct 20 21:27:45 2009 From: wtogami at redhat.com (Warren Togami) Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 17:27:45 -0400 Subject: Reminder: Tagging Policy for Fedora 12 Message-ID: <4ADE2B51.4080006@redhat.com> This is just a reminder about the tagging policy for packages built for Fedora 12 past the development freeze. What Qualifies for Tagging? =========================== * You must have tested the build yourself. Great shame to be bestowed if you break things so close to the release! Great Shame! * http://wwoods.fedorapeople.org/files/critical-path/deplist.txt Anything on the critical path list requires two votes from Fedora release engineering. Critical path is loosely defined as packages that can break the ability to install or update. Typically rel-eng might do some sanity tests of your package as well, but don't count on them to find non-obvious issues. * Anything not on the critical path list can be approved by release engineering with a single vote. * You DID test it right? Many Builds Not Tagged, but Probably Should Be ============================================== # koji list-tagged --latest dist-f12-updates-candidate This command shows over 400 packages are built for F-12 but not tagged for release. https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/F12/pending Currently there are 270+ packages in the pending queue to become Fedora 12 updates. Many if not all of the packages requested update at this point probably belong tagged into rawhide immediately. Requesting it for updates at this point is problematic because you miss out on several weeks of testing only for it to show up as an update on day zero when Fedora 12 is released. Tagging policy might tighten up in the coming weeks then it might make sense to push as day zero updates at that point. How to Request Tagging ====================== https://fedorahosted.org/rel-eng Please file requests to have your post-freeze build included here. Please include the full Name-Version-Release of your build in the Summary of the ticket. To save rel-eng's time it might be helpful to mention a few other details like: * How important is this? * How much have you tested it? * Is it on the critical path list? Upcoming Deadlines ================== https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Schedule Warren Togami wtogami at redhat.com From wtogami at redhat.com Wed Oct 21 20:18:30 2009 From: wtogami at redhat.com (Warren Togami) Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 16:18:30 -0400 Subject: Notice: Fedora 12 Tagging Status Update Message-ID: <4ADF6C96.3000006@redhat.com> Fedora Release Engineering decided to deal with the 250+ backlog of Bodhi update requests by tagging them all into f12-final. Bodhi is now disabled for Fedora 12 updates. Questions ========= 1) Why tag all Update requests into f12-final? At this point of the schedule we realized that there were updates sitting in the queue from since October. They were sitting there. Not getting pushed to any repository. Rawhide gives these packages several more weeks of testing exposure. This was decided to be better than a flood of day zero updates that are poorly tested. 2) When will we be able to submit Updates again? Rel-eng will decide when to begin accepting Updates for Fedora 12 again during Monday's rel-eng meeting. Meanwhile please use the rel-eng ticketing system to request tagging into f12-final. 3) How do I file a tag request to include my package into Fedora 12? https://fedorahosted.org/rel-eng/ Please file tag request tickets here if you want your package build to be included in Fedora 12. Please include details like: * Full Name-Version-Release of your package(s) * What changed? * How risky is this change? * How important is this change? * How well tested is this package build? * Is this package in the critical-path list? 4) Which packages are critical-path? https://fedorahosted.org/pipermail/autoqa-results/2009-October/001714.html Unfortunately we do not yet have a permanent URL with the critical-path list. This page contains an auto-generated list of critical-path packages as of today. If your package is not critical-path and not a risk to others to update, then it is highly likely proper to tag at this point of the schedule. 5) How many untagged packages are there? koji list-tagged --latest dist-f12-updates-candidate This command lists all packages that are not tagged for f12-final. In some cases these are false positives because a newer package is instead tagged into f12-final. After you have tested your package and verified it doesn't make things worse, please file rel-eng tickets to have it included. Please direct questions to fedora-devel-list. Warren Togami wtogami at redhat.com From mchua at fedoraproject.org Sun Oct 25 05:30:00 2009 From: mchua at fedoraproject.org (Mel Chua) Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2009 01:30:00 -0400 Subject: Request your FUDCon funding now: cutoff Thursday 19:30 UTC Message-ID: <4AE3E258.3000509@fedoraproject.org> We?d like to wrap up budgeting for FUDCon Toronto 2009 as the happy date draws nearer. And we need your help. Ask us for money! Before Thursday October 29 at 19:30 UTC, that is. More details here (the blog post below will lead you to instructions on the wiki outlining how to request funding): http://blog.melchua.com/2009/10/25/request-your-fudcon-funding-now-cutoff-thursday-1930-utc/ I look forward to a flooded inbox on Thursday afternoon. ;) --Mel From john.brown009 at gmail.com Wed Oct 28 21:39:31 2009 From: john.brown009 at gmail.com (TK009) Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:39:31 -0400 Subject: Upcoming Bugzilla Changes Message-ID: <20091028213931.GC2663@blackhare> The time is almost here to reap the harvest on which so many have toiled and enjoy the bounty that is Fedora 12. With each new Fedora release comes some Bugzilla housekeeping. This e-mail is designed to let you know about two things happening around November 17, 2009 (Fedora 12 release day) and what you need to do, if anything. (1) We will be automatically changing the version all rawhide bugs to Fedora 12. This will result in regular bugs reported against rawhide during the Fedora 12 development cycle being changed to version '12' instead of their current assignment, 'rawhide'. This is done in order to more accurately tell where in the lineage of releases the bug was last reported because over time 'rawhide' becomes ambiguous. Note that this procedure does not apply to bugs that are against component 'Package Review' or bugs that have the 'FutureFeature' or 'Tracking' keywords set. They will stay open as rawhide bugs indefinitely. If you do not want your bugs changed to version '12', add the FutureFeature keyword. If you need help changing a large amount of bugs manually, we'd be glad to help. Stop by #fedora-bugzappers on irc.freenode.net and we'll help you. (2) All bugs for upcoming EOL releases (at this point, Fedora 10) will get a comment on release day, explaining that one month of maintenance remains. These bugs must move to a later version if still applicable or they will be automatically closed in one month with a resolution of WONTFIX. More about these processes is here: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/BugZappers/HouseKeeping Thanks for reading, Edward Kirk Fedora Bug Triage Team From kevin at scrye.com Sat Oct 31 20:38:35 2009 From: kevin at scrye.com (Kevin Fenzi) Date: Sat, 31 Oct 2009 14:38:35 -0600 Subject: Addition to the Policy for non responsive maintainers Message-ID: <20091031143835.3474f21c@ohm.scrye.com> Greetings. FESCo has made an additional 'fast track' process for non responsive maintainers available for some rare cases. See https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Policy_for_nonresponsive_package_maintainers#Fast_Track_procedure for more details. See https://fedorahosted.org/fesco/ticket/251 for more discussion. As well as: http://meetbot.fedoraproject.org/fedora-meeting/2009-09-18/fedora-meeting.2009-09-18-16.59.log.html#l-31 For the meeting discussion. Sorry for the delay in writing this up and announcing it. We have enacted a new process that should update the wiki and make announcements like these whenever policy is changed. thanks, kevin -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: not available URL: