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Hier — 16 août 2024LWN

Gentoo Linux drops IA-64 (Itanium) support

Par : jzb
16 août 2024 à 16:46

The Gentoo Linux project has announced that it is dropping support for Itanium:

Following the removal of IA-64 (Itanium) support in the Linux kernel and glibc, and subsequent discussions on our mailing list, as well as a vote by the Gentoo Council, Gentoo will discontinue all ia64 profiles and keywords. The primary reason for this decision is the inability of the Gentoo IA-64 team to support this architecture without kernel support, glibc support, and a functional development box (or even a well-established emulator). In addition, there have been only very few users interested in this type of hardware.
À partir d’avant-hierLWN

[$] Zettlr: note-taking and publishing with Markdown

Par : jzb
13 août 2024 à 17:22

Markdown editors are a dime a dozen. Cheaper than that, actually, since many of them are open‑source software. Despite the sheer number of options, finding an editor that has all of the features that one might want can be tricky. For some users, Zettlr might be the right tool. It is a What You See is What You Mean (WYSIWYM) editor that stores its work locally as plain Markdown files. The project is billed as a "one-stop publication workbench", and is suitable for writing anything from blog posts to academic papers, maintaining a personal journal, or keeping notes in a Zettlekasten. It is simple to get started with, but rewards deeper exploration and customization.

[$] COSMIC desktop makes its debut

Par : jzb
12 août 2024 à 17:26

Linux hardware vendor System76 started promoting its work on a Rust-based, Wayland desktop environment for its Pop!_OS Ubuntu-derivative distribution almost two years ago. On August 8, the company released an alpha version of the COSMIC desktop environment for users to test out. While it has rough edges and missing features, it is stable enough to get a good feel for what the finished product has in store—and the initial results are promising.

Security updates for Wednesday

Par : jzb
7 août 2024 à 13:14
Security updates have been issued by Debian (firefox-esr, openjdk-17, and wpa), Gentoo (aiohttp, Bitcoin, Cairo, Go, json-c, Levenshtein, libXpm, nghttp2, PostgreSQL, and Redis), Red Hat (kernel, kernel-rt, python-setuptools, python-urllib3, python3.11-setuptools, and wget), Slackware (mozilla), SUSE (bind, curl, docker, ffmpeg, ffmpeg-4, kernel, kernel-firmware, libnbd, patch, shadow, and thunderbird), and Ubuntu (python-django and wpa).

[$] The complexity of BUSL transformation

Par : jzb
5 août 2024 à 14:55

The Business Source License (BUSL) is a source-available license that "converts" to an open-source license after a period of time. In theory, this means that a few years after a version of a product is released under the BUSL, it becomes open source and is fair game for Linux distributions to package along with regular open-source projects. In practice, the license throws a few curveballs that require special consideration and caution, as the Fedora Project recently discussed.

Sovereign Tech Fund introduces fellowship pilot program

Par : jzb
1 août 2024 à 15:31

The Sovereign Tech Fund (STF) has announced a fellowship program to support "the dedicated individuals who keep our digital infrastructure running":

Over the past two years, STF has successfully contracted over 40 FOSS projects, enhancing their technical sustainability through targeted milestones. However, the activities of maintainers, who often work on multiple FOSS projects, are hard to quantify for funding applications, as the demands and challenges vary and can change quickly. This is where the fellowship for maintainers comes into play.

According to the fellowship page the STF plans to fund five fellowships, beginning in the fourth quarter of this year, for a period of 12 months.

Mel Chua RIP

Par : jzb
1 août 2024 à 13:39

We have received the sad news that Dr. Mel Chua has passed away. Mel was probably best known in the free-software community as a contributor to the Fedora Project in its early days. The Fedora Community blog honored Mel recently after she had moved to hospice care with tributes from several Fedorans. Stephen Jacobs wrote:

I can't find the words to express how much of a positive impact Mel has had on my work, our shared work, my family, the experiences of my students, and the world of FOSS writ large. Nor can I find the words to convey just how much I will miss her.

Mel will be greatly missed.

Security updates for Thursday

Par : jzb
1 août 2024 à 13:01
Security updates have been issued by Debian (chromium), Fedora (kernel, obs-cef, and xen), Mageia (emacs), Oracle (freeradius, freeradius:3.0, and kernel), Red Hat (emacs, httpd, and kpatch-patch-4_18_0-305_120_1), Slackware (curl), SUSE (apache2, cockpit-wicked, glibc, gnutls, gvfs, less, nghttp2, opensc, python-idna, python-requests, qemu, rpm, tpm2-0-tss, tpm2.0-tools, and unbound), and Ubuntu (clickhouse, exim4, libcommons-collections3-java, linux, linux-aws, linux-kvm, linux-lts-xenial, mysql-8.0, openssl, php-cas, prometheus-alertmanager, and snapd).

[$] Showing up for Python in GNOME

Par : jzb
31 juillet 2024 à 17:39

A few years ago, PyGObject—the Python package that provides bindings for GTK and GNOME applications—was not faring particularly well. Several maintainers had left the project and its development was not keeping pace with changes in GTK. At this year's GUADEC, Dan Yeaw presented a talk about the project's decline, improvements in the last year, and his experience getting involved in an undermaintained project.

Forgejo v8.0 released

Par : jzb
31 juillet 2024 à 15:58

Version 8.0 of the Forgejo software-development platform has been released. Notable changes include the removal of non-free software found in the codebase, improved stability, and a reduction in "seemingly random User Interface changes":

A gentle way of describing Forgejo User eXperience is that it is an acquired taste: it grew over the years, driven by the inspiration of the person with the keyboard in their hand. Once implemented it almost never changed. A user who started with Forgejo in 2022 can only see minor changes in 2024 and not all of them make intuitive sense. The solution to this problem is simple and was identified early on: User Research. But only in the making of Forgejo v8.0 did it get some momentum.

See the release notes for a full list of changes.

Security updates for Wednesday

Par : jzb
31 juillet 2024 à 13:09
Security updates have been issued by Fedora (xdg-desktop-portal-hyprland), Red Hat (freeradius, freeradius:3.0, git-lfs, httpd, kernel, openssh, and varnish:6), SUSE (cdi-apiserver-container, cdi-cloner-container, cdi- controller-container, cdi-importer-container, cdi-operator-container, cdi- uploadproxy-container, cdi-uploadserver-container, cont, git, gtk2, gtk3, kubevirt, virt-api-container, virt-controller-container, virt-exportproxy-container, virt-exportserver-container, virt-handler-container, virt-launcher-container, virt-libguestfs-t, orc, postgresql14, python-dnspython, python-urllib3, shadow, and xen), and Ubuntu (openjdk-17, openjdk-21, openjdk-8, openjdk-lts, and python3.10, python3.8).

Funtoo Linux is being discontinued

Par : jzb
30 juillet 2024 à 17:10

Daniel Robbins, founder of the Gentoo Linux distribution and its spinoff Funtoo Linux, has announced that he has decided to end the Funtoo project:

Funtoo started as a philosophy to create a fun community of contributors building something great together. For me, it's no longer that so I need to move on to other things. There is not a successor BDFL for Funtoo nor am I interested in trying to find one, or hand the project off to someone else. You can expect the project to wind down through August. If you have a Funtoo container, it will continue to be online through the end of August so you have time to find another hosting solution if you need one.

[$] Report from the annual general meeting at GUADEC

Par : jzb
30 juillet 2024 à 13:51

At GUADEC in Denver, Colorado on July 21, the GNOME Foundation held its annual general meeting (AGM) to provide updates from the foundation's board and committees. Topics included work accomplished in the past year, challenges facing the GNOME Foundation–including fundraising and finding a new executive director–and some insight into plans for the next year. And last, but not least, the awarding of the Pants of Thanks.

Linux Mint 22 "Wilma" released

Par : jzb
25 juillet 2024 à 13:53

Linux Mint has announced version 22 of the distribution in three editions: Cinnamon, MATE, and Xfce. Mint 22 is based on Ubuntu 24.04 and uses kernel version 6.8.0:

Linux Mint 22 is a long term support release which will be supported until 2029. It comes with updated software and brings refinements and many new features to make your desktop even more comfortable to use.

LWN covered the Linux Mint 22 beta in early July. See the new features page and release notes for more information on this release.

OpenMandriva ROME 24.07 released

Par : jzb
24 juillet 2024 à 16:25

Updated installation images for the OpenMandriva ROME rolling release Linux distribution are now available. Notable features in the 24.07 snapshot include KDE Plasma 6 as the default desktop, the addition of Proton and Proton experimental packages for playing Windows games on Linux, as well as GNOME 46.3 and LXQt 2.0.0 spins.

OpenSSL announces new governance structure

Par : jzb
24 juillet 2024 à 15:58

OpenSSL has announced that it has adopted a new governance framework:

The OpenSSL Management Committee (OMC) has been dissolved, and two boards of directors have been elected for the Foundation and the Corporation. Each organization has ten voting members. These boards share all the responsibilities and authorities of the former OMC co-equally.

To further engage our communities, we are establishing two advisory committees for each entity: a Business Advisory Committee (BAC) and a Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). The communities will elect the members of the BACs and TACs, creating a direct channel for community input in roadmap development and reflecting the diverse perspectives of OpenSSL's communities.

OpenSSL has also announced that two projects have adopted the OpenSSL Mission and become OpenSSL projects: Bouncy Castle, which provides cryptographic APIs for Java and C#, and the cryptlib security software development toolkit. See the announcement for full details.

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