Red Hat publishes Fedora 9 preview

By Matthew Broersma, ZDNet UK
Wednesday, April 23, 2008 10:48 AM

Red Hat has published a "preview release" of Fedora 9, the next version of its freely available Linux distribution, which will be the last public release before the final edition next month.

The final version of Fedora 9 was initially planned for next week, but the release has been put back by two weeks to 13 May, according to the Fedora Project.

Among the updates to Fedora 9 are improvements to the Xen hypervisor, support for new filesystems and the inclusion of newer versions of the Firefox browser and and the KDE desktop environment. "This is the most critical release for the Fedora community to use and test and report bugs on," said Red Hat's Jesse Keating in a release announcement.

Red Hat initially released the preview as a BitTorrent download, and is planning direct HTTP downloads for this week. Users can choose from Live images--which execute from a disc, without the need to install--or standard CD or DVD installers.

The final version is also scheduled to include the recently released Linux 2.6.25 kernel. A release candidate is also scheduled for 1 May, but is primarily for a smaller group of testers.

Among the new features are improvements to the Xen virtualization hypervisor, the addition of support for the ext4 filesystem and encrypted filesystems, and upgrades to Firefox 3 and KDE 4.0.

In March, Red Hat released new beta versions of its enterprise and desktop Linux products, with improvements including better virtualization and clustering features, to make the operating system a more stable platform for server farms.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 5.2 beta upgraded the core virtualization hypervisor, Xen, to Xen 3.1.2, and allowed support for up to 64 processors per system and up to 512GB of memory per server. The Numa (non-uniform memory access) interface was also improved.

Some users have criticized Red Hat for neglecting its freely available distribution, while focusing on its more profitable enterprise version. In February of last year, Eric Raymond, a key figure in the open-source community, transferred his allegiance from Fedora to Ubuntu. At the time, he cited issues such as "chronic governance problems", problems with maintaining repositories, "effectively abandoning the struggle for desktop market share" and "failure to address the problem of proprietary multimedia formats".

Last week Red Hat squashed speculation that it was planning a consumer desktop version of Linux to compete with Windows, saying it is focused on enterprise systems and would not be able to make such a product profitably.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Replicating your infrastructure in a lab

Enterprise Servers & Storage

Learn two ways to replicate your current environment for testing and evaluation of new server platforms.


Read more »



  • HPC Applications

    Ever wondered if High Performing Computing systems really matter in our day-to-day world? HPC is not just reserved for the some obscure high-end scientific studies.

    David Scott from Intel Corporation gives you a quick tour to the process of developing HPC applications and the interesting world of HPC Applications in today's industries, including the lucrative oil industry.
    Play video


  • Maximize IT Spend: Business Acceleration

    How do you ensure your IT solutions are well integrated and streamlined across your enterprise? Rajendhiran Sanggaran from Oracle explains the processes and important considerations required to enable IT to fuel your business to the next level of growth.
    Play video

Tags

  1. adobe
  2. apple
  3. big
  4. chief
  5. china
  6. firefox
  7. google
  8. ibm
  9. microsoft
  10. ooxml
  11. open
  12. oracle
  13. philippine
  14. ratification
  15. release
  16. saas
  17. sap
  18. says
  19. search
  20. software
  21. source
  22. sun
  23. support
  24. ubuntu
  25. us
  26. users
  27. vista
  28. windows
  29. xp
  30. yahoo

What's the Indian definition of privacy?

Blog thumbnail

Two days back, I was having dinner at an aunt's place. She is a leading doctor. We were discussing my school friend, who happens to be her patient.

My aunt..... by Swati Prasad

Read more »