Final Farewell for Fedora 21

Fedora produces new releases approximately every six months — targeted at May and October. We always have two currently-supported releases, the latest and “n minus one”. We also have a one-month overlap after a new release comes out where “n minus two” is supported for a month. That lets you skip a release, if you like, and upgrade only once a year. I can’t believe this year has gone so fast, but the time has come to say goodbye to Fedora 21, which reached end of life status on December 1st, 2015. No further updates will be produced, even for security issues. If you’re still on F21 (or something older!) now’s the time to upgrade. Check out the upgrade instructions here.

Fedora Elections Update

Fedora generally runs elections for many community leadership positions after a new release — it’s a good time for fresh thoughts, and for people who have put in the work for a release or two to relax a bit or to move on to other things within the project. This time around, we have open elections for the Fedora Council (our top-level governance and leadership body), FESCo (Fedora Engineering Steering Committee, which makes decisions on technical issues affecting the project as a whole), and FAmSCo (the Fedora Ambassadors‘ Steering Committee).

We are currently in the “campaign” period — voting starts December 8 and lasts until 23:59:00 UTC on December 14th (which is early evening in the US). Make sure to check out interviews with candidates on the Fedora Community Blog.

The Ambassadors Steering Committee election is particularly interesting as over the last year or so we’ve been talking about possibly retiring that

body in favor of something more tied in with other groups like Marketing,

Design, Docs, and Globalizaiton. However, we haven’t reached agreement on exactly what that would look like or how to do it, so figuring that out will be part of the newly-elected committee’s upcoming agenda.

Wayland features: “What’s good enough for Fedora?”

Wayland is the next-generation graphics stack for Linux, intended to replace the venerable X11 we use today. In keeping with Fedora’s “First!” foundation, the Fedora Workstation edition intends to be an early adopter. In fact, you can enable it easily in F22 or F23 Workstation, but it isn’t the default yet, because we also want to keep in line with the “Features” foundation — we want the great new stuff Wayland will bring, but a the same time, we want the switch to be a basically-seamless step forward for current users.

So, Fedora developer Kevin Martin posted a message to the desktop mailing list about a project to categorize and prioritize features that need to be in place before the switch. As Kevin says,

The question is: What features do we have to complete in order to make this switch? Everyone seems to have their own ideas of what is required, and a systematic approach is needed to organize the effort. […] In order for us to enable [Wayland] by default we need to both implement the missing features and fix the bugs in features that are already complete.

For the bugs, we simply need to fix them. However, the situation with features is more complex. We each have our own list of features that we believe need to be implemented, but we lack a complete list of all the missing features and a clear way to determine when we have implemented enough of them to enable the Wayland-based GNOME desktop by default.

If you’re interested, and particularly if you use or depend on any of these features, join the conversation. (Personally, I’m very pleased to see “primary selection” on the list: that’s the X feature where selecting text copies it and middle-button pastes. If you’re coming from Mac or Windows it takes a bit to get used to, but it’s such an efficient way of working that I’d really miss it were it gone. And I’m not alone — emulating this is a common feature of advanced terminal apps for OS X.)

Vacation time!

It’s December, and in a lot of the world, that means holiday season. If you’re a Fedora contributor and will be on vacation and away-from-keyboard, don’t forget to put your name on the Vacation Calendar.

For those of us who work at Red Hat, there’s a company shutdown the week after Christmas. And, Red Hat has a huge engineering office in Brno, in the Czech Republic (see you on Fedora Day at DevConf.cz in February, by the way!), and as I understand it, any vacation days unused throughout the year become mandatory, making that office rather quiet. So, don’t be surprised by some silence from people who work on Fedora as part of their day jobs. On the other hand, a lot of us are here for the love of it, and that downtime gives us a chance to work on pet projects without the obligations of assigned roles — that’s why you see a lot of Red Hatters on holidays and weekends, too!

Fedora 24 Change Proposal Deadline

I know it sounds kind of far way, but factor in the section just above this — it’s hard to get much done in December! Take a look at the schedule for Fedora 24, and if you’re a contributor who wants to do something big — or even something small which could affect others in the project or which has high promotional value, it’s time to get serious about filing a Change Proposal. The deadline is January 12th, and that’s going to be here sooner than you might think.