Hot on the heels of the news that the Google Chromebook runs openSUSE (even made slashdot) and following the closing of the openSUSE Conference in Prague, Dirk Müller let the ARM team know that RC2 is about ready to go and this will be the final before the release of openSUSE for ARM! Read on to find out some details of this exciting release.

The plan

Quoting Dirk:

Alex and I have worked yesterday a few hours to finish up the last remaining bugs for a 12.2 RC2 release.we plan that this is the last RC before final 12.2 for ARM, which is scheduled for November 6th.

So, there you have it: less than two week from now, openSUSE ARM will be ready for the masses. But, as with any ARM release, the diversity of the ecosystem warrants extensive testing: the developers themselves have not yet tested all variations and they’d like more feedback.

Changes

The changes over RC1 are:

various bugfixes in the imaging

add an update repository to the images for maintenance

adding various fixes for booting machines without RTC with a reasonable system time

Adding a YaST firstboot stage for configuring the country, language, root password and creating the first user login

various smaller fixes in packaging

New is support support for the following SoCs’:

Calxeda Highbank

CuBox

IMX 53

Samsung Origen

There are now XFCE images for panda and beagle board, which, according to Dirk, “still have some bugs that need to be fixed for the final release”. The JeOS images are considered good and there has been some work on graphics support for a few of the boards but the results have not been consistently satisfying.

Also note that the Raspberry Pi image is not part of this release, it will come at a later point in time.

Get it

The images are available for download here.

Thanks!

Andrew Wafaa made a nice list of people who deserve credit for their hard work on openSUSE ARM:

Adrian Schröter

Alex Graf

Joop Boonen

Guillaume Gardet

Marcus Schäfer

Dirk Müller

Andreas Färber

Bernhard Wiedemann

Bamvor Jian Zhang

Peter Czanik

Michal Vyskocil

and many more.

But we’re also grateful for the testing we get and any other help (including hardware). It’s a community project so without these contributions - there would be no openSUSE-on-ARM!