- cross-posted to:
- openSUSE@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- openSUSE@kbin.social
From Dominique Leuenberger at Tumbleweed - Review of the week 2024/10
- KDE Frameworks and Plasma 6: Lots of progress since last week. By now we reached the QA phase. Optimistic souls bet on next week (no promises though!)
- KDE Gear 24.02.0 – Requires KDE Frameworks 6 and will land at the same time
Dear Tumbleweed users and hackers,
We have officially reached ‘spring’ (according to some calendars/regions). We cleaned up the staging projects: we accepted all the good things you submitted that passed staging. Neat, eh? That’s what we do all the time anyway, so it’s not that special. The progress on RPM 4.20 fixes in the spec files has been slowing down a bit, but we’re nearing the end. This morning, there were 235 spec files left in Factory that needed touching – and many submit requests are still pending.
In sum, we have released again 6 snapshots this week (0301…0306), containing these changes:
- ImageMagick 7.1.1.29
- Python 3.x fixes for CVE-2023-6597 (TmpDir cleaning)
- Linux kernel 6.7.7
- kernel-firmware 20240229
- openblas 0.3.26
- Tcl 8.6.14
- RPM: patches to better support reproducible builds. Factory will test-enable this feature on Monday (March 11)
- Shadow 4.14.6
- openjpeg 2.5.2
- GStreamer 1.24.0: We have heard of some users having issues with their local caches.If you experience issues, try “rm ~/.cache/gstreamer-1.0/registry.x86_64.bin”
- postfix 3.8.6
- wireplumber 0.4.90
Staging projects are mainly busy with the same things that take some more time to prepare. Luckily, this does not stop progress at all and we have sufficient capacity to test things in parallel. The current list here is:
- libvirt 10.1.0
- Mozilla Firefox 123.0.1
- Poppler 24.03.0
- KDE Frameworks and Plasma 6: Lots of progress since last week. By now we reached the QA phase. Optimistic souls bet on next week (no promises though!)
- KDE Gear 24.02.0 – Requires KDE Frameworks 6 and will land at the same time
- Systemd 255.3: issues with OBS/build and transactional-update were identified. Once addressed, this should move forward soon too.
- python 3.9 deprecation: we decided to postpone this a little bit due to the still large fallout from Python 3.12 addition. Removing a Python flavor will require us to rebuild all the Python packages for the new builds to drop the python39 flavor. Too many packages fail to build at this moment.
- dbus-broker: no progress this week
- libxml 2.12.x: slow/no progress
- GCC 14: phase 2: use gcc14 as the default compiler
Cheers, Dominique
That will be my first major version jump of such an integral part of my system since switching to Tumbleweed. Let’s see how it goes.
Yeah going to mine as well. I am both excited and a little scared. Some folks have reports some serious issues when upgrading so let’s hope the Tumbleweed folks sit on this until they feel it’s ready for general availability.
Works fine on arch. The update was smooth. :)
My update was fine the first day but after some updates the next day, my panels have completely disappeared and I had to switch back to X11.
As an endeavourOS user, I recommend perusing some of the threads over there regarding this update before you upgrade.
Tumble me weeds!!
Nice!
When would it be available for Leap?
In a year or two probably
I would guess, when Leap 16 releases, which is listed here as somewhen in 2025, probably.
If you want to use the latest release, you can use the repos as described here:
https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:KDE_repositories#KDE_Frameworks_6,_Plasma_6_and_Applications
Cries in Debian Stable
- GStreamer 1.24.0: We have heard of some users having issues with their local caches.If you experience issues, try “rm ~/.cache/gstreamer-1.0/registry.x86_64.bin”
Why isn’t cache invalidated on an update, then?
isn’t opensuse rolling release, tumbleweed at least? shouldn’t it have arrived immediately?
No. Tumbleweed is a pure rolling release containing the latest “stable” versions of all software and is updated once Factory’s bleeding edge software has been integrated, stabilized and tested by openQA. So the stability comes before bleeding edge.
oh alright. completely forgot about that lmao
Latte Dock users will need to say goodbye then
Unless someone steps in as a maintainer and will continue to work on it.