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Fedora 9 now available

by Parm Mann on 14 May 2008, 15:12

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qam7o

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Ubuntu may be proving to be the most popular of Linux distributions, but Fedora 9, codenamed Sulphur, is said to be making waves.

The latest release of Fedora, built by the Fedora Project community, delivers a host of new enhancements such as the inclusion of GNOME 2.22 and a 2.6.25-based kernel.

Its key highlights, as listed by the Fedora Project, are as follows:

  • This release features GNOME 2.22. GNOME now includes a webcam photo and video creation utility called Cheese, improved network filesystem support, a new international clock applet, Google Calendar support and custom email labels in Evolution, a new Remote Desktop Viewer, improved accessibility features, and PolicyKit integration.
  • KDE 4.0.3 is available in the KDE Live image as well as the regular DVD.
  • Xfce 4.4.2 is available as part of this release.
  • NetworkManager 0.7 provides improved mobile broadband support, including GSM and CDMA devices, and now supports multiple devices and ad-hoc networking for sharing connections. It is now enabled by default on installations from DVD, CD, the network, and Live images.
  • The Fedora installer, Anaconda, now supports partition resizing for ext2/3, NTFS filesystems, creating and installing to encrypted file systems, improved Rescue Mode with FirstAidKit, independent locations for the second stage installer and the software packages. A redesigned, larger netboot.iso image now features a second stage installer partly for this reason.
  • Live USB images now support persistence, so your data and setting changes will be preserved even after rebooting.
  • PackageKit, a new set of graphical and console tools, with a framework for cross-distribution software management, has replaced Pirut in this release of Fedora. The PackageKit graphical updater is available instead of Pup. Behind PackageKit, the performance of yum has been significantly improved.
  • FreeIPA makes managing auditing, identity and policy processes easier by providing web-based and command line provisioning, and administration tools to ease system administration. FreeIPA combines the power of the Fedora Directory Server with FreeRADIUS, MIT Kerberos, NTP and DNS to provide an easy, out of the box solution.
  • Ext4, the next version of the mature and stable ext3 filesystem is available as a option in this release. Ext4 features better performance, higher storage capacity and several other new features.
  • This release of Fedora uses Upstart, an event-based replacement for the /sbin/init daemon.
  • Firefox 3 brings a number of major improvements including a native look and feel, desktop integration, the new Places replacement for bookmarks, and a re-worked address bar.
  • The completely free and open source Java environment OpenJDK 6 is installed by default. IcedTea 7, derived from OpenJDK 1.7, is no longer the default. IcedTea includes a browser plug-in based on GCJ, and is available for both x86 and x86_64 architectures. GCJ is still the default on PPC architecture.
  • OpenOffice.org 2.4, with many new features, is available as part of Fedora 9.
  • Fedora now includes Perl 5.10.0, which features a smaller memory footprint and other improvements.
  • Fedora now includes TeXLive to replace the older, unmaintained TeX distribution.
  • Fedora 9 features a 2.6.25 based kernel.
  • Kernel crashes can be more automatically reported to http://www.kerneloops.org/ and diagnosed in a friendly way via the kerneloops package installed by default. Crash signatures are commonly referred to as oopses in Linux.
  • Work on the start-up and shutdown in X has yielded noticeable improvements.


Fedora 9 is available as a free download from fedoraproject.org. Are you a Linux user, and if so, which is your distribution of choice? Will you be putting Fedora 9 through its paces, share your experience in the HEXUS forums.

Official product page: fedoraproject.org



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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still doesn't come with the files on the install media to use it on a ps3 - though the release notes give you instructions on the required extra steps
I'll be giving it a shot on my laptop later and report my experience.
Alright, I played around for Fedora for some of the day, here's some of my personal points on it:

+ Anaconda works fairly well and painlessly
- Doesn't allow wireless configuration for adding “Extra Fedora Packages” repo at install time, and doesn't give an option for alternative desktop environments and/or window managers out of the box.
+ Bleeding edge Gnome, some snazzy new desktop effects
- GDM login, looks rather bland, and less smoothed off compared to Fedora 8.
+ virt-manager package available
- SELinux eats it
+ gnome-packagekit, first half decent attempt at a unified package manager wrapper for Gnome.
- Group tabs are somewhat randomly broken
+ Linux 2.6.25
- No stable nVidia drivers (not a problem for my laptop, but may for some), nVidia users will need to download the beta drivers
+ YUM still improving
- still RPM based, and slower than most binary package managers

Personally I think Fedora 9 is *too* bleeding edge, it hasn't had time to mature and many of it's oob packages are far too young to be tossed into production headlong. Also, SELinux for a desktop install is nothing short of a neusence. While it may be great for servers where that level of fine grain access control is wanted, I really wouldn't use Fedora 9 as a Redhat clone for servers, CentOS is much better in this regard.