openSUSE Developer/Maintainer/Member/Whatever.
I do things with openSUSE. Not that I’m particularly good at any of them =P

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  • 58 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Correct, SUSE, the corporation is no longer providing a traditional linux distribution, after the SLE-15 EOL.

    openSUSE, which is a community project, and not controlled by SUSE, is currently debating as to whether we have the contributors interested in doing so, and in sufficient numbers, to continue to provide a traditional point release distribution.

    Tumbleweed (the rolling release) is not going anywhere. The community has not yet decided if the interest and manpower is there to use the ALP sources provided by SUSE to create A) A traditional linux distribution, akin to what Leap currently is, B) a “Slowroll” version of Tumbleweed, that has a slower release cycle, or C) Nothing at all, because there isn’t the community there to support the development of it.

    SUSE != openSUSE
















  • Uh. The relationship between CentOS Stream and RHEL is a bit murkier to me. I’d be lying to you if I said I fully understood how that code flow works.

    For openSUSE the flow is “openSUSE Tumbleweed” -> “SUSE Linux Enterprise” -> “openSUSE Leap”

    Everytime SUSE creates a new version/service pack of SLE (SLE 15 SP4, to use an example) the sources for that version are provided to openSUSE, and a new version of Leap is released (openSUSE Leap 15.4)

    I don’t actually work on Leap much, nor am I a SUSE Employee, so there are probably some minutae in that process that I’m missing, but that’s the basic workflow.




  • That’s a very emotional take indeed, you obviously feel strongly.

    What, exactly, is RedHat stealing here? Are they deleting code from upstream git repos?

    I mean, if you have a moral issue with the way RedHat chooses to structure their customer agreements, you’re more than welcome to not use their products. I generally feel like this is a mistake on RedHats part myself, but it doesn’t affect my life in any meaningful way.

    RedHat is going to continue to contribute back upstream, they’re going to continue to support Fedora, and provide CentOS Stream for to community to use.

    Rocky, Alma, Oracle and other projects that were rebuilding RHEL sources will have to sort out how they want to proceed.

    There are a hell of a lot more evil things happening in the world to get pissed off about.