Yum and Fedora 16

David dgboles at gmail.com
Wed Feb 8 22:17:08 UTC 2012


On 2/8/2012 3:51 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 02/08/2012 10:57 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
>>   i know that the release quality get more and more worse and hope
>> the people resposible for that will relize this as soon as possible
>> but it doe snot help screaming and running away because changes in
>> fedora will hit most distributons sooner or later and mostly
>> SUCH sort of troubles can be isolated easily
> 
> Fedora 15 and 16 seem to be glaring exceptions to Fedora's usual QA,
> partially because of the people who (like me) skipped 15 and went right
> from 14 to 16.
> 
> I've been giving the situation some thought, and I think that the main
> cause for all of the trouble is that Fedora made major changes to three
> different systems at the same time: going from Legacy grub to grub2,
> going from init to systemd and, for most people, going from Gnome2 to
> Gnome3.  Each of those changes has its own problems and pitfalls, and
> putting all three of them into the same Fedora version was probably a
> Bad Idea.
> 
> The change in grub was probably the most transparent for most of us
> because if we upgraded, the new grub software was installed, but not
> actually put into use; AIUI, if you use the preupgrade route, you still
> need to run grub2-install yourself or you're still using legacy grub.
> Even so, there are bound to be occasional teething troubles, no matter
> how careful the QA is.  In this case, I'm getting the impression that
> there either wasn't enough testing on older hardware or the issues found
> by such testing weren't considered worth correcting.
> 
> I don't use Gnome, so I shan't comment on it except to say that the devs
> seem to have a rather inflated idea of how much RAM their userbase tends
> to have.  As far as systemd goes, more thought should have been done
> (IMAO) on making the transition as smooth and transparent as possible.
> You shouldn't expect the average non-techy user to know how to do
> whatever's needed to find out if all of the services that were started
> at boot still are or that any services that had been explicitly disabled
> weren't re-enabled.  Yes, a professional sysadmin with dozens of servers
> to keep running can be expected to check, but the average home user with
> one Linux box isn't going to expect to need that.
> 
> I'm hoping that by the time Fedora 17 is ready, most, if not all of
> these issues will be corrected and that things will be back to normal.
> In closing, I'd just like to point out that there are very few threads
> about installation problems with F16 on the fedoraforums, especially
> when you compare it to the constant cries for help F15 generated.


If you 'liked' Fedora 16 you will just 'love' the new/moved filesystem.  :-)

-- 

  David

"May your road lead you to warm sands."


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