openSUSE Leap 15 Announced
The release was announced at the openSUSE Conference in Prague, Czech Republic.
In an interview, Richard Brown, the openSUSE Chairman, said that the focus of openSUSE Leap is a super-stable release of openSUSE targeted for server workloads and professionals who use desktop Linux as a development platform. Leap is based on the latest release of SUSE Linux Enterprise. According to Brown, openSUSE Leap is an enterprise-grade distribution that offers a mix of packages from openSUSE's rolling-release Tumbleweed project and SUSE Linux Enterprise.
“Having a community distribution that shares a common DNA with enterprise is the smart way to interact with the open-source ecosystem,” said Kai Dupke, long-time openSUSE user and senior product manager for SUSE Linux Enterprise 15.
openSUSE Leap 15 makes it easy for users to migrate to SLE, allowing users to gain access to SUSE’s commercial support offerings. The latest Leap introduces a new partitioner, integrates the Groupware Kopano, and moves to Firewalld. In addition, Leap 15 also introduces a system role selection with a classic “server” or “transactional server” role with transactional updates and a read-only root file system. This configuration brings the benefits of atomic updates to the full scope of deployments, from the Internet of Things (IoT) and embedded devices to classical server and desktop roles.
Leap 15 is optimized for cloud usage scenarios as a virtualization guest and offers a great variety of desktops, including KDE and GNOME. Leap also features the return of Live images for simple test-driving.
openSUSE Leap comes with KDE’s Plasma Desktop as the default desktop environment with Gnome as an option during installation.
Download openSUSE Leap 15 for free from the openSUSE website.
Issue 220/2019
Buy this issue as a PDF
News
-
Kali Linux 2019.1 Released
The favorite Linux distro of Mr. Robot gets the first update of 2019.
-
Linux Foundation Releases a New Draft of OpenChain Spec
OpenChain provides a standard for open source compliance throughout the software supply chain.
-
Linux Kernel Continues To Offer Mitigation for Spectre Mitigation
Kernel 4.19 has added another family of Spectre vulnerabilities to its list of mitigating the mitigation.
-
SpeakUp Trojan Targets Linux Servers
It’s exploiting a known vulnerability.
-
KDE Plasma 5.15 Beta Arrives
Major improvements to software management.
-
Canonical Announces Latest Ubuntu Core for IoT
Now offers 10 years of support.
-
GitHub Offers Free Private Repositories
Popular source code collaboration site makes a major change to feature set.
-
Linus Torvalds Welcomes 2019 with Linux 5.x
Better support for GPUs and CPUs.
-
Keep your edge with these powerful Linux administration tools:
Keep All Your Linux Servers in Check
Watching the Bad Guys with Cowrie
Become a certified Linux Admin professional with the Linux Professional Institute LPIC-1 Systems Administrator certification.
-
Microsoft Gets an Open Source Web Browser
The company will use Google Chromium web browser as the foundation for its next browser.