Fedora and Red Hat Leftovers
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Introducing the Community Design Team (Part 1) - Fedora Community Blog
This is the first part of a two-part blog post series introducing the Community Design Team (CDT) to the Fedora Community. In this post, we’ll introduce you to all of the wonderful team members and the projects they’ve been working on. In Part 2, we’ll explain how you can reach our team, make a request, and work with us!
Many of you have already been collaborating with CDT members for months now on various upstream community projects such as the Fedora Websites Revamp, the new Fedora Brand Book, the Fedora 37 artwork, and Podman’s new Podman Desktop tool. Since we formed the team, we’ve set up regular meetings, chosen our initial project set, and created a space on Fedora’s GitLab to organize our work. Now that we’ve settled in a bit and better understand how we collaborate best, we’d like to formally introduce ourselves to you as a team!
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Stratis Storage
Stratis 3.4.0 includes one significant enhancement as well as several smaller improvements.
Most significantly, Stratis 3.4.0 extends its functionality to allow users to specify a pool by its name when starting a stopped pool. Previously it was only possible to identify a stopped pool by its UUID.
In addition, stratisd enforces some checks on the compatibility of the block devices which make up a pool. It now takes into account the logical and physical sector sizes of the individual block devices when creating a pool, adding a cache, or extending the data or cache tier with additional devices.
The stratis pool start command has been modified to accept either a UUID or a name option, while the stratis pool list --stopped command now displays the pool name if it is available.
This release also includes improvements to stratisd's internal locking mechanism.
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10 must-read tech books for 2023 | The Enterprisers Project
Every year, we put together a list of books that we’re excited to read via recommendations from our community and research on what will be necessary for IT leaders to know in the coming year. This post will highlight 10 tech books that we think should be on your radar for 2023. (Stay tuned for our picks for the top leadership books and books for job hunters coming soon.)
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.NET, Go, Kamelets, and more: Top articles from November 2022 | Red Hat Developer
Whether you'll soon be signing off for a fall November break or working through the end of the month, take a moment to check out Red Hat Developer's latest top-performing articles. We've highlighted the tutorial guides and announcements that our developer community has engaged with the most.
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Top 15 articles sysadmins are thankful for in 2022 | Enable Sysadmin
Enable Sysadmin has published more than 1,200 articles; these are the favorites sysadmins turn to month after month.