Fedora: UBI, Anaconda WebUI, CPE Weekly, and More
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Debarshi Ray: Fedora meets RHEL: upgrading UBI to RHEL [Ed: Helping IBM entrap developers, making them depending on the quasi-proprietary RHEL (Red Bait)]
As part of our efforts to make Fedora Workstation more attractive for developers, particularly those building applications that would be deployed on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, we had made it easy to create gratis, self-supported Red Hat Enterprise Linux virtual machines inside GNOME Boxes. You had to join the Red Hat Developer Program by creating an account on developers.redhat.com and with that you not only had gratis, self-supported access to RHEL, but also a series of other products like Red Hat JBoss Middleware, Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform and so on.
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Fedora Magazine: Contribute at the Test Week for the Anaconda WebUI Installer for Fedora Workstation
The Workstation team is working on the final integration of Anaconda WebUI Installer for Fedora Linux Workstation. As a result, the Fedora Workstation Working Group and QA teams have organized a test week from Monday, Aug 28, 2023 to Monday, Sept 04, 2023. The wiki page in this article contains links to the test images you’ll need to participate. Please continue reading for details.
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Fedora Magazine: Docs workshop: Virtually writing together
At the Fedora Linux 38 release party, the Docs team suggested that we take advantage of a virtual meetup to bring teamwork into documentation writing. Documentation writing shouldn’t be a solitary pursuit.
An interactive session at Flock 2023 helped exchange ideas on a collaborative way to run meetings and invite more contributions for documentation.
After months of waiting for ideas to be finalized, the Docs team is pleased to announce the workshop will begin September 2023.
If you fancy coming along, just let us know your preferred timeslot in the When-is-good scheduler by September 15 2023.
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Fedora Community Blog: CPE Weekly update – Week 34 2023
This is a weekly report from the CPE (Community Platform Engineering) Team. If you have any questions or feedback, please respond to this report or contact us on #redhat-cpe channel on libera.chat.
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Pablo Iranzo Gómez: No matching key found
As you might have experienced… using a recent system to connect to a legacy one could be complicated as some insecure protocols have been disabled, with a message like: Unable to negotiate with 192.168.2.82 port 22: no matching host key type found. Their offer: ssh-rsa,ssh-dss Create an entry like this in your .ssh/config file, so that insecure methods can be used to connect to a specific host: Host 192.168.2.82 HostKeyAlgorithms=+ssh-rsa KexAlgorithms=+diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes=+ssh-rsa User root or alternatively on the command line: [...]