Fedora and Red Hat Leftovers
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Strengthen DevSecOps with Red Bait Trusted Software Supply Chain
As organizations start deploying advanced monitoring capabilities to protect their production environment from cyber attacks, attackers are finding it increasingly difficult to break in and compromise systems. As a result, they are now leveraging alternate approaches to infiltrate systems by secretly injecting malware into the software supply chain.
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Getting started with an automation community of practice
Whether you're in healthcare, finance, manufacturing or government, automation is a critical tool for enhancing efficiency and streamlining processes. But can your organization effectively use the capabilities of automation and continually improve upon them? This is a common problem organizations face. Many find the solution by forming a community of practice, a group of people sharing a common interest or passion who collaborate regularly to learn, improve, and share knowledge.
-
Jakub Kadlčík: Copr Modularity, the End of an Era
Our team has put a lot of effort into the possibility of building modules in Copr. This feature went through many iterations and rewrites from scratch as the concepts, requirements, and goals of Fedora Modularity kept changing. This will be my last article about this topic because we are planning to drop Modularity and all of its functionality from Copr. The only exception are Module hotfixes, which are staying for good.
The Fedora Modularity project never really took off, and building modules in Copr even less so. We’ve had only 14 builds in the last two years. It’s not feasible to maintain the code for so few users. Modularity has also been retired since Fedora 39 and will die with RHEL 9.
-
LWN ☛ Kadlčík: Copr Modularity, the End of an Era
Jakub Kadlčík announced on his blog that Fedora's Copr build system will be dropping support for building modules (groups of RPM packages that are built, installed, and shipped together) soon:
-
Cockpit Project: Cockpit 327
Cockpit is the modern GNU/Linux admin interface.
Here are the release notes from Cockpit 327:
Connect to similar servers without Cockpit installed
Support for connecting to remote machines without Cockpit installed now extends to the standard GNU/Linux distribution packages.