Fedora is primarily sponsored by Red Hat. However the future of Fedora is driven by independent free and open source upstream projects and potential contributors, including yourself. We welcome you to join. Fedora is a integration point for a large number of upstream projects and strives to bring you the best of free and open source software including new innovations about every six months.
The current development schedule for the next release, Fedora 42, is found on the Schedule page. A full list of features under development is found on the FeatureList page.
Historical release details
Release | Schedule page | Feature list | Bugs Targeted [1] | Blockers[2] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fedora 16 (Verne) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 15 (Lovelock) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 14 (Laughlin) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 13 (Goddard) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 12 (Constantine) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 11 (Leonidas) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 10 (Cambridge) | Schedule | Features | See Tracker Page | See Tracker Page |
Fedora 9 (Sulphur) | Schedule | Features | Target Bugs | Blockers |
Fedora 8 (Werewolf) | Schedule | Features | Target Bugs | Blockers |
Fedora 7 (Moonshine) | Schedule | Features |
- ↑ The Target tracker is a nice to have fixed list of bugs for a release. It is a convenient way to separate them from all the other open bugs.
- ↑ Issues that affect the critical path stuff (graphics, installer, network) have a lower barrier because fixing them with updates is much more disrupting.
For more info, view Bugs Targeted & Blocker Bug FAQ.
Older releases
- Fedora Core 6: Releases/6/FC6Future
- Fedora Core 5: Releases/5/FC5Future