These are the Talking Points for the Fedora 19 release. They are currently under construction. For information on how we are making these talking points, please see Talking Points SOP.
Categories
We have traditionally used categories along the lines of "User, Developer, Sysadmin," and of late have used additional categories for release announcements such as "cloud." I'd like to rethink that - the line is increasingly blurry for all of those groups, and I wonder if we might get more understanding by grouping some features along the lines of what they enable.
Suggested Categories
- User
- Sysadmin
- Developer
- Cloud
- (new) Develop and Distribute: Languages, compilers, and tools for developing software, and tools for packaging software.
- (new) Start and Recover: Enabling a variety of options for improving boot times, as well as quicker recovery from system or software failure.
- (new) Monitor and Manage: Systems and resource management, and tools for diagnosis, monitoring, and logging.
- Add your suggestion here!
How to use Categories
Feel free to give a feature multiple categories; if you come up with category suggestions of your own, add them to the suggested categories list and apply them in the list of features as you see fit and reasonable.
Brainstorming List
Features on this draft/brainstorming list have been accepted as features for Fedora 19. Extended descriptions of the features can be seen on the Feature List; it may be helpful to view that list in a separate window as you consider which features
Feature | Category | Why should this be a talking point? |
---|---|---|
3D Printing | Users, Developers, Develop & Distribute | This enables 3D printing technologies directly in Fedora, including creation of 3D models, generation of G-code for printers, and the ability to control 3D printers, such as RepRap. These capabilities are new to Fedora. |
AnacondaNewUI Followup | ||
Anaconda Realm Integration | ||
BIND10 | ||
CUPS 1.6 | ||
Checkpoint/Restore | Sysadmin, Start & Recover | Enables process checkpoints, which can be used to either restore a process (in case of failure) without significant data loss, or to move a process, process tree, or container to another machine for load balancing or system maintenance purposes, without disrupting service. |
Developers Assistant | Developers, Develop & Distribute | Provides an easy method for developers to start new projects via package sets by language (currently C, Java, and Python). A new project can take advantage of project templates and samples, based on language selection or framework, as well as having the appropriate toolchain installed to develop in that language. Additionally, the ability to directly upload to GitHub is HUUUUUGE and cool. |
Dracut HostOnly | ||
Erlang/OTP R16 | ||
Fedora 19 Boost 1.53 Uplift | ||
Federated VoIP | ||
firewalld Lockdown | ||
firewalld Rich Language | ||
First-Class Cloud Images | ||
FreeIPA Two Factor Authentication | ||
GCC 4.8.x | ||
GLIBC 2.17 | ||
GNOME 3.8 | ||
Guile2 | ||
High Availability Container Resources | Sysadmin, Monitor & Manage | Extends the HA stack (pacemaker + corosync) beyond management of virtual guests to inside the guests themselves, enabling the ability to manage both virtual guests and the resources that live within the guests all from the host cluster node without requiring the guest nodes to run the cluster stack. New containers can be defined and subsequently added to the cluster. |
FreeIPA v3 Trust Improvements | ||
Features/JRuby 1.7 | ||
Java 8 | ||
KDE Plasma Workspaces 4.10 | ||
KScreen | ||
Less Brittle Kerberos | ||
MATE Desktop 1.6 | ||
MEMSTOMP | ||
MinGW GCC 4.8 | ||
More Mobile Broadband | ||
NFStest | ||
New firstboot | ||
Node.js | Developers, Develop & Distribute | The Node.js platform is a highly popular development and deployment ecosystem, designed for easily building fast, scalable network applications, and suitable for developing real-time applications that run across distributed devices. In addition to the node.js runtime, the npm package manager is also included. End-users will also benefit from the ability to run Node.js apps such as etherpad lite and ethercalc in Fedora. |
Ease Of Use: System Management with OpenLMI | Sysadmins, Monitor and Manage | |
OpenShift Origin | ||
OpenStack Grizzly | ||
Feature Name: Performance Co-Pilot Feature Update | ||
PHP 5.5 | ||
Pillow | ||
QXL/Spice KMS Driver | ||
Update RPM to 4.11 | ||
Realmd FreeIPA Support | ||
Remove PyXML from Fedora | ||
Replace MySQL with MariaDB | ||
Ruby 2.0.0 | Developers, Develop & Distribute | Ruby 2.0.0 is the newest version of this popular language, released in February 2013. It includes a number of new features and increases in speed and reliability. An included custom Ruby loader provides the ability to easily switch interpreters while still keeping backwards compatibility with all the user's ruby scripts. |
Ryu Network Operating System | ||
SSSD improve AD integration | ||
Scratch for Fedora | ||
Shared System Certificates | ||
Simplify Java/Maven Packaging using XMvn | Developers, Develop & Distribute | |
Syslinux Option | Sysadmin, Cloud, Start & Recover | This optional bootloader, which can be used in place of grub2, is focused on virtualized systems as a primary target. It is small, has minimal dependencies, is significantly easier to use than grub2, and is ideal for use in images in the cloud and other Fedora-based virt appliances. |
systemd Calendar Timers | ||
systemd Lightweight Containers | ||
systemd Message Catalog | ||
systemd/udev Predictable Network Interface Names | ||
systemd Resource Control | Sysadmins, Monitor & Manage | Enables administrators to dynamically modify c-groups based resource controls for services at runtime. Service settings such as MemoryLimit=, CPUShares= or BlockIOWeight= can now be changed at runtime, and have the changes take effect immediately. |
Systemtap 2.2 | Sysadmins, Monitor & Manage | |
Thermostat 1.0 | Sysadmins, Monitor & Manage | This monitoring and servicing tool for Java apps enables the ability to examine applications as they are running. The 1.0 release includes improvements in gathering information for monitored hosts and Java virtual machines, either on a single machine or in a network or cluster, and a stable API for plugin developers. |
Trusted Network Connect (TNC) | ||
Virt Storage Migration | Sysadmin, Monitor & Manage, possibly Start & Recover? | While the ability to migrate a virtual machine from one host to another has existed for a while, but VM storage disks previously needed to be shared by the respective hosts, as well as mounted in the same location. Virt storage migration enables the ability to move the VM *and* in-use storage, without having shared storage between the hosts. This ability comes directly from new improvements in QEMU, which previously had a storage migration feature, but was painful. |
Virtio RNG | ||
Add LVM Thin provisioning support to the yum-fs-snapshot plugin | ||
Yum Groups as Objects | ||
GSS Proxy | ||
libkkc |
Template for Final Talking Points Selected
These are the Talking Points for the Fedora 19 release. For information on how these talking points were chosen, see Talking Points SOP. They are intended to help Ambassadors quickly present an overview of highlighted features when talking about the release.
The talking points are based in part on the features for this release. Any Fedora community member can introduce a feature, using our feature process.
Uncategorized Features
3D Printing Feature
3D printing is enabled through availability of a variety of tools, ranging from software for creation of 3D models, to tools for generation of G-code and delivery to a 3D printer. Software available includes: OpenSCAD, for creating solid 3D CAD objects, and the associated MCAD library, for design and mock-up of mechanical designs; Skeinforge and SFACT, toolchains for conversion of 3D models into instructions for RepRap; Printrun, a suite of G-code sender tools for RepRap, with both command-line and graphical interfaces, as well as a GUI tool to prepare printing plate from STL files for RepRap; and RepetierHost, an all-in-one tool for 3D printing, with the ability to model on a virtual print plate, slice models, and error-check and send G-code.
3D modeling and printing is enabled through a variety of tools in Fedora, including OpenSCAD, Skeinforge, SFACT, Printrun, and RepetierHost.
Checkpoint and Restore Feature
The checkpoint/restore feature enables the ability to checkpoint processes, and restore them on another machine. Created by the CRIU project, the crtools software can be used for cases such as load balancing, fault tolerance, or system maintenance purposes. Taken in regular intervals, process checkpoints can be used to either restore a process (in case of failure) without significant data loss, or to move a process, process tree, or container to another machine for load balancing or system maintenance purposes, without disrupting service.
The Checkpoint/restore capability provides the ability to checkpoint and restore a process, and is useful for cases such as process failure, or moving a process to another machine for maintenance or load balancing.
Developer's Assistant Feature
High Availability Container Resources Feature
High Availability Container Resources Feature
Node.js Feature
node.js Feature The Node.js platform is a highly popular development and deployment ecosystem, designed for easily building fast, scalable network applications, and is suitable for developing real-time applications that run across distributed devices. In addition to the node.js runtime, the npm package manager is also included. End-users will also benefit from the ability to run Node.js apps such as etherpad lite and ethercalc in Fedora.
OpenLMI Feature
System Management with OpenLMI Feature
Virt Storage Migration Feature
Features/Virt_Storage_Migration
Paragraph.
bottom line comment.
Thermostat 1.0 Feature
systemd Resource Control Feature
Resource Control with systemd Feature
Syslinux Boot Option Feature
OpenShift Origin Feature
Scratch for Fedora
Desktop Environments and Spins
Spins are alternate versions of Fedora, tailored for various uses by community members.
Spins are alternate versions of Fedora. In addition to various desktop environments for Fedora, spins are also available as tailored environments for various types of users via hand-picked application sets or customizations.
Interest-specific Spins include the Design Suite Spin, the Robotics Spin, and the Security Spin, among others. Other available desktop environments, in addition to the GNOME 3.8 desktop which is shipped in the default version of Fedora 19, as well as those highlighted below, include XFCE, Sugar on a Stick, and LXDE.
To see all of the Official Fedora 19 Release Spins, see the Fedora 19 Release Spins link.
GNOME 3.8
Long description of feature, paragraph-sized.
To the point, short sentence about Spin.
KDE Plasma Workspaces 4.10
KDE Plasma Workspaces 4.10 Desktop