Release Notes for Alpine 3.21.0: Difference between revisions

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m (→‎ISC DHCP: still cool?)
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Like, you know, you should prolly migrate to some other thing disregardless, yeah? I mean, it has been EoL since friggin' '''2022''', jeez!
Like, you know, you should prolly migrate to some other thing disregardless, yeah? I mean, it has been EoL since friggin' '''2022''', jeez!


Have an ISC guide for migrating to Kea, why don't you? https://www.isc.org/dhcp_migration/
Have an ISC guide for migrating to {{pkg|kea}}, why don't you? https://www.isc.org/dhcp_migration/


something something keama https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/package/edge/main/x86_64/keama
something something {{pkg|keama}} https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/package/edge/main/x86_64/keama


=== Gogs ===
=== Gogs ===

Revision as of 00:09, 29 November 2024

As always, make sure to read Upgrading Alpine to a new major release when upgrading to a new release.

If you experience any issues with the upgrade, please let us know and file an issue in our repositories.

Important changes

OpenSSH requires restart

Note: TODO: Remove this section if https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports/-/merge_requests/68589 gets merged before 3.21 is released

You need to restart your sshd service!

Since the 9.8_p1 release, openssh-server is now split into two binaries, sshd and sshd-session. With this change sshd needs to be restarted to be able to accept new connections.

Since managing services has always been out-of-scope for apk, we will NOT do the following for you:

rc-service --ifstarted sshd restart

New loongarch64 architecture

Alpine 3.21 is the first release which is available for loongarch64.

Thanks to the support of the team of Loongson dedicated to supporting Alpine Linux and many other contributors.

Preparations for /usr-merge

We plan for the next Alpine Linux, version 3.22, to contain the /usr-merge.

A lot of preparations went into this release to ensure that the merge happens as smoothly as possible. That included moving the location of some binaries and many libraries from /bin, /sbin, and /lib to their counter-parts in /usr. Users with installations where / and /usr are in different partitions should proceed with care, and may be advisable to skip the 3.21 upgrade. If you still want to go ahead, you may open an issue and ping @pabloyoyoista to ask for support.

Note: TODO: replace with actual blog post

For more information, the timeline and the effects, read the blog post: https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/infra/alpine-mksite/-/merge_requests/88/diffs

Significant changes

Jellyfin

Jellyfin now uses the recommended fork of ffmpeg called jellyfin-ffmpeg by default. If you want to change that, take a look at the ffmpegpath variable in /etc/conf.d/jellyfin. (!69924)

Jellyfin was disabled for ARM architectures (aarch64 and armv7) and is only available for x86_64. The relevant issue is: #16613

Bats

"main/bats" was renamed to "main/bats-core". Now there is a meta package "community/bats" which contains:

  • bats-core
  • bats-file
  • bats-support
  • bats-assert

Xen

qemu-traditional and stubdom are removed from the build in this release, see https://git.alpinelinux.org/aports/commit/?id=24217a24da3924039b000eb17c04bf3f01bf1f12

The regular qemu aport, community/qemu, is now build with xen support, see https://git.alpinelinux.org/aports/commit/?id=a9249e2e0de827e88d84c01f9731aeebd248be13

uutils-coreutils

uutils-coreutils is repackaged as a sub-package to uutils in such a way as to be a drop-in replacement for GNU coreutils.

If you have both uutils-coreutils and coreutils installed, the latter will be purged and its symlinks replaced with ones pointing to the /usr/bin/uutils binary, provided by the uutils package. If you prefer to use GNU coreutils, you may want to remove the uutils-coreutils package before upgrading and add uutils after.

A few parts of the uutils are also split into uutils-* subpackages, to avoid conflicts or other issues.

linux-firmware

linux-firmware is now compressed with ZSTD compression. If you run a custom built Linux kernel, you need to ensure that CONFIG_FW_LOADER_COMPRESS_ZSTD=y is set in your configuration.

Note-worthy updates

As always, a lot of packages were upgraded. Make sure to read the indivdual release notes of the projects you use.

  • Linux 6.12
  • GCC 14.2.0
  • LLVM 19
  • Go 1.23.3
  • Rust 1.82
  • GNOME 47.1
  • KDE Plasma 6.2.3
  • LXQt 2.1.0
  • Qt 6.8.0

GCC 14

GCC was upgraded to 14.2.0 and as a result all packages in Alpine 3.21 are compiled with GCC 14.2.0.

Make sure to read all changes: https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-14/changes.html

LXQt 2.1

LXQt has been updated to release 2.1.0

  • It now uses Qt6
  • Many parts of LXQt are now wayland ready¹, but wayland ports of the following are pending: screengrab, lxqt-globalkeys, and keyboard indicator, some input settings, and settings of monitor, power button, and screen locker.
  • LXQt Panel has a new default application menu called Fancy Menu.

¹ lxqt-wayland-session has not been packaged yet, but most folks wanting to test on wayland will want to use it.

Linux 6.12

Alpine 3.21.0 ships Linux 6.12.0 in the linux-lts package.

Please note that linux-headers still is on 6.6, because the kernel was released after we kicked off our rebuilds and we coudn't ensure that the upgrade doesn't break other packages. (More about the linux-headers 6.12 upgrade: !75618)

PostgreSQL 17

This release features postgresql17. We dropped support for postgresql14, and moved postgreSQL15 from main to community.

LLVM 19

We packaged LLVM 19 in our repositories. Coming to total of 5 supported LLVM versions: llvm19, llvm18, llvm17, llvm16, llvm15.

Significant removals

Disabled packages due to FTBS

Note: update to latest state (last update 2024-11-28)

The following packages are temporarily disabled because they failed to build. We try to restore them as soon as possible.

ISC DHCP

Note: TODO: Write something cool if https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports/-/merge_requests/70974 (or alternative) is merged

Like, you know, you should prolly migrate to some other thing disregardless, yeah? I mean, it has been EoL since friggin' 2022, jeez!

Have an ISC guide for migrating to kea, why don't you? https://www.isc.org/dhcp_migration/

something something keama https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/package/edge/main/x86_64/keama

Gogs

gogs was removed due to multiple high-severity vulnerabilities which are open within a year. The developers of Gogs were contacted multiple times by the Forgejo team, but got no response. Therefore we removed Gogs from our repositories. (!75304)

Please consider migrating to forgejo or gitea. Both forks are available in our community repo, like gogs was.

The Gitea fork of Gogs was created in 2016 by contributors who were annoyed by the single-maintainer management model of Gogs. Forgejo is a fork of Gitea, which was created because the for-profit company Gitea Ltd took over the maintainership, see also https://forgejo.org/compare-to-gitea/.

neofetch

The upstream repository was archived in April, therefore is unmaintained and we removed it from our repositories. fastfetch provides similar functionality.