Fedora Linux: Difference between revisions

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Old builds including the 406.XX series were based on Fedora Core 6.
Old builds including the 406.XX series were based on Fedora Core 6.


The transition to Fedora 7 happened before the Trial 2 milestone (build 542) ([[OLPC Trial-2 Software Release Notes]]).
The transition to Fedora 7 happened in 2007 before the [[OLPC Trial-2 Software Release Notes|Trial 2]] milestone (build 542).


So the operating system in the "ship.1" and "update.1" streams of releases was Fedora 7 , as you can see in the [http://pilgrim.laptop.org/~pilgrim/olpc/streams/update.1/latest/devel_jffs2/build.log latest update.1 build log].
So the operating system in the "ship.1" and "update.1" streams of releases was Fedora 7 , as you can see in the [http://pilgrim.laptop.org/~pilgrim/olpc/streams/update.1/latest/devel_jffs2/build.log latest update.1 build log].

Revision as of 21:32, 4 October 2008

This article is a stub. You can help the OLPC project by expanding it.

Fedora is the basic OS of OLPC XO laptop. This is the Linux distribution which is, previously called "Fedora Core", developed by Fedora Project and sponsored by Red Hat.

Because it is the Linux base chosen by the OLPC on which to develop Sugar, it is a reference for any other Linux distribution whose intention is to be an alternative or different take.

Fedora versions

Old builds including the 406.XX series were based on Fedora Core 6.

The transition to Fedora 7 happened in 2007 before the Trial 2 milestone (build 542).

So the operating system in the "ship.1" and "update.1" streams of releases was Fedora 7 , as you can see in the latest update.1 build log.

The 8.2.0 release was rebased on Fedora 9. Development efforts took place in the olpc3 stream but were merged into joyride as of build joyride-2072. Distro version migration nastiness records some of the changes made to the OLPC version of Fedora 7 that had to be reapplied to Fedora 9, and maybe in future rebasing efforts.

What type of problems can you expect if you add one of the [koji repositories] to your configured [yum] repositories configuration and attempt to install packages from them?

Language support

Fedora Core 6 uses the SCIM (Smart Common Input Framework) system to support multiple IMEs and keyboard layouts for multiple writing systems and languages. This includes Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and many other languages.

Installing Sugar

If you have a Fedora distribution running on a computer, you can install the Sugar environment that runs on the XO laptop.

See also

External links