Tux Machines

Red Hat and Fedora Leftovers

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Feb 03, 2024

GNU/Linux Devices and Open Hardware: Raspberry Pi, Arduino, and Real-time Linux
Security Leftovers
↺ Woman And Red Hat

Red Hat Official ☛ Red Hat’s customer success in action: Enhancing security posture for organizations across the information services and telco industries

↺ Red Hat’s customer success in action: Enhancing security posture for organizations across the information services and telco industries
The Japan Research Institute (JRI) is a “knowledge engineering” company that offers comprehensive, high-value-added information services through the coordinated application of three functions: information systems, consulting and think-tank.

Fedora Project ☛ Fedora Community Blog: Infra & RelEng Update – Week 5 2024

↺ Fedora Community Blog: Infra & RelEng Update – Week 5 2024
This is a weekly report from the I&R (Infrastructure & Release Engineering) Team. It also contains updates for CPE (Community Platform Engineering) Team as the CPE initiatives are in most cases tied to I&R work.
↺ Infrastructure & Release Engineering
↺ Community Platform Engineering
We provide you both an infographic and a text version of the weekly report. If you just want to quickly look at what we did, just look at the infographic. If you are interested in more in-depth details look below the infographic.
↺ Infrastructure & Release Engineering
↺ Community Platform Engineering

Remi Collet ☛ Remi Collet: PHP version 8.2.16RC1 and 8.3.3RC1

↺ Remi Collet: PHP version 8.2.16RC1 and 8.3.3RC1
Release Candidate versions are available in the testing repository for Fedora and Enterprise Linux (RHEL / CentOS / Alma / Rocky and other clones) to allow more people to test them. They are available as Software Collections, for a parallel installation, the perfect solution for such tests, and also as base packages.

GNOME ☛ Christian Hergert: Performance Profiling for Fedora Magazine

↺ Christian Hergert: Performance Profiling for Fedora Magazine
I’ve authored an article recently for Fedora Magazine on Performance Profiling in Fedora.
↺ Fedora Magazine
↺ Performance Profiling in Fedora
It covers both the basics on how to get started as well as the nitty-gritty details of how profilers work. I’d love for others to be more informed on that so I’m not the only person maintaining Sysprof.
Hopefully I was able to distill the information down a bit better than my typical blog posts. If you felt like those were maybe too difficult to follow, give this one a read.
↺ Fedora Magazine
↺ Performance Profiling in Fedora
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