Across the Fedora project, teams are heavily focused on preparing for the upcoming Fedora 45 release, with groups including Quality, Workstation, Server, Cloud, and CoreOS actively coordinating system-wide changes, mass rebuilds, and issuing calls for F45 Test Day proposals. Simultaneously, a massive infrastructure transition is underway as Infrastructure, Release Engineering, Mindshare, and IoT urgently migrate repositories, issue trackers, and automated workflows from the sunsetting Pagure platform to the new Fedora Forge (Forgejo). Security and policy enforcement also dominate current efforts, highlighted by the newly enacted Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) mandate for provenpackager members, ongoing discussions around cryptographic library management, and extensive CVE patching within EPEL. Finally, improving the contributor experience remains a central priority, with the Docs and Design teams actively modernizing onboarding materials, while groups like Mindshare and Ambassadors recruit volunteers to support community engagement and upcoming global events.
Announcements
For Fedora contributors, there are several important infrastructure and policy updates to be aware of this week. FESCo now requires two-factor authentication for all provenpackager members, with a grace period extending to September 24, 2026, before non-compliant accounts are temporarily downgraded. Additionally, history has been rewritten for 71 package git repositories to fix long-standing git fsck issues; contributors with existing checkouts of these specific repos will need to perform fresh clones. A planned one-hour outage occurred on June 25th, temporarily affecting download-ib01, torrent, and fedorapeople services. In ecosystem news, discussions are ongoing regarding the future of Pagure.io and the transition to Forgejo, while Fedora Documentation translations are once again available following their successful migration to the new Fedora Forge. Finally, the F44 Election Results have been announced, officially seating new members for the Council, FESCo, Mindshare, and the EPEL Steering Committee.
In news relevant to the broader Linux community, Fedora has addressed the upcoming expiration of Microsoft's UEFI Secure Boot keys. Existing machines will continue to boot normally without panic, and Fedora Rawhide (f45) already includes a first-stage boot loader signed with multiple keys to ensure maximum compatibility moving forward. On the community front, Fedora was heavily represented at the XV P.I.W.O. Poznań Free Software Fest in Poland, which saw record attendance and hosted the historical signing of the SPOIWO declaration—a new coalition advocating for digital sovereignty and open-source software in public institutions.
Council
The Council discussed the Draft Council Proposal for the Fedora Innovation Lifecycle, a framework designed to handle experimental, large-scale projects that are too complex for the standard ChangeProposal process. The proposed lifecycle introduces Sandbox, Curation, and Integration stages to help solve the "innovator's dilemma" by nurturing big ideas within the project boundary. While some participants questioned if existing tools like Copr and the current Changes Process could simply be improved, proponents argued that a dedicated Sandbox is necessary for massive, interlocking changes to prove their viability without being hindered by strict technical policies early on. This structured pathway aims to foster innovation and sustainable contributor engagement for strategic initiatives, such as the ongoing RISC-V architecture bring-up, which currently has to operate outside the project as a remix.
Learn more about the Council team.
FESCo
FESCo welcomed new members following the F44 elections and opened nominations for the Fedora Council Engineering Representative. A major security policy update was announced, requiring all provenpackager group members to enable Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) by September 24, 2026, with discussions underway to potentially expand this requirement to all packagers. Additionally, FESCo approved several system-wide changes for Fedora 45, including updates to RPM 6.1, Golang 1.27, Erlang 27, and the adoption of PURL Metadata. New F45 Change Proposals were also introduced for community feedback, such as a minimal GRUB EFI build for Confidential Computing and offering the Lazarus IDE with multiple widgetsets.
The committee is actively seeking input on managing binary executable content in node_modules and whether to drop the signoff requirement from the defunct Fedora crypto team for new cryptography libraries. Contributors are also invited to discuss the upcoming Forgejo distgit migration and a proposal to allow draft builds for ELN rebuild batches. To streamline issue tracking, FESCo is migrating its public issues to the new forge, archiving private issues, and temporarily opening its mailing list to non-subscribers for sensitive reports.
Decisions
Learn more about the FESCo team.
Packaging Committee
During the Packaging Committee meeting, members addressed several guideline updates and packaging challenges. The committee reviewed FPC#1551 regarding versioned packages and agreed to remove the strict guideline stating they "MUST NOT conflict with all other versions," noting that general conflict guidelines are sufficient and development subpackages often unavoidably conflict. The group also discussed the ongoing issue of NodeJS packages shipping pre-built JavaScript blobs instead of building from source. While no immediate enforcement was enacted, the committee highlighted a strong need for improved NodeJS packaging tooling—presenting an excellent opportunity for contributor engagement—and suggested a potential future flag date to enforce compliance.
Additionally, the committee discussed FPC#1546 concerning the use of non-Fedora distribution conditionals (such as SUSE or Azure Linux macros) in spec files. Rather than strictly banning or allowlisting specific macros, it was agreed that new, comprehensive multi-distro guidance will be drafted. This upcoming proposal will aim to support cross-distribution compatibility for ecosystems sharing Fedora's packaging roots without cluttering spec files or burdening Fedora maintainers.
Learn more about the Packaging Committee team.
Mindshare
During the June 23 CommOps meeting, the team prepared for the impending mid-July sunset of Pagure.io by coordinating the migration of Fedora Magazine and Community Blog repositories to Forgejo. To improve news accessibility for newcomers and the broader Linux community, the team explored alternatives to dense LLM-generated summaries and approved a proof-of-concept for a human-curated "This Week in Fedora" Matrix news bot, inspired by similar tools used by GNOME and Ansible (hebbot).
Planning has officially kicked off for the Virtual F45 Release Party, tentatively scheduled for October 30, 2026. The team is actively seeking volunteers to lead various work streams, including a lead "Wrangler," speaker coordination, and video production. Furthermore, there is a high-profile engagement opportunity open: CommOps is searching for a new representative to serve on the Fedora Mindshare Committee to help guide global outreach and event operations.
Learn more about the Mindshare team.
Ambassadors
The Ambassadors group is beginning preparations for All Things Open 2026 in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. A call for participation has been issued for Fedora Ambassadors planning to attend, offering an excellent engagement opportunity to help shape the project's official event presence. Contributors interested in collaborating, representing the project, or helping staff a potential joint Fedora and CentOS nonprofit booth are encouraged to reply to the forum thread as soon as possible so resources can be mobilized. Further coordination regarding the official booth plan is expected to take place after July 5th.
Learn more about the Ambassadors team.
Workstation / GNOME
A new EXT4 mount option called rralloc (round-robin allocator) was proposed and discussed this week. Designed as an optional, mount-time allocation policy that leaves the on-disk format unchanged, it aims to reduce allocator contention and improve tail latencies for high-concurrency workloads on modern SSD and NVMe storage. The developer is currently seeking feedback and identifying potential use cases to gauge community interest and justify its broader adoption.
In preparation for the upcoming release, the Quality team has issued a call for Fedora 45 Test Days. Contributors are encouraged to review the accepted Fedora 45 changes and propose focused testing events for specific features by filing a ticket on Fedora Forge.
Learn more about the Workstation / GNOME team.
KDE
In recent discussions, it was noted that KDE Gear 26.04 was initially blocked on Fedora 43 due to a gpgme dependency update (requiring version 2.0+) that conflicted with Fedora's soname bump policy. Thanks to upstream commits lowering the requirement to version 1.24.2, this hurdle was cleared. KDE Gear 26.04 will now be pushed to Fedora 43 alongside Plasma 6.7.1, and the update is currently available in Bodhi for community testing.
Looking ahead to the next release cycle, the Fedora QA team has announced a Call for Fedora 45 Test Days. Contributors are highly encouraged to review the accepted F45 ChangeSet and propose specific testing events by filing a ticket on Fedora Forge. This is a prime opportunity for community members to help organize and lead focused testing for new features or critical distribution areas.
Learn more about the KDE team.
Server
The Server Working Group discussed several updates to the distribution and its documentation during their weekly meeting (also summarized on the mailing list). To better support users in regions with fragile or slow internet connections, the group agreed to re-include PPP and xDSL connection support packages in the base distribution media. Additionally, a call for Fedora 45 Test Days was announced across the forum and mailing list, inviting contributors to propose and host testing events for upcoming features.
On the documentation front, the team approved plans to create comprehensive OpenSSH guides and assigned action items to clean up existing NFS installation instructions. To improve security practices and consistency, all Server documentation will be updated to align with the Fedora Docs Style Guide, specifically transitioning command-line examples to use sudo [command] rather than root shells. Contributors interested in helping with these documentation updates or ongoing PXE boot and Kickstart configurations are encouraged to engage with the team.
Learn more about the Server team.
Infrastructure
The Infrastructure team managed several significant server moves and reinstalls this week, including relocating 11 OpenQA, Copr, and OpenShift worker nodes to optimize datacenter power usage, and reinstalling the download-ib01 host with RHEL 10. A major topic of discussion across meetings and the forum was the ongoing migration from the sunsetting Pagure platform to Fedora Forge. The team is actively exploring solutions for handling private security tickets on Forgejo, considering alternative workflows like private Discourse categories, while also assisting teams in archiving their old Pagure repositories. Additionally, a recent RabbitMQ certificate refresh surfaced a bug in the fedora-messaging library where it only read the first CA certificate in a combined file, which was promptly fixed and released.
In community-facing services, a forum discussion highlighted a growing need for shared, open LLM inference hosting within Fedora infrastructure to support tools like Log Detective and meeting summarization bots. The team also addressed a backlog of s390x builds by provisioning an additional builder, resolved Rawhide mirror 404 errors, and granted a storage quota increase on fedorapeople.org to host Flock 2026 video recordings. Ongoing operational work for contributors includes a major cleanup of legacy Nagios and collectd monitoring in favor of Zabbix, and migrating OpenShift applications to standardized Ansible roles.
Decisions
- To mitigate staging connection failures, the team decided to temporarily restore the old RabbitMQ server certificates until the patched
fedora-messaging library is widely adopted.
- The team decided to provision an additional
s390x builder to alleviate a severe backlog of long-running package builds.
Learn more about the Infrastructure team.
Release Engineering
During the Release Engineering meeting, the team prioritized the scm-requests migration ahead of the upcoming Pagure decommission. This involves updating fedpkg to file tickets in Forgejo and determining the safest backend method for processing those requests. The team also prepared for the upcoming mass rebuild cycle, the rollout of F47 keys, and finalizing the Fedora 42 End of Life process. Over on the forum, a community member shared their configuration and a brief guide on building a customized Fedora 44 XFCE live ISO using kiwi-ng.
Ticket activity this week centered heavily on package unretirements (kdevelop-python, rust-git-absorb, wavemon, pcl) and implementing a related fix for Koji owner synchronization to ensure unretired packages are properly assigned. The team also addressed Rawhide gating issues by untagging a problematic haveged build that was breaking FreeIPA upgrade tests, and reviewed upcoming Fedora 45 system-wide changes regarding Stratis storage in Anaconda and disabling DNF5 vendor changes by default.
Decisions
- For the
scm-requests migration, the team decided to update the existing toddlers code to process Forgejo tickets rather than switching to Forgejo Actions. This was chosen to avoid the security risks of storing highly privileged distgit admin tokens in Action secrets.
- Patrik will take the lead responsibility for managing the upcoming mass rebuild cycle.
Learn more about the Release Engineering team.
Quality
During their weekly meeting, the Quality team reviewed their recent Flock and DevConf attendance, highlighting productive discussions on openQA failure analysis, Fedora CI improvements, and the ongoing effort to move testing to dist-git PRs. On the technical front, the massive OpenSSL 4 update landed in Rawhide; while it initially broke FreeIPA replication tests and gated all updates, these failures were temporarily bypassed to allow the merge. Additionally, Adam Williamson shared early work on a new system for tracking critical path packages to improve dependency gating, and the team noted that a Kernel 7.1 test week will be scheduled soon.
A Call for Fedora 45 Test Days has been officially issued, inviting the community to review the accepted ChangeSet and propose focused testing events via Fedora Forge. In other community news, volunteers have stepped up to help maintain the Packager Dashboard and Oraculum, though more contributors are always welcome to join the effort. Finally, nightly release validation testing is ongoing, with new composes nominated for Fedora 45 Rawhide and Fedora-IoT 45 RC.
Decisions
- Temporarily bypass FreeIPA replication test failures on Rawhide to allow the OpenSSL 4 update to merge.
- Disable the use of
haveged in FreeIPA tests to resolve recent Rawhide update blocking issues.
Learn more about the Quality team.
Design
The Fedora Design team made significant progress on release artwork this week, officially completing and uploading the Fedora 45 Beta wallpaper. While the final wallpaper is expected in early July, the team is currently troubleshooting Inkscape export crashes related to high-resolution gradients. In event design, the Flock 2026 livestream splash screens were completed and closed, and a new ticket was opened to automate the creation of YouTube thumbnails for individual Flock talks.
There are excellent opportunities for contributor engagement, including a fun new request to design an avatar for the Fedora Matrix Moderation bot. Ongoing community projects also saw major updates: the team is finalizing a community onboarding flyer after implementing accessibility and design feedback, and the Contributor Onboarding Video Series is nearing completion after receiving official voiceovers from the Fedora Project podcast and undergoing final visual and audio tweaks.
Decisions
- The Fedora 45 Beta wallpaper will be used to internally test JXL packaging while the final version is completed.
- Based on viewer feedback, future Flock livestream templates will prioritize maximizing the screen size allocated for presented content (slides and workshops) to improve readability.
- The community onboarding flyer will drop the "technical vs. non-technical" grouping requirement to better accommodate the current design layout.
Learn more about the Design team.
Docs
This week, the Docs team focused heavily on modernizing the documentation ecosystem and improving the onboarding experience. Several mentored issues are open for newcomers to help update contribution guides, including shifting the focus to local authoring workflows, updating the Quick Docs contribution guide, and creating a beginner-friendly "Git for Writers" article. Broader restructuring efforts are also underway, such as planning a modern design for the Docs homepage, exploring UI/UX enhancements for knowledgebase-style pages, and piloting a new "Fedora Docs Captain" role to decentralize documentation leadership across various Fedora Working Groups and SIGs. In the forums, a community member shared a detailed guide on creating a custom Fedora 44 XFCE live ISO using KIWI-ng.
Behind the scenes, the team is actively cleaning up legacy infrastructure by deleting outdated docs pages from the Fedora Wiki and unprotecting specific wiki categories to facilitate change proposal management. Ongoing policy discussions include whether to enforce opening PRs exclusively from forks and the potential creation of a formal code style guide to ensure syntax consistency across repositories.
Decisions
- To address security vulnerabilities in the outdated
docsbuilder.sh container image, the team decided to request a testing-farm runner on the Fedora Forge staging instance to test building new container images, with a long-term plan to transition to Konflux.
Learn more about the Docs team.
Internationalization
During the Internationalization meeting, the team reviewed the tracker for Fedora 45 changes, noting that the LibreOffice dictionaries change is planned for this week, while the fontconfig change is still in progress. Members were reminded to assist with Fedora 43 bug triaging and were briefed on upcoming proposal submission deadlines for Fedora 45 system-wide and infrastructure changes.
On the mailing list, a new contributor volunteered to assist with Norwegian Bokmål translations for core projects like systemd, Anaconda, and dnf. The team welcomed the contributor, confirmed that their manual review of AI-drafted translations complies with the Fedora AI-Assisted Contributions Policy, and requested a re-upload of recent systemd translations that were lost due to a Weblate merge conflict.
Learn more about the Internationalization team.
COPR
Following the end-of-life of Fedora 42 on May 27, 2026, the COPR team announced the disabling of all Fedora 42 chroots. Consequently, contributors can no longer submit new builds for fedora-42 architectures, including x86_64, i386, ppc64le, aarch64, and s390x.
To avoid disruptive surprises, project owners should note that existing Fedora 42 build results will be preserved for 180 days. After this grace period, they will be automatically removed unless contributors take explicit action to prolong the chroots' lifespan within their specific projects.
Learn more about the COPR team.
EPEL
During the EPEL meeting on 2026-06-24, the steering committee discussed several upcoming package transitions and security updates. Contributors are encouraged to review issue #368 regarding a proposed incompatible update or retirement for syncthing (v1.30 to v2) ahead of next week's vote. Additionally, significant work is underway to address CVEs in EPEL packages. The caddy package will be fast-forwarded in EPEL 10, may require an incompatible update in EPEL 9, and is facing potential retirement in EPEL 8 due to build complexities without go-vendor-tools. Furthermore, the KDE SIG has stepped in to help update qt6-qtwebengine in EPEL 9 to resolve a large number of outstanding CVEs, ensuring the package remains available for its active user base rather than being dropped.
Decisions
- Issue #367: The committee approved proceeding with the incompatible update of
p7zip to 7zip for EPEL 9, provided appropriate announcements are made. Approval for EPEL 8 will be handled asynchronously once COPR build tests for EPEL 8-specific dependencies (conky-manager and retrace-server) are completed.
Learn more about the EPEL team.
ELN
During the ELN meeting, the team provided status updates on ELNBuildSync (EBS) and bootc integration. The migration of EBS to Fedora Infrastructure is 95% complete, with the Ansible playbook functioning in staging and the team currently awaiting OIDC secrets from Fedora Infra to finalize the deployment. To improve crash recovery, the team proposed a new approach to run EBS batches as Draft Builds right up until submission to Bodhi. This change is pending approval in FESCo issue #3621, and the corresponding pull request is already prepared.
Additionally, progress on bootc compose images is nearing completion. The work is ready to merge but is temporarily blocked waiting for preceding merge requests to land and for Konflux team members to return from PTO, though the bootc team is actively looking into unblocking the process.
Learn more about the ELN team.
Atomic
This week, discussions continued regarding the proposal to create a systemd-sysexts SIG. This proposed Special Interest Group aims to build and distribute systemd system-extensions based on Fedora content, providing a way to add extensibility to atomic systems for software that does not run well in containers or Flatpaks. The initiative continues to gather interested contributors to help design the distribution, discoverability, and official building processes.
In contributor engagement opportunities, the QA team has issued a call for Fedora 45 Test Days. With the Fedora 45 schedule progressing, community members are encouraged to review the accepted ChangeSet and propose features or distribution areas that would benefit from focused community testing. Contributors can propose and organize a test day by filing a ticket on the Fedora Forge.
Learn more about the Atomic team.
CoreOS
During the CoreOS meeting, the team focused heavily on upcoming Fedora 45 changes ahead of the proposal deadlines. Preparations are underway for the F45 pivot change request, the relocation of RPM repository configs to /usr, and upcoming proposals to introduce an oom-kill service and default zram for CoreOS. In the forums, a community member proposed a new EXT4 mount option called rralloc (round-robin allocator) designed to reduce allocation hotspotting and improve tail latencies for high-concurrency workloads. Additionally, interest continues to grow around the proposal to create a systemd-sysexts SIG.
There are several immediate opportunities for contributor engagement this week. The team is actively seeking code reviews and local testing for a major Ignition pivot PR and an Afterburn configuration logic PR. Furthermore, the QA team has issued a call for Fedora 45 Test Days, inviting community members to propose and organize testing events for upcoming features via Fedora Forge. Finally, the team welcomed apiaseck back to the FCOS release rotation.
Decisions
- The team agreed to file a formal change request for an Ignition RPM update to boost its visibility and promote the feature to potential users, even though a formal request is not strictly required by the release process.
Learn more about the CoreOS team.
IoT
During the Fedora IoT Working Group Meeting, the team reviewed OpenQA test results for current and upcoming releases. For Fedora IoT 44 (Stable), a new test failure surfaced for rpmostree-rebase on x86_64 and aarch64, alongside a known iot_clevis failure. Meanwhile, Fedora IoT 45 (Rawhide) tests improved after a recent x86 failure and are currently looking stable enough for Rawhide.
In broader community news, the migration of Fedora IoT repositories from Pagure to Forge is expected to happen very soon, potentially within the week. The team is currently waiting on the necessary group creation before moving things over, which contributors should keep in mind for upcoming engagement and issue tracking.
Learn more about the IoT team.
Cloud
This week, the Cloud group received a call for Fedora 45 Test Days proposals. Contributors and community members are encouraged to review the accepted Fedora 45 ChangeSet to identify features or areas of the distribution that would benefit from focused testing. Anyone interested in organizing or hosting an online test event can propose one by filing a ticket on Fedora Forge, making this an excellent engagement opportunity to help ensure the quality and stability of the upcoming Fedora 45 release.
Learn more about the Cloud team.
AI & ML
The Fedora AI initiative has relocated the repositories for the AI Developer Desktop Remix. Contributors and interested community members can now find and engage with the project at its new organization home on Codeberg. This migration is an important update for existing developers to ensure their local environments are synced with the new upstream location, and it provides a centralized hub for the broader Linux community to explore the remix.
Learn more about the AI & ML team.
RISC-V
During the June 23 meeting, the RISC-V group confirmed that Fedora 44 is being kept up to date with major package bumps, including GCC. The Fedora 45 rebuild has officially started with an initial focus on language toolchains, and the team is preparing for a Python 3.14 to 3.15 rebuild utilizing bootstrap sidetag strategies discussed in a recent Flock lightning talk. To avoid workflow disruptions, existing contributors should note that the dist-git overlay has been officially migrated from the old fedora.riscv.rocks infrastructure to forge.fedoraproject.org/riscv/.
Hardware capacity for the architecture continues to grow, with two SpacemiT K3 systems recently added to the Fedora Koji builders to maintain build momentum, and two more on the way. Finally, the group shared their Flock presentation slides and highlighted an open planning ticket for contributors interested in joining the discussion on the long-term roadmap for promoting riscv64 to a primary Koji architecture.
Learn more about the RISC-V team.
Security
The Security SIG met to discuss improving meeting structures, predictability, and ticket prioritization to prevent contributor burnout and maximize meeting value. To help contributors better prioritize their time and know when specific issues will be discussed, the team agreed to start publishing meeting agendas in advance rather than relying solely on ticket labels or ad-hoc discussions.
Additionally, Fedora's CRI-O packager put out a call for SELinux experts to help investigate a potential CRI-O, composefs, and SELinux bug affecting Fedora CoreOS. This presents a highly focused opportunity for contributors with SELinux knowledge to engage and assist with a critical container runtime issue that impacts the broader Linux container ecosystem.
Learn more about the Security team.
Gaming
This week, a community member proposed packaging nbsdgames for Fedora. This project is a lightweight collection of 21 terminal-based games that depends solely on ncurses. Because the author is unfamiliar with Fedora's specific packaging guidelines, this serves as an excellent, low-barrier engagement opportunity for an existing or new contributor looking to help expand the Fedora Games repository. To assist potential packagers, the author noted that using make nb or make nbinstall during the build process will easily prevent any naming conflicts with other existing game packages.
Learn more about the Gaming team.
Perl
This week, the Perl group's activity was centered around routine package maintenance. Specifically, Jitka Plesnikova opened and successfully merged a pull request to bump the perl-App-cpm package to version 1.1.2, addressing bug report rhbz#2492221.
Learn more about the Perl team.
Other Discussions
- A guide was shared on how to properly set a Fedora profile picture using Libravatar, including troubleshooting login loops and avatar update delays.
- Meeting notes for the Hummingbird project clarified its relationship with Fedora and defined "Agentic OS" simply as Linux with Kubernetes and standard GitOps workflows, rather than autonomous AI magic.
- A recap of the Fedora Mentor Summit at Flock 2026 highlighted successful Lunch & Learn sessions and community-building activities like sticker matching.
- The 2026 Fedora Contributor Recognition Program Winners were announced, celebrating Ankur Sinha, Fabio Valentini, and Justin Forbes for their outstanding community contributions.
- A thread initially about an AI bot making unauthorized Bugzilla changes evolved into a deep discussion about Two-Factor Authentication (2FA), exploring recovery token strategies and Kerberos ticket renewals via
sssd-kcm and GNOME Online Accounts.
- Following FESCo's decision, the 2FA policy for provenpackagers is now active, prompting discussions on using
kinit with Yubikey OTPs and obtaining 7-day renewable Kerberos tickets.
- A Change Proposal for a minimal GRUB bootloader tailored for Confidential Computing and Unified Kernel Images (UKIs) sparked debate over whether to include filesystem drivers (like Btrfs) or rely solely on FAT and the EFI System Partition.
- A discussion addressed the policy violation of shipping pre-built WASM and ELF binaries inside
node_modules source archives, leading to proposals for new tools like npm2rpm to automatically strip them.
- A request to package AWS
s2n-tls and aws-lc raised concerns about the responsiveness of the Fedora Crypto Team and whether the strict gatekeeping process for new cryptographic libraries needs reform.
- A proposal to explicitly permit macros like
%rhel, %centos, and %hummingbird in spec files was met with pushback from some developers who consider %rhel an antipattern that causes packaging divergence.
- Other discussions this week included a call for Packager Dashboard maintainers, feedback on Node.js metapackages, help with git authentication for package releases, new helper scripts for upstream releases, an issue with redhat.com emails failing DMARC, handling Sphinx autodoc in RPM builds, optimizing compose disk space, addressing unmerged CMake 4 PRs, GCC plugin version dependencies, ideas to improve the Changes Process, centralizing GNOME SRPM macros, a planned infrastructure outage, the migration of the FESCo ticket tracker, a call for F45 Test Days, the disabling of F42 chroots in Copr, identifying package metadata in side-tag testing, and the resolution of git fsck issues in 71 package repos.
New contributor introductions
- Joshua Thomas introduced himself on the fedora-join list, expressing interest in contributing to QA and leveraging his homelab environment for Rawhide testing.
Orphaning packages
Package updates