Across the project, a primary focus was on technical modernization and infrastructure migration. This was highlighted by the major mass rebuild for Python 3.15 in Rawhide, the Workstation team's plans to replace several core desktop components like gnome-keyring and dbus-daemon, and the continued migration of services and repositories to the new Fedora Forge platform. Alongside these technical upgrades, there was a strong emphasis on improving governance and community processes, demonstrated by the Council's work on a new "Fedora Innovation Lifecycle," the official release of new forum moderation guidelines, and discussions within the Docs and EPEL teams to refine workflows and policies. Much of this work was contextualized by the upcoming Flock conference, which influenced planning and was identified as a venue for key in-person discussions. Other common themes included the development of new offerings, such as a home server spin-off and a new graphical UI for DNF, and a consistent focus on community engagement through the ongoing Fedora elections and numerous calls for new package maintainers.
Announcements
This week, the Fedora 44 elections voting period opened and will run until June 12th, with candidate interviews available for review (e.g., Vít Smolík, Tomáš Hrčka). For users of the forums, new self-moderation guidelines and rules have been released to improve transparency and formalize community standards. On the technical front, a major mass rebuild for Python 3.15 in Fedora 45 has begun and successfully concluded, and packagers can now safely build in Rawhide again. Contributors were also notified of a planned infrastructure outage for server updates. In news relevant to the broader community, a recent Fedora 43 upgrade helped uncover a 20-year-old security bug in Microsoft Outlook related to unencrypted connections.
In preparation for the upcoming Flock conference, the CommOps team launched the #Commit History campaign, inviting contributors to share their origin stories. Fedora Magazine continued its series of interviews with Flock speakers, featuring insights from Jef Spaleta, Valentin Rothberg, Aleksandra Fedorova, Akashdeep Dhar, and Jona Azizaj. Additionally, the weekly Community Update detailed progress across various teams, including work on Fedora Badges, RISC-V for F44, and QE bug fixes. A helpful guide on installing Fedora across two disks was also published.
Council
In their weekly meeting, the Council discussed several key governance topics. They reviewed the draft for a new Fedora Innovation Lifecycle, deciding to formally introduce it after the Flock conference to allow for more community context-building. The group also approved the new moderation guidelines for the Fedora Discussion forum and initiated a broader conversation about improving the representation of community moderators within Fedora's governance structures. A consensus emerged that the current "Initiatives" framework is ineffective and should be replaced, with further discussion planned. Ongoing forum topics included a proposal for a Fedora AI Ecosystem and the eligibility of teens running for Council.
Decisions
- The Council agreed that the draft proposal for the Fedora Innovation Lifecycle will be formally proposed to the community after Flock. In the meantime, the Council will work to build more community awareness around it.
- The Council approved the current moderation guidelines for the Fedora Discussion forum for publication. A new ticket will be created to discuss how community moderators can be better represented in Fedora's governance structures.
- Regarding a past provenpackager revocation incident, the Council re-affirmed its decision not to publicly disclose confidential details of the incident. The focus will instead be on improving the Conflict of Interest Policy to prevent future issues.
Learn more about the Council team.
Mindshare
The main discussion for the Mindshare group this week continued to focus on the future of surveys within Fedora, specifically the proposal to shut down the LimeSurvey service. The topic was originally raised due to the sole maintainer's burnout, difficult billing changes, and community dissatisfaction with the quality of recent surveys. This week's contribution supported dropping LimeSurvey, suggesting that the Data WG could instead leverage existing, repeatable data sources for analysis. One example was using event data from Pretix via the Fedora message bus to gather insights on attendance, rather than relying on a survey. The idea of a specialized SIG for survey design was also raised to better separate statistical data gathering from simple feedback collection.
Learn more about the Mindshare team.
Workstation / GNOME
This week, the Workstation Working Group laid out plans for several significant technical transitions. Key initiatives include replacing the gnome-keyring daemon with 007, removing the legacy dbus-daemon to standardize on dbus-broker, and modernizing testing infrastructure by replacing xvfb-run with wl-headless-run. These efforts aim to streamline the desktop stack and align with modern practices. Contributor opportunities include finding a new maintainer for the orphaned Showtime package and helping update packages to use the new wl-headless-run testing utility.
In forum discussions, a proposal to undertake a chain of updates related to the mozjs JavaScript engine for the Cinnamon DE in Fedora 44 was debated. The consensus was to prioritize stability for the current release, deferring the larger migration but updating the existing mozjs128 package to include the latest security fixes. Another topic explored the possibility of creating a new Fedora edition for upcoming NVIDIA RTX Spark hardware, with community sentiment leaning towards leveraging existing AArch64 builds and creating documentation rather than introducing a new Spin.
Decisions
- The
gnome-keyring daemon will be replaced with 007 in Fedora Workstation, with work being managed to ensure a smooth transition.
- A plan was initiated to remove the
dbus-daemon package by addressing dependencies that pull it in, such as in the Anaconda installer.
- The
xvfb-run utility will be incrementally replaced with wl-headless-run for testing; this will be added to the package maintenance checklist.
- Regarding the Cinnamon DE in Fedora 44, the decision was made to update the existing
mozjs128 package but not to perform a larger migration to mozjs140 to avoid destabilizing a released version of Fedora.
- A long-term goal was set to remove the
libcanberra dependency from core desktop packages by rerouting sounds directly to PipeWire.
- Newer LibreOffice dictionaries will be packaged and made available in parallel with existing aspell dictionaries to improve language support.
Learn more about the Workstation / GNOME team.
Server
The Server team held its weekly meeting with a strong focus on the development of a new home server spin-off. The main discussion revolved around user-friendly management and the initial software selection. The group reviewed a draft management guide, which led to a conversation about security practices for home use, including SSH key usage, firewall configuration, and remote access strategies. There was a consensus to leverage Ansible for configuration, with a plan to provide pre-configured playbooks to simplify setup for end-users. Using Cockpit for remote management was also highlighted as a secure and accessible option. The team also discussed which applications should be included by default, agreeing to start with a minimal set from the official Fedora repositories.
Learn more about the Server team.
Infrastructure
This week, the Infrastructure team's main operational focus was a planned mass update and reboot outage to apply the latest updates across servers. Significant progress was also made on the migration from Nagios to Zabbix for monitoring; the team is finalizing per-team notifications and is nearing the project's completion, with plans to announce the final switchover soon. Regular administrative tasks included reviewing the monthly AWS usage report and addressing untagged AWS resources.
A key topic of discussion was the future of the now-defunct scm-commits mailing list. A new forum thread was created to gather feedback from the community, especially packagers, on potential replacements. The primary options being considered are a public-inbox service, for which a proof-of-concept is already running, and leveraging the new Fedora Data Working Group (FDWG) platform for analysis and querying of commit data. Contributors are encouraged to join the discussion and share their use cases to help guide the final implementation. Other topics in the weekly and daily meetings included ticket triage and planning around upcoming events like Flock and a Red Hat Day of Learning, which may impact team availability.
Learn more about the Infrastructure team.
Release Engineering
The Release Engineering team's weekly meeting focused on the ongoing migration to the new Forgejo instance. A significant point of discussion was the migration of the fedora-scm-requests repository, which is blocked on updates to the fedpkg tool. This change will require a broad rollout to all package maintainers and is not expected to be completed before Flock. The team also explored opportunities for automation, identifying the release End-of-Life (EOL) process and mass branching as prime candidates for future work. Additionally, a scheduled task related to retiring packages with security issues was reviewed; it was determined that the underlying policy was never fully implemented, and the team decided to request its removal from the schedule.
Decisions
- The scheduled task "Notifications for retirement of packages with security issues" will be requested for removal from the schedule, as the associated policy was never finalized or implemented.
- Ticket #10160, a feature request for compose failure reporting, was closed as it is better tracked in the
compose-tracker project.
- Samyak will chair the next meeting on June 8th.
Learn more about the Release Engineering team.
Quality
This week, the main highlight was a community discussion around a new tool, "Dnf-ui is ready for testing", a modern GTK4 graphical frontend for DNF5. The developer is actively seeking feedback on installation, usability, and functionality, providing a great opportunity for contributors to get involved. The discussion has already yielded valuable feedback on performance, transaction handling, and testing on Fedora Silverblue via Distrobox.
Routine activities for the Quality team continued with announcements for Rawhide nightly compose testing and the upcoming weekly meeting. On the mailing lists, discussions included a user report about a missing grub2 menu after kernel updates on Rawhide and a question about the process for closing bugs for Fedora 42, which has now reached its end of life.
Learn more about the Quality team.
Design
The main discussion this week centered on the ongoing effort to create a prototype for a modernized Fedora Media Writer. The original proposer acknowledged the community's continued interest and praised a functional prototype that another contributor developed based on the initial designs. However, the initiative has been temporarily put on hold due to other commitments and the need to investigate the existing codebase to avoid a complete rewrite. The conversation also included ideas about a web-based writer, referencing the Chromebook Recovery Utility as an example, and suggested that contributors could help by exploring the codebases of other popular tools like Rufus and Etcher for inspiration.
Learn more about the Design team.
Docs
The Docs team held their bi-weekly meeting to discuss several housekeeping and process-related topics. A major organizational change was the standardization of issue labels across all Docs repositories and the decision to consolidate project boards at the organization level to improve cross-repository tracking. The team also discussed how to handle outdated content, including an unsupported system upgrade path in Quick Docs and the ongoing effort to retire old Docs pages on the Fedora Wiki. A debate on contribution workflows took place regarding whether to enforce creating pull requests from forks, with the discussion set to continue in the ticket. Help is needed from the community to apply the new standardized labels to issues in the Quick Docs repository.
On the forums, a new discussion began about "AEO" (AI Engine Optimization) and improving the discoverability of Fedora's documentation for newcomers and automated tools. The conversation highlighted the need for better-organized menus and strategic linking to guide new contributors. In an ongoing topic, the new "Fedora Discussion Forum (Self-)Moderation Guidelines and Rules" were officially published on the docs website, replacing the obsolete Ask Fedora SOPs, and have now been added to Weblate for translation. Finally, a discussion about the legality of including NVIDIA driver installation instructions continued, with a user pointing out that Quick Docs already links to RPM Fusion, questioning the consistency of the policy.
Decisions
- The Docs team meeting on June 16, 2026, is canceled as it overlaps with the Flock contributor conference.
- All project boards will be consolidated at the organization level instead of being created per-repository. Existing repository-level boards will be migrated.
Learn more about the Docs team.
Legal
A discussion was initiated this week regarding the licensing of timidity code, which is bundled within the SDL3_mixer package currently being prepared for Fedora. The timidity README offers a choice between "the GNU GPL, the GNU LGPL, or the Perl Artistic License" without specifying versions, creating ambiguity for packaging. The conversation explored how to interpret this statement, considering the code's history predating GPLv3. The consensus was to assume the author intended versions available at the time, leading to an acceptable license combination for Fedora: GPL-2.0-or-later OR LGPL-2.0-or-later OR Artistic-1.0-Perl.
Learn more about the Legal team.
COPR
This week, the COPR team announced and performed a planned maintenance outage on June 2nd to update the copr-backend server. The outage lasted approximately one hour, during which build queue processing was stopped. Existing DNF packages and repositories remained available throughout the maintenance period. The update was completed successfully.
Learn more about the COPR team.
EPEL
During the weekly EPEL meeting, the main topic was a proposal to delay the retirement of EPEL minor versions. Currently, a minor version is retired on the same day a new RHEL minor version is released, which can surprise maintainers. A two-week delay was proposed to allow in-flight updates to reach the stable repository, but the committee decided to table the discussion to gather more feedback. The results of the Spring 2026 EPEL Steering Committee elections were also announced, with Diego Herrera joining as a new member and Carl George, Troy Dawson, and Jonathan Wright returning. Kevin Fenzi was thanked for 19 years of service as he retires from the committee. On the development mailing list, a discussion about updating OpenColorIO for EPEL 9 highlighted the challenges and general reluctance to introduce updates with library version bumps in stable EPEL releases.
Decisions
- The discussion regarding the EPEL minor version retirement timing was tabled until the next meeting to allow for more feedback in the issue tracker.
- The Spring 2026 EPEL Steering Committee elections concluded, with Diego Herrera, Carl George, Troy Dawson, and Jonathan Wright elected to the four open seats.
Learn more about the EPEL team.
CentOS Hyperscale
The CentOS Hyperscale SIG held its weekly meeting to discuss kernel updates, transactional systems, and tooling. After delays due to security work, new kernel updates for CentOS Stream 9 and 10 are planned for the upcoming week. The group discussed the possibility of shipping an LTS kernel but concluded against it for now, citing the benefits of tracking the Fedora kernel and the viability of using the stock kernel with modules from the Kmods SIG. Significant progress has been made on a dnf5 plugin for transactional updates, thanks to community contributions for Kalpa Desktop, which brings the goal of a transactional Hyperscale variant closer. Contributors interested in having specific packages from Fedora tracked and updated can reach out to the SIG.
On the tooling front, the hs-relmon tool now features a new interactive review mode to simplify package promotion, which was used to release wprof 0.4. In community news, Paweł Zmarzłowski announced his resignation from the SIG. The team also noted that their activity report is overdue and they plan to finalize and publish it soon. Finally, a cleanup of stale packages was performed to reduce repository metadata size, and dnsmasq was backported to the el9 branch to address a security vulnerability.
Learn more about the CentOS Hyperscale team.
ELN
The ELN SIG held one meeting this week, providing status updates on ELNBuildSync (EBS) and bootc. The EBS service has undergone a significant reorganization: its source code has been migrated to a new GitHub repository, its deployment process has been simplified, and a pull request has been submitted to host it within the Fedora Infrastructure OpenShift cluster.
There was also a discussion on the progress of creating bootc images for ELN. This effort is a prerequisite for producing bootc images for CentOS Stream 11. The current work is focused on creating the necessary compose image, with further technical discussions planned for a follow-up meeting.
Learn more about the ELN team.
Atomic
The Atomic group's main focus this week was the migration to the new Fedora Forge atomic organization, discussed during their weekly meeting. The team decided to begin by migrating repositories that do not depend on Konflux, such as documentation and issue trackers. Repositories requiring Konflux for CI/builds will be moved once the integration is unblocked. The discussion also confirmed that the new organization will be the home for bootc-related projects, including work on ELN and a potential move of the CentOS Stream bootc repository. Contributor opportunities include helping with documentation fixes and issue triage after the initial migration, with a cleanup session planned for a future video call.
In community discussions, new solutions were shared for technical challenges on immutable systems. A user provided an updated guide for running the Guix package manager on Fedora Silverblue, and another user shared their method for integrating the KeePassXC and Firefox Flatpaks.
Decisions
- Repositories that do not depend on Konflux (e.g., docs, issues) will be migrated first from GitLab to the new
atomic organization on Fedora Forge.
- Repositories dependent on Konflux will be held back until the Konflux integration is complete.
- The
bootc ELN work and the CentOS Stream bootc container repository are considered in scope for the new atomic organization.
Learn more about the Atomic team.
CoreOS
In this week's CoreOS meeting, the team discussed the upcoming Fedora 45 release cycle and progress on build system modernization. A key topic was the effort to switch CoreOS Assembler (COSA) to run on Fedora 44, with a plan to test the removal of a potentially unneeded dependency to move forward. Following successful work to repair the bootc pipeline, the team decided to re-enable Konflux for building the Rawhide stream. The group also planned the next steps for adopting bootc-image-builder, which includes moving partition layout definitions into the OCI container and staging the rollout across different release streams, starting with Rawhide.
Learn more about the CoreOS team.
AI & ML
During the weekly AI & ML meeting, the group discussed significant packaging updates, including a new version of ollama in rawhide and progress on updating onnxruntime, which is unblocked by a recent protobuf update. There is a call for community help to review several new packages, including the pi-coding-agent and emacs-agent-shell. In a related forum discussion on NPU support, it was noted that an xrt runtime package is now awaiting review. The meeting also addressed the "Fedora AI Developer Desktop" proposal, with a consensus that the SIG should serve as a collaborative space to shape such ideas before wider public announcement. This led to a re-commitment to create better "Getting Involved" documentation to improve the SIG's visibility and accessibility.
Decisions
Learn more about the AI & ML team.
Security
This week, the Security SIG held its weekly meeting, where the main topic of discussion was user privacy in default applications. Sparked by concerns around Firefox, the group considered creating a Fedora-wide policy to disable telemetry and AI features by default, ensuring users must explicitly opt-in. Given the sensitive nature of the topic, the consensus was to continue this conversation in person at the upcoming Flock conference.
A significant opportunity for contributor engagement was announced on the forums with the publication of a new static analysis report on Fedora 45 Critical Path Packages. The report identified 1,242 new findings since the last release, with an AI analysis flagging 14 important and 12 moderate-impact issues that may have security implications. Package maintainers and other contributors are encouraged to review these findings to help secure Fedora's core components.
Learn more about the Security team.
DotNET
The DotNET SIG welcomed a new potential contributor, Anugerah Tallenta Agung, who introduced themselves on the mailing list. As a university student and long-time Fedora user, they expressed interest in contributing to the .NET and gaming experience on Fedora. They are seeking guidance on how to get involved, specifically mentioning sharing their experiences and potentially helping with packaging. This provides an excellent opportunity for the SIG to engage with and mentor a new member. No technical discussions or decisions took place this week.
Learn more about the DotNET team.
Go
This week in the Go SIG, the weekly meeting was lightly attended, leading to the postponement of discussions on open tracker issues. The primary point of information was the announcement of the public Fedora 45 Change proposal to introduce Golang 1.27. This proposal outlines the standard update of the Go toolchain for the next Fedora release.
A discussion on the mailing list resolved a packaging issue where spectool failed to download a source tarball. The problem was identified as a mismatch between the %{gosource} macro's generated URL and the upstream git tag, which included a "v" prefix. The solution was to remove a custom %global tag definition from the spec file, allowing the macro to use its default, correct behavior.
Learn more about the Go team.
Perl
The main point of discussion this week was a call for new maintainers for a large number of orphaned Perl packages. Due to the inactivity of a previous maintainer, there is a risk of these packages being retired. This presents a significant opportunity for contributors to step up and take ownership of packages they are interested in. Other activity consisted of routine package maintenance, including several version updates and a bug fix.
Decisions
Learn more about the Perl team.
Python
The Python team announced and executed the mass rebuild of packages for Python 3.15 in Fedora 45 (Rawhide). The process was conducted in a dedicated side tag to minimize disruption, starting on June 3rd. Maintainers were advised to pause their builds in the main Rawhide branch during this period. The side tag was successfully merged on June 6th, completing the transition.
With Python 3.15 now the default in Rawhide, the focus shifts to resolving any remaining build failures. Maintainers are encouraged to fix their packages, with guidance provided for handling common issues like test failures or broken dependencies. This is a key opportunity for contributors to help ensure their packages are compatible with the latest Python version.
Learn more about the Python team.
Other Discussions
- In a discussion about a request to package the
ouch compression utility, community members explained that Fedora packaging is volunteer-driven. The requester highlighted the tool's memory safety as a key advantage over existing tools like unar and 7z. While there was interest in the tool, no one committed to packaging it.
- A user initiated a discussion about the use of AI in Linux kernel development, raising concerns about code quality, plagiarism, and the increased rate of change. The conversation touched on Fedora's own kernel validation challenges and whether an LTS kernel would be beneficial, with some contributors noting that kernel developers often consider LTS kernels to be of lower quality than the stable series Fedora already ships. It was also suggested that the main kernel mailing list (LKML) is no longer the appropriate venue for such discussions, which should instead be directed to subsystem-specific lists.
- A proposal was made to standardize the inclusion of upstream repository URLs in Fedora package metadata to improve automation, security analysis, and contributor onboarding. The discussion evaluated using the existing
URL or VCS RPM tags. The VCS tag was favored as a more suitable candidate, though concerns were raised about the significant effort required for a mass update and the need for a clear benefit to package maintainers.
- Samyak Jain from Fedora Release Engineering announced that the
fedora-comps repository has been migrated from Pagure to Fedora Forge. The repository, which maintains the XML files for installer groups and dnf metadata, is now located at https://forge.fedoraproject.org/releng/fedora-comps.
- Frantisek Zatloukal provided an update on the rebuilds for the ICU 78.3 update, stating that they would restart early the following week after other conflicting rebuilds, such as the Python 3.15 bump, were completed.
- Other topics discussed this week include a list of new packages added to Fedora, a query on how to easily add another user's fork as a remote in
fedpkg, a clarification that the RPM 6.1 Change Proposal does not include a switch to the v6 package format, a report on static analysis findings in Critical Path packages which sparked a debate on responsible disclosure, and a reminder about the sunset of pagure.io clarifying its scope.
Orphaning packages
Package Updates
New Contributor Introductions
- Pragyan Poudyal, who works at Red Hat, introduced himself and expressed his interest in contributing to Fedora as a package maintainer.
- Raghavan Kanagaraj introduced himself to maintain the
intel-cmt-cat package. It was clarified that as a previously inactive packager, he needed to follow the process for returning contributors to be re-added to the packager group.
- Carl Byington, a former maintainer of
libpst, requested sponsorship to package passwordsafe. Dominik 'Rathann' Mierzejewski sponsored him, welcoming him back into the packager group.