Discover Fedora 40'S Latest Enhancements: The Most Recent Advancements in This Popular Linux Distribution
Discover Fedora 40’S Latest Enhancements: The Most Recent Advancements in This Popular Linux Distribution
Quick Links
- Fedora at 40
- Fedora’s Atomic Desktops
- Linux Kernel 6.8
- The GNOME 46 Desktop
- Application Versions
- The Roaring Forties
Key Takeaways
- Fedora 40 boasts speed gains and GNOME 46, providing a blazing user experience.
- Fedora 40 offers Atomic Desktops that use immutable spins with rpm-ostree for specific use cases.
- Kernel 6.8 introduces improved security, operational benefits, and impressive hardware compatibility.
Fedora Linux has hit the big four-oh! With Fedora 40 released, and the first patches available, it’s time to fire up this popular distribution and take it for a test run.
Fedora at 40
They say life begins at 40. Whether that’s true or not, Fedora Linux certainly seems to have found renewed vigor with this milestone release. Fedora was always a fast distribution, and this time round it’s even more noticeable.
Coupled with the speed gains in the new GNOME 46 desktop, you get a blazing user experience. I don’t recall using a Linux desktop as fast as this. But as we’ll see, there’s more to Fedora 40 than speed gains and GNOME 46.
Fedora’s official desktop is GNOME, and that’s the version we checked out. There are 10 other variants, or “spins” of Fedora 40 available, each with a different desktop environment, so you’ve got plenty of choice.
Dave McKay/How-To Geek
Thankfully, you get a selection of bundled desktop wallpapers to choose from because the default one is too muted and drab for my liking. But don’t let that set the tone. Fedora 40 is anything but boring .
Fedora’s Atomic Desktops
Fedora 40 has all the usual spins available , with some additional organizational changes to immutable spins.
The immutable spins are now called Atomic Desktops. The four Atomic Desktops are Silverblue, which uses GNOME as its desktop environment manager, Kinoite, which uses KDE Plasma, Budgie, which uses its own Budgie desktop environment, and Sway, which uses the Sway tiling manager.
These all use rpm-ostree , which describes itself as a hybrid image and package manager system. Operating system vendors can release images that are downloaded and installed, and then modified by a collection of RPM packages on the local computer.
Images are created, tested, and updated as required, off-line, by the vendor. Once they’re ready, they can be downloaded to the target computers, IoT devices, virtual servers, and so forth. Additional local modifications are achieved by adding applications from RPMs, in a process called layering.
This gives a very granular means of rolling back from upgrades without affecting user data. These are spins intended for specific use cases, usually where the scale of installations and updates is a factor. In most cases, you’ll be better served with a regular Fedora spin.
But, if you were wondering where the immutable spins have gone, they’re still here, but with a name change.
## Linux Kernel 6.8We used a post-release version of Fedora, patched up to date. This gave us kernel version 6.8.7. New kernels bring two categories of benefits. One is bug fixes and security patches, which are vital in helping protect your computer. The other benefits are operational improvements or new features. Kernel 6.8 delivers in both camps.
Security is bolstered with extended support for Secure Boot and disk encryption, and the ability to “stack” Linux security modules so that you can layer your protection. Intel Shadow Stack is now supported.
Running processes can verify their return addresses, which is the location in memory that code execution should return to when the current process has concluded. Processes can compare the value retrieved from the stack with the value retrieved from the Shadow Stack. Differences between the two values might indicate suspicious or malicious activity.
Operational benefits include replacing the Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS) with a new Earliest Eligible Virtual Deadline First (EEVDF) CPU scheduler. The new scheduler is said to reduce latency in certain scenarios.
- Title: Discover Fedora 40'S Latest Enhancements: The Most Recent Advancements in This Popular Linux Distribution
- Author: Robert
- Created at : 2024-08-30 15:07:09
- Updated at : 2024-08-31 15:07:09
- Link: https://techtrends.techidaily.com/discover-fedora-40s-latest-enhancements-the-most-recent-advancements-in-this-popular-linux-distribution/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.