Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Why openSUSE

Why openSUSE

1. Difference between openSUSE and SUSE
2. openSUSE's gold triangle: OBS, openQA, Yast
3. How to contribute

Avatar for binary-sequence

binary-sequence

May 31, 2018
Tweet

Other Decks in Programming

Transcript

  1. openSUSE is not SUSE openSUSE (community) • Leap • Tumbleweed

    Help • forum.opensuse.org • IRC (Internet Relay Chat) – freenode server – channel #suse SUSE (company) • cloud computing (aaS) • software-defined storage • SUSE Linux Enterprise (SLE) • more… Help • paid support
  2. Why should I use openSUSE? “Those who do, decide” -openSUSE

    “openSUSE is a do-ocracy” -Richard Brown • Submit a fix to their devel sources. • Feedback in few days. • When accepted, changes released within a week.
  3. How to contribute to openSUSE? Contributing to factory (Tumbleweed) contributor

    openSUSE local ←check out← OBS home ← branch ← devel project --> factory --> Tumbleweed snapshot →check in→ → submit request → Contributing to released version (Leap/SLE) • No new packages • Only fixes (maintenance request)
  4. Do you want to know more? May 25th Let's talk

    about testing, software and user experience in open source. Santiago Zarate Room 107 11:00am openSUSE is what you make it. Richard Brown Room 105 15:00 "Hello world" from OpenQA. Jiawei Room 349 16:00 May 26th Tumbleweed Snapshots: Rolling With You. Jimmy Berry Room 105 13:00 May 27th What's new in OBS? David Kang Room 105 10:00am Developing SLE, Factory and Leap distributions at the same time, impossible? Frederic Crozat Room 105 14:45
  5. License This slide deck is licensed under the Creative Commons

    Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. It can be shared and adapted for any purpose (even commercially) as long as Attribution is given and any derivative work is distributed under the same license. Details can be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ General Disclaimer This document is not to be construed as a promise by any participating organisation to develop, deliver, or market a product. It is not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasing decisions. openSUSE makes no representations or warranties with respect to the contents of this document, and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. The development, release, and timing of features or functionality described for openSUSE products remains at the sole discretion of openSUSE. Further, openSUSE reserves the right to revise this document and to make changes to its content, at any time, without obligation to notify any person or entity of such revisions or changes. All openSUSE marks referenced in this presentation are trademarks or registered trademarks of SUSE LLC, in the United States and other countries. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Credits Template Richard Brown [email protected] Design & Inspiration openSUSE Design Team http://opensuse.github.io/branding- guidelines/