Takashi Iwai and Richard Brown proposed using the new 4.1 LTS Kernel as the default Kernel in Leap, which was integrated into the distribution on July 22, 2015. However there were concerns regarding the support for new hardware. Original plans for Leap were to use the SLE provided Version 3.12 Kernel. Reviews are passed the project maintainer accepts the submit Known from Tumbleweed are applied to those requests. The usual automated and manual review methods as Packagers branch and file submit requests to openSUSE:Leap:42.1 like withĪny other project. Project Layout openSUSE:Leap:42.1 packages with free software license openSUSE:Leap:42.1:NonFree packages with non free licenses openSUSE:Leap:42.1:Update updates for packages with free software license openSUSE:Leap:42.1:NonFree:Updates updates for packages with non free licenses Package Submission Workflow Stephan Kulow proposed that the basic work flow is that SLE sources provide the core system and 4, 2015,( ANNOUNCEMENT) and can be downloaded from The development of Leap proceeded through communications on the Factory Mailing List and how to develop the baby cemented the path toward developing the first version of Leap 42.1. Richard Brown captured the idea of a new release using the SLE sources in his presentation The Future is unwritten at oSC15. This opened up the possibility to unite SLE and openSUSE developers and processes for stable distribution releases (SLE12/13.2). At the openSUSE Conference 2015 SUSE announced that it has released SUSE Linux Enterprise (SLE) sources, including all maintenance updates, into the OBS reference server.
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