openSUSE 10.2 Release Notes

Copyright © 2006 Novell, Inc.

The release notes are under constant development. Download the newest version during the Internet test or refer to http://www.suse.com/relnotes/i386/openSUSE/10.2/RELEASE-NOTES.en.html.

These release notes cover the following areas:

In the Start-Up Manual, find information about installation and basic system configuration. In the Reference Guide, the system configuration is explained in detail. Additionally, the most important applications are described in the GNOME and KDE User Guides.

General
  1. Installation Media
  2. Availability of Manuals
  3. Adding Extra Installation Sources during Installation
  4. New Software Management Tools: zypper and opensuseupdater
  5. Changes with Firefox 2
  6. New wodim Package to Write Optical Disc Media (CD-ROM and DVD)
  7. The OpenSync Synchronization Framework
  8. Add-On Medium with Additional Languages
Update
  1. Configuration of CUPS (Common UNIX Printing System)
Technical
  1. The Standard Kernel
  2. The New Default File System: ext3
  3. Setting Up LVM and EVMS with YaST
  4. SMART Disk Monitoring Daemon (smartd)
  5. BIOS RAID Supported During Installation
  6. Booting Multiple Instances of openSUSE on One System
  7. GRUB or LILO Left Over in the MBR from a Previous Installation
  8. X.Org-Specific Changes for Developers
  9. New Power Management Options
  10. Booting Systems with HPET Timer Problems

General

Installation Media

openSUSE 10.2 is available on different media:

For a default installation (including KDE or GNOME desktop) in one of the following languages, you only need CDs 1-3: Czech, German, English, Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Brazilian Portuguese, and Chinese.

CDs 4 and 5 and the language Add-On contain further language packages (Polish, Danish, Hungarian, Dutch, Bokmaal, Finnish, and Khmer). For installing these language versions and special packages, use CD 4-5 and the Language Add-On CD. The Language Add-On holds special packages such as more language packages for OpenOffice.org and and KOffice, spell checkers for various languages, specialized fonts, and specialized tools for Korean and other Asian languages.

Availability of Manuals

Find the PDF versions of the manuals on the DVD. Find the HTML version of the manuals in the following packages on the DVDs:

If you install openSUSE from CDs, the HTML version of the manual packages is not installed by default. In this case, you can install the packages from our FTP tree (see section Adding Extra Installation Sources During Installation). After you have installed the packages, the manuals are also available in the Help Centers of your desktop.

Adding Extra Installation Sources during Installation

After setting up the update configuration at the end of the installation, YaST offers to add the following three installation sources, "also called catalogs":

The source RPMs for these catalogs can be found nearby. The source RPMs for "oss" are available at http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/10.2/src-oss, the source RPMs for "non-oss" are available at http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/10.2/src-non-oss . The source RPMs you need are to be downloaded manually.

New Software Management Tools: zypper and opensuseupdater

10.2 introduces a new set of lightweight software management tools for use even without the ZENWorks Management Daemon (ZMD) running:

Changes with Firefox 2

The switch from Firefox version 1.5 to version 2 is a major update. Find detailed update information in the official release notes at http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/2.0/releasenotes/. Note the following changes:

New wodim Package to Write Optical Disc Media (CD-ROM and DVD)

The cdrecord package has been dropped from the distribution. The new wodim package can be used to record data or audio CDs on a CD recorder that conforms with the Orange Book standard or to write DVD media on a DVD recorder.

Alternatively use growisofs for writing DVDs. The graphical front-ends handle this transparently.

The OpenSync Synchronization Framework

For synchronizing mobile devices, the OpenSync suite replaces multisync. For more information, read the "Mobility" part of the Reference manual.

Add-On Medium with Additional Languages

Include the language add-on medium in your list of installation sources if you want better support for one of our tier 2 languages. Tier 2 languages are all those other than the tier 1 languages (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, simplified and traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Czech). Support for tier 1 languages is available on the standard media set.

You can also achieve better support for additional languages when registering additional installation sources at the end of the installation. Just activate the first item of the list of sources to register.

Update

Configuration of CUPS (Common UNIX Printing System)

The update of CUPS from version 1.1 to 1.2 includes incompatible changes. It is not possible to convert the printer configuration from the previous CUPS versions automatically. Use the YaST printer setup ("Hardware" -> "Printer") to reconfigure the printing system.

For reference, check the saved configuration files:

/etc/cups/classes.conf.rpmsave

/etc/cups/printers.conf.rpmsave

Technical

The Standard Kernel

The kernel-default package contains the standard kernel for both uniprocessor and multiprocessor systems. The kernel comes with SMP support and runs with only minimal overhead on uniprocessor systems. There is no kernel-smp package anymore.

The New Default File System: ext3

The YaST partitioner now defaults to create new file systems using the ext3 file system, replacing reiserfs. The ext3 file system is known for its backward compatibility with the ext2 file system.

The high performance directory hashing option is enabled by default. This feature uses hashed b-trees to locate directory entries. By not requiring the entire directory to be read, this accelerates lookups in large directories dramatically. Although it is not recommended, the administrator can disable this feature by removing the "dir_index" option in the YaST partitioner.

Setting Up LVM and EVMS with YaST

Experts can now rely on YaST for configuring LVM (Logical Volume Manager) and EVMS (Enterprise Volume Management). Find detailed information in the Reference manual, Chapter "Advanced Disk Setup".

SMART Disk Monitoring Daemon (smartd)

The SMART Disk Monitoring Daemon (smartd) now also supports SATA hard disks without the "-d ata" switch. Status notification is given through powersavenotify. smartd is not enabled by default. To enable it, start the YaST runlevel editor ("System" -> "System Services (Runlevel)") and check the smartd service.

For more information, see the smartd man page.

BIOS RAID Supported During Installation

BIOS RAID is now supported during installation. Activate it in the BIOS and run a default installation.

Booting Multiple Instances of openSUSE on One System

If multiple instances of openSUSE 10.2 are installed on one machine and the instance in partition 2 is booted from the GRUB in partition 1, the entry in menu.lst in partition 1 for partition 2 should contain the entry:

kernel /boot/vmlinuz

initrd /boot/initrd

instead of

kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.18.2-23-default

initrd /boot/initrd-2.6.18.2-23-default

With this change, it is safe to update the kernel in partition 2 and the system can still be booted from partition 1.

GRUB or LILO Left Over in the MBR from a Previous Installation

If you update an older SUSE Linux installation that wrote GRUB or LILO into the master boot record (MBR) of your disk, it is now replaced by a generic MBR automatically if possible.

If the GRUB or LILO in the MBR does not belong to the partition you are reinstalling or if you want to keep the old behavior, change the setting for the boot loader location in YaST (System -> Boot Loader -> Boot Loader Installation -> Boot Loader Location). As a permanent solution for multiple Linux systems on one computer, we suggest using a generic MBR that loads a master GRUB or a similar boot selector, which is able to chain load operating system loaders from various partitions.

X.Org-Specific Changes for Developers

The X.Org system is installed in /usr. Adjust your programs if needed. If you are referencing fonts by directory names, like XEP, now find the new directories in /usr/share/fonts.

New Power Management Options

The suspend framework switched from powersaved to pm-utils. This switch makes many configuration options in /etc/powersave/sleep obsolete. Instead, configure suspend in /etc/pm/config. For more information, refer to http://en.opensuse.org/Pm-utils.

Booting Systems with HPET Timer Problems

On some NVIDIA nForce 5 motherboards (in particular from ASUS) or others that do not support a HPET timer proper booting might require the acpi_use_timer_override kernel option at the boot prompt.