Re: TOP TEMA: Ubuntu vijesti
Postano: 13 lis 2016, 18:47
i ja sam išao probat, izdržalo je cca 3 sec i onda se smrznulo. Na drugom monitoru je pisalo da ga koristim ko Touchpad a radi se o stolnom računalu s 28" monitorima. Očito ovo neće biti upotrebljivo još dugo.JH-IM je napisao/la: Ubuntu 16.10 Unity 8 session. Meni se i dalje smrzava sa Nouveau driverom.
Nouveau driver izgleda ima velikih problema sa Mirom u ovom trenutku, neke serije Nvidia imaju više problema nego druge. Trebati će još koji ciklus da se sredi, ali bitno da je došlo do opcije uz Unity 7, oni kojima se ne smrzava je djelomično upotrebljiv, X.org aplikacije rade ali GTK još ima problema sa window decorationima i temama, a nema ni dasha za desktop.codegun je napisao/la:
i ja sam išao probat, izdržalo je cca 3 sec i onda se smrznulo. Na drugom monitoru je pisalo da ga koristim ko Touchpad a radi se o stolnom računalu s 28" monitorima. Očito ovo neće biti upotrebljivo još dugo.
Canonical sada omogućava Ubuntu korisnicima live kernel patching besplatno do tri računala.Today, October 18, 2016, Canonical informs us, through Dustin Kirkland, about a new interesting feature for Ubuntu Linux, which users can enable on their current installations.
First off, we'd like to remind you that the Linux 4.0 kernel released a year and a half ago brought with it a new functionality that would allow users to patch/update their kernel packages without restarting. The feature is called kernel live patching and, until today, no GNU/Linux distribution offered it, for free, to their users. It was only available in commercial offerings like SUSE Enterprise Linux or Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
"Kernel live patching enables runtime correction of critical security issues in your kernel without rebooting. It’s the best way to ensure that machines are safe at the kernel level, while guaranteeing uptime, especially for container hosts where a single machine may be running thousands of different workloads," says Dustin Kirkland, Ubuntu Product and Strategy at Canonical.
It actually makes sense to offer live kernel patching on large-scale operating system deployments, and that's what Canonical is now doing as well for their customers. However, that's about to change today, as the company behind the popular Ubuntu distribution is now offering kernel live patching for everyone, and it's free for up to free of your personal computers.
Here's how to enable kernel live patching in Ubuntu right now
So, if you're interested in enabling live kernel patching on your Ubuntu OS right now, you'll have to go to the Canonical Livepatch Service website and retrieve your livepatch token, which should look like "d3b07384d213edec49eaa6238ad5ff00". After that, install the livepatch Snap using the first command below, and then enable your account using the livepatch token obtained in the second command below.
That’s it! You've just enabled kernel live patching for your Ubuntu system, and you can do that, for free, on two more installations. However, if you want to enable Canonical's Livepatch service on more then three systems, you'll have to purchase a commercial support subscription from them, which starts at $12 per month. Checking the status of your kernel live patching can be done anytime with the following command.Kod: Označi sve
sudo snap install canonical-livepatch sudo canonical-livepatch enable d3b07384d113edec49eaa6238ad5ff00
kernel: 4.4.0-38.57-genericKod: Označi sve
canonical-livepatch status
fully-patched: true
version: "12.2"