Good point well made. I should have been specific by pointing out that it’s only the Redhat devs that are no longer packaging RPM versions, the community is obviously free to maintain any packages it wishes (within project rules), and have adopted LibreOffice.
No worries, there is a bit of nuance to it that can be easy to mix up. People often make the mistake of thinking Fedora == Red Hat. Red Hat folks are certainly involved, but Fedora does have a healthy amount of independence too. The best example of this is the fact that Fedora uses btrfs as the default filesystem, while it’s disabled entirely in RHEL.
I have no idea. That would probably require the Stratis developers submitting a change proposal, and the Fedora Engineering Steering Committee (FESCo) approving it.
Good point well made. I should have been specific by pointing out that it’s only the Redhat devs that are no longer packaging RPM versions, the community is obviously free to maintain any packages it wishes (within project rules), and have adopted LibreOffice.
No worries, there is a bit of nuance to it that can be easy to mix up. People often make the mistake of thinking Fedora == Red Hat. Red Hat folks are certainly involved, but Fedora does have a healthy amount of independence too. The best example of this is the fact that Fedora uses btrfs as the default filesystem, while it’s disabled entirely in RHEL.
Will Fedora ever support Stratis on install like RHEL does?
I have no idea. That would probably require the Stratis developers submitting a change proposal, and the Fedora Engineering Steering Committee (FESCo) approving it.