Fedora 39 announcement, news and known issues
Once a year, we upgrade all the desktop systems to the latest version of Fedora, our Linux desktop operating system.
New in F39, or in our Fedora setup:
Gnome 45 (see below for details)
Various Gnome shell extensions that you can load for yourself from
https://extensions.gnome.org/.
Make sure to update any installed extensions to make them compatible with the new version.
Cloud integration: you can link your
Google Drive,
OwnCloud/SurfDrive and some other cloud storage services the file manager (in addition to
Dropbox, which has been there for a couple of years).
Various online calendars can be integrated in the desktop calendar utility.
Python is now by default 3.12. You can still call python2
to get a python 2.7 interpreter, but NO PACKAGES are installed for it any more; so you can just use this to build your own python2 environment if needed.
Command python
will now invoke python 3.12 so check your own scripts.
We also have the interpreters of python 3.8, 3.10 and 3.11 installed, for compatibility and in case you need them for your own projects or virtualenvs. These are the bare interpreters, we do not provide a complete stack of modules for these older versions.
To move your personally installed modules from python 3.11 (Fedora 37) to python 3.12:
Setup pip
for the old python version: python3.11 -m ensurepip –user
Make list of installed packages with versions: python3.11 -m pip freeze > installed.txt
Install the same packages into the current python: python3 -m pip install –user -r installed.txt
Some 3rd party build and install scripts still don't seem to understand that 3.12 > 3.9, so if something complains our python is too old, the program just doesn't compute.
GCC (C, C++, Fortran) is at version 13.2 now. Some older versions are available through environment modules.
CLANG /LLVM compilers are now at version 17. If necessary, compatibility packages of older versions can be added.
LibreOffice has been upgraded to version 7.6 with lots of improvements and new features. See
Release notes
Java is now available in several versions: The last freely obtainable Oracle Java 8.x release; OpenJDK 8, OpenJDK 11, OpenJDK 17 and OpenJDK latest (currently 21).
Removed software:
Several compatibility libraries were dropped. These were libraries to run programs built with very old versions of the GNU compilers (gcc 3.3, 3.4 and 4.1). If you still have binaries from > 10 years ago, recompiling might be advisable.
Also, all compatibility with 32-bit executables was dropped some time ago. Not surprising, since the last 32-bit machines were bought by our institute in 2006. Known fatalities: acroread
, supermongo
Please use a native Linux pdf viewer, such as atril
or evince
as a replacement for acroread
.
A workaround for (ancient) supermongo
exists but is not installed by default. If you use this software, please contact us and we can make the workaround available on your desktop.
StarDict (dictionary app) is no longer supported; try goldendict, gnome-dictionary or mate-dictionary; for translations, online tools are probably better anyway.
Known issues in Fedora 39
VNC issues: Desktop environments that require hardware accelleration (3D desktop effects) are often too heavy to be used inside a virtual desktop (VNC, X2GO). See
VNC desktop issues for details and workarounds.
An alternative to VNC and X2GO is
XPRA, a tool that can forward a single window or an entire desktop to a remote display.
Gnome doesn't display notification area aka system tray icons any more by default. The fix is, to enable the appindicator
extension: open gnome-extentions-app
(Applications - Extensions
in the menu) to do that. After that, the icons such as status icons of dropbox, zoom etc, will be in your top panel.
Note: in the previous
OS versions, there was an extension named
topicons plus
. If you had that enabled, you will have to enable the new extension now, and possibly remove references to the no longer existing extension.
The clipit
clipboard app that is a default part of Gnome, Cinnamon and MATE desktops, sometimes hangs, which blocks all cut, copy and paste actions. Exit the app by right-clicking on the icon (which looks like a clipboard), and choose the quit action. If this happens a lot to you, you might want to disable the app in your startup applications preferences. The app is only needed to maintain a clipboard history; without it, a single cut/copy and paste is still possible.
Workarounds are in place for some software that was built with older versions of CFITSIO and/or older GFortran (StarLink). When using these programs from within other programs, this workaround may be bypassed (eg, StarLink's perl and python modules). If you run into that issue, let us know so we can provide you with the necessary workaround. Eventually these issues are expected to be solved when new versions of these software packages are released or recompiled using current libraries.
Some theme libraries from earlier releases are no longer present. If you get errors when starting graphical applications such as:
Gtk-Message: Failed to load module "colorreload-gtk-module"
then go to the settings controlling your desktop look & feel and select another theme instead of the one that uses theme libraries that are no longer present.
Some general observations and tips
Gnome. Gnome (>= 3) is a completely different desktop design, which makes the desktop look and behave a bit like a Tablet PC. Some people may like it, but if you don't, “Mate” is available as an alternative, to give you the experience of good old Gnome 2, or “Cinnamon”, for a more desktop-like version of the new Gnome, or try “Gnome Classic”.
More on Gnome
Gnome applications: in every new release, more Gnome applications are rewritten in the style of the Gnome 3 desktop. This means: a separate application menu, displayed Mac-style in the top bar on the Gnome desktop, or under the application icon in other desktops, the most important actions displayed as buttons, and everything else in a menu at the top right in the application window.
See
desktop applications for a table listing alternatives, in case you cannot get used to the new look.
Cinnamon desktop tweaks: While Cinnamon is based on (and compatible with) Gnome 3, there are separate tools for its customization, eg, if you want to modify the programs that start in each session, use cinnamon-session-properties for that (also available from the settings overview).
More on Cinnamon or see the list of available
desktop applications
Programs that start with each session: A lot of programs are started by default in each desktop session. many of them are unnecessary; some of them are annoying or can cause problems. users can disable everything they don't need.
More on session tweaking