fedora-release README-i386-en, 1.2, 1.3 README-ppc-en, 1.2, 1.3 README-x86_64-en, 1.2, 1.3 RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en, 1.3, 1.4 RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en, 1.3, 1.4 RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en, 1.3, 1.4 fedora-release.spec, 1.6, 1.7 index.html, 1.2, 1.3

Bill Nottingham (notting) fedora-extras-commits at redhat.com
Wed May 4 18:40:33 UTC 2005


Author: notting

Update of /cvs/fedora/fedora-release
In directory cvs-int.fedora.redhat.com:/tmp/cvs-serv12036

Modified Files:
	README-i386-en README-ppc-en README-x86_64-en 
	RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en 
	RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en fedora-release.spec index.html 
Log Message:
updated relnotes from kwade
bump version



Index: README-i386-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/README-i386-en,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- README-i386-en	6 Apr 2005 21:29:55 -0000	1.2
+++ README-i386-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.3
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-                              Fedora Core 3.91 README
+                              Fedora Core 3.92 README
 
    Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 


Index: README-ppc-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/README-ppc-en,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- README-ppc-en	6 Apr 2005 21:29:55 -0000	1.2
+++ README-ppc-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.3
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-                              Fedora Core 3.91 README
+                              Fedora Core 3.92 README
 
    Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 


Index: README-x86_64-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/README-x86_64-en,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- README-x86_64-en	6 Apr 2005 21:29:55 -0000	1.2
+++ README-x86_64-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.3
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-                              Fedora Core 3.91 README
+                              Fedora Core 3.92 README
 
    Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 


Index: RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en	6 Apr 2005 21:33:20 -0000	1.3
+++ RELEASE-NOTES-i386-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.4
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-== Fedora Core 4 test 2 Release Notes ==
+= Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes =
 
 Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
 Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
 copy of the license is available at
-http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
+[1]http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
 
 This document may be copied and distributed in any medium, either
 commercially or non-commercially, provided that the GNU Free
@@ -30,14 +30,13 @@
 All other trademarks and copyrights referred to are the property of
 their respective owners.
 
-The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key
-is:
+The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key is:
 
 CA B4 4B 99 6F 27 74 4E 86 12 7C DF B4 42 69 D0 4F 2A 6F D2
 
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-         1. Fedora Core 4 test2 Release Notes
+         1. Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes
          2. Introduction
          3. Hardware Requirements
                1. CPU Requirements
@@ -57,8 +56,7 @@
                8. Macintosh File Server
                9. X Window System
               10. Miscellaneous Notes
-         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or
-Deprecated/Nuked
+         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked
                1. Packages Added
                2. Packages Moved Out Of Core
          9. An Overview of the Fedora Project
@@ -77,7 +75,7 @@
 For more information, refer to the Fedora Project overview later in
 this document.
 
-The following topics related to Fedora Core 4 test 2 are covered in this
+The following topics related to Fedora Core 4test3 are covered in this
 document:
 
     * Introduction (this section)
@@ -91,29 +89,29 @@
 == Hardware Requirements ==
 
 The following information represents the minimum hardware requirements
-necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
-video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
-modes and/or post-installation usage.
+  The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
+  video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
+  modes and/or post-installation usage.
 
-=== CPU Requirements ===
+===  CPU Requirements ===
 
 This section lists the CPU specifications required by Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
-processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix, and
-VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following Intel
-processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
+  The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
+  processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix,
+  and VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following
+  Intel processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
 
     * Minimum: Pentium-class
 
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
+Fedora Core 4test3 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
 earlier CPUs (such as Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III,
 and including AMD and VIA variants). This approach has been taken
 because Pentium-class optimizations actually result in reduced
@@ -127,18 +125,17 @@
 
 === Hard Disk Space Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
-taken up by Fedora Core 4 test 2 after the installation is
-complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
-installation to support the installation environment. This additional
-disk space corresponds to the size of /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on
-CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in /var/lib/rpm on the installed
-system.
+  The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
+  taken up by Fedora Core 4test3 after the installation is
+  complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
+  installation to support the installation environment. This
+  additional disk space corresponds to the size of
+  /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in
+  /var/lib/rpm on the installed system.
 
 In practical terms, this means that as little as an additional 90MB
 can be required for a minimal installation, while as much as an
@@ -156,7 +153,7 @@
 
 === Memory Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
   * Minimum for text-mode: 64MB
   * Minimum for graphical: 192MB
@@ -164,120 +161,167 @@
 
 == Overview of This Release ==
 
-The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core
-4 test 2:
+The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core 4test3:
 
   * GCC 4.0
   * GNOME 2.10
   * KDE 3.4
-  * Native Eclipse 3.1M5
+  * Native Eclipse 3.1M6 - Part of free Java stack
   * MySQL 4.1
   * PHP 5.0
+  * Xen 2 - Virtualization to run multiple versions of an OS
+  * GFS 6.1-0.pre22 - Cluster file system
+  * Evince 0.2.1 - Universal document viewer
+  * GDM 2.6 - Includes early login capability
+
+  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy.
+    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .  This is a list of
+    daemons protected by the targeted policy:
 
-  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy For
-    more information, refer to the SELinux FAQ at
-    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .
+    * NetworkManager
     * amanda
     * apache
+    * apmd
+    * arpwatch
+    * auditd
+    * bluetooth
+    * canna
+    * cardmgr
+    * checkpolicy
     * chkpwd
+    * compat
+    * comsat
+    * consoletype
+    * cpucontrol
+    * cpuspeed
+    * crond
     * cups
+    * cvs
+    * cyrus
+    * dbskkd
+    * dbusd
     * dhcpc
     * dhcpd
     * dictd
+    * dmidecode
     * dovecot
     * fingerd
+    * fsadm
     * ftpd
+    * getty
+    * hald
+    * hostname
+    * hotplug
     * howl
+    * hwclock
     * i18n_input
     * ifconfig
+    * inetd
     * init
     * initrc
-    * inetd
     * innd
     * kerberos
+    * klogd
     * ktalkd
+    * kudzu
     * ldconfig
+    * load_policy
     * login
     * lpd
     * mailman
     * modutil
     * mta
     * mysqld
-    * NetworkManager
     * named
+    * netutils
     * nscd
     * ntpd
     * portmap
     * postgresql
+    * pppd
     * privoxy
     * radius
     * radvd
+    * restorecon
     * rlogind
     * rpcd
+    * rpm
     * rshd
     * rsync
     * samba
+    * saslauthd
+    * sendmail
+    * setfiles
     * slapd
     * snmpd
     * squid
+    * ssh
     * stunnel
     * syslogd
     * telnetd
     * tftpd
+    * udev
+    * updfstab
+    * uucpd
+    * webalizer
     * winbind
+    * xdm
     * ypbind
     * ypserv
     * zebra
 
+
 == Installation-Related Notes ==
 
 This section outlines anything noteworthy that is related to Anaconda
 (the Fedora Core installation program) and installing Fedora Core
-4 test 2 in general.
+4test3 in general.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4 test 2 DVD ISO image, keep
-in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
-larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File size
-limit exceeded error.
+  If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4test3 DVD ISO image, keep
+  in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
+  larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File
+  size limit exceeded error.
 
 The curl and ncftpget file downloading tools do not have this
 limitation, and can successfully download files larger than 2GB.
 
 Bittorrent is another method for downloading large files.
 
+
 Anaconda Notes
 
   * The Fedora Core installation program has the ability to test the
-integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD, hard
-drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat recommends that
-you test all installation media before starting the installation
-process, and before reporting any installation-related bugs (many of
-the bugs reported are actually due to improperly-burned CDs). To use
-this test, type linux mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
+    integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD,
+    hard drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat
+    recommends that you test all installation media before starting
+    the installation process, and before reporting any
+    installation-related bugs (many of the bugs reported are actually
+    due to improperly-burned CDs). To use this test, type linux
+    mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
 
   * Memory testing may be performed prior to installing Fedora Core by
-entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
-standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory testing
-continues until the Esc key is pressed.
+    entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
+    standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory
+    testing continues until the Esc key is pressed.
 
 NOTE: You must boot from CD-ROM 1 (or a rescue CD-ROM) in order to use
 this feature.
 
-  * Fedora Core 4 test 2 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
-installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
-installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM (or
-systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer image) can
-use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or less will continue
-to use the text-based installer.
+  * Fedora Core 4test3 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
+    installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
+    installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM
+    (or systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer
+    image) can use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or
+    less will continue to use the text-based installer.
 
 == Installation-Related Issues ==
 
   * Certain hardware configurations (particularly those with LCD
-displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
-installation program. In these instances, restart the installation,
-and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
+    displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
+    installation program. In these instances, restart the
+    installation, and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
 
 NOTE: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean graphical installations started
 using the "nofb" option will start in English, and then switch to the
@@ -285,9 +329,9 @@
 process begins.
 
   * Some Sony VAIO(R) notebook systems may experience problems
-installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
-installation process and add the following option to the boot command
-line:
+    installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
+    installation process and add the following option to the boot
+    command line:
 
 pci=off ide1=0x180,0x386
 
@@ -296,28 +340,28 @@
 first time Fedora Core is booted.
 
   * Serial mice are known to be inoperative during
-installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
-properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
-119474 for more information:
+    installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
+    properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
+    119474 for more information:
 
 [6]http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=119474
 
   * There have been issues observed when upgrading Red Hat Linux
-7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
-issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat Linux
-RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian RPMs. This
-configuration is not supported. You have several choices in resolving
-this issue:
-
-1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading to
-Fedora Core.
-
-2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall Ximian
-GNOME.
-
-3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
-remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding Fedora
-Core RPMs.
+    7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
+    issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat
+    Linux RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian
+    RPMs. This configuration is not supported. You have several
+    choices in resolving this issue:
+
+    1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading
+       to Fedora Core.
+
+    2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall
+       Ximian GNOME.
+
+    3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
+       remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding
+       Fedora Core RPMs.
 
 You must resolve the version overlap using one of the above choices.
 Failure to do so will result in an unstable GNOME configuration.
@@ -325,22 +369,95 @@
 == Package-Specific Notes ==
 
 The following sections contain information regarding packages that
-have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4 test 2. For easier
+have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4test3. For easier
 access, they are organized using the same groups used in Anaconda.
 
 === Base ===
 
 This section contains information related to basic system components.
 
+
+auditd and log files
+
+The audit daemon, auditd, is now enabled by default.  When auditd is
+running, the kernel directs audit messages to
+/var/log/audit/audit.log.  The location of this file is specified in
+/etc/auditd.conf.
+
+AVC messages for SELinux are sent using the audit infrastructure.
+These messages are now in /var/log/audit/audit.log.
+
+When auditd is not running, the kernel passes audit messages to
+syslog.  These logs are typically kept in /var/log/messages and are
+viewable using dmesg.
+
+Audit extensions are now compiled into PAM.  All programs that do
+grant entry to the system or change user account attributes will
+generate an audit message.
+
+To enable auditing within the kernel, you must pass the parameter
+audit=1 to the kernel during boot.  Otherwise, you can use this
+command to enable auditing during run time:
+
+  'auditctl -e 1'
+
+
+LinuxThreads v. NPTL
+
+As the next step in removing support for the obsolete LinuxThreads
+library, code compiled and linked on FC4 now automatically uses the NPTL
+headers and libraries.  
+
+In previous releases, since Red Hat Linux 9, the default was to use
+LinuxThreads since the interface is mostly forward compatible.  The
+advantages of the NPTL interface is that the cancellation handling is
+faster (when -fexception is used, even in C code) and that the
+additional interfaces are now available without special compiler and
+linker parameters.  In other words, you do not need to use
+-I/usr/include/nptl and -L/usr/lib{,64}/nptl any longer.  Note that
+lib{,64} is to be interpreted as lib64 on platforms which place DSOs
+in lib64 directories, and lib otherwise.
+
+In FC4 it is still possible to create code using the LinuxThreads
+definitions.  For this the linuxthreads-devel package must be
+installed and
+
+   -I/usr/include/linuxthreads -L/usr/lib{,64}/linuxthreads
+
+must be passed to the compiler.
+
+At runtime, it used to be possible to use the LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
+environment variable to select the appropriate version of glibc and the
+libpthread DSO.  Now it is additionally necessary to specify
+
+  LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib{,64}/obsolete/linuxthreads
+
+in the environment.  This is because the runtime libraries have also
+been moved out of the way.  There might programs that will not work if
+the program uses an unfortunate DT_RPATH (which overwrites the
+LD_LIBRARY_PATH setting).
+
+All this makes it more cumbersome to run programs which depend on
+LinuxThreads.  But this is intentional.  
+
+  Important
+
+  FC5 will not have LinuxThreads support and all programs have to be
+  converted to use NPTL by then.
+
+In general, conversion to using NPTL has not been an issue.
+
+
 slocate database
 
-The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by
-default.  Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to
-"yes" in /etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by default.
+Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to "yes" in
+/etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+
 
 openssh
 
-The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4 test 2 contains OpenSSH 3.9
+The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4test3 contains OpenSSH 3.9
 includes strict permission and ownership checks for the ~/.ssh/config
 file. These checks mean that ssh will exit if this file does not have
 appropriate ownership and permissions.
@@ -367,51 +484,63 @@
 This section contains the most elemental components of Fedora Core,
 including the kernel.
 
-  * In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a
-separate package for the kernel source code when that source code
-already exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4 test 2 no
-longer includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access
-to the kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To
-create an exploded source tree from this file, perform the following
-steps (note that <version> refers to the version specification for
-your currently-running kernel):
 
-        1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
-following sources:
+yum
+
+The sqllite database is now used by yum, and makes performance
+noticeably faster.
 
-          * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso
-image
+The Fedora Extras repository is now enabled by default.
 
-          * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-          * By running the following command:
+kernel source
 
-                up2date --get-source kernel
+In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a separate
+package for the kernel source code when that source code already
+exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4test3 no longer
+includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access to the
+kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To create an
+exploded source tree from this file, perform the following steps (note
+that <version> refers to the version specification for your
+currently-running kernel):
 
-        2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
-configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
-/usr/src/redhat/)
+  1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
+     following sources:
 
-        3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
-following command:
+     * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso image
 
-        rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+     * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-        (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+     * By running the following command:
 
-        On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be
-located in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+         up2date --get-source kernel
 
-        4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific
-kernels shipped in Fedora Core 4 test 2 are in the /configs/
-directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
-/configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following command
-to place the desired configuration file in the proper place for
-building:
+  2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
+     configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
+     /usr/src/redhat/)
+     
+       rpm -ivh kernel-<version>.src.rpm
+
+  3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
+     following command:
+
+       rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+
+       (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+
+     On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be located
+     in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+
+   4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific kernels
+      shipped in Fedora Core 4test3 are in the /configs/
+      directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
+      /configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following
+      command to place the desired configuration file in the proper
+      place for building:
 
         cp <desired-file> ./.config
 
-        5. Issue the following command:
+   5. Issue the following command:
 
         make oldconfig
 
@@ -425,11 +554,13 @@
 For example, to build the foo.ko module, create the following file
 (named Makefile) in the directory containing the foo.c file:
 
-obj-m := foo.o
+obj-m    := foo.o
 
-KDIR := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build PWD := $(shell pwd)
+KDIR    := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build
+PWD    := $(shell pwd)
 
-default: $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
+default:
+$(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
         
 
 Issue the make command to build the foo.ko module.
@@ -453,6 +584,17 @@
 
 This section contains information related to Web-related tools.
 
+
+mod_perl
+
+The "RC5" release of mod_perl 2.0 is now included; the API provided by
+this release is incompatible with previous 1.99_xx releases.  Please
+refer to the following document for discussion of how to adapt code to
+use the new API:
+
+   http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/rename.html 
+
+
 php
 
 Version 5.0 of PHP is now included, which includes a number of changes
@@ -462,6 +604,10 @@
 
 http://www.php.net/manual/en/migration5.php
 
+The /usr/bin/php binary is now built using the "CLI" command-line
+SAPI, rather than the CGI SAPI.  The CGI SAPI is now available as
+/usr/bin/php-cgi; this binary also includes FastCGI support.
+
 The following extensions have been added:
 
  * the "mysqli" extension, the newly MySQL interface designed
@@ -469,22 +615,29 @@
  * the "soap" extension, which can be used to implement a SOAP server
    or client
 
+The following extensions are now available as optional loadable
+extensions, rather than being built in to the php binaries:
+
+ * dba, now available in the php-dba package
+ * bcmath, now available in the php-bcmath package
+
 === Windows File Server ===
 
 This section contains information related to Samba, software that
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Windows systems.
 
+
 samba
 
 Browsing of Windows shares (also known as SMB browsing) fails on
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 systems that have the standard firewall
+Fedora Core 4test3 systems that have the standard firewall
 configured. This is most easily noticed in the failure of Nautilus to
 display shares. The failure is due to the firewall disrupting the
 broadcast mode of SMB browsing, which is Samba's default
 setting. There are two workarounds:
 
   * Configure a WINS server on the network, and set the "wins server"
-option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
+    option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
 
   * Disable the firewall
 
@@ -502,25 +655,26 @@
 
 === Macintosh File Server ===
 
-This section contains information related to netatalk, software that
+This section contains information related to netatalk, software that 
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Macintosh systems.
 
+
 netatalk
 
-The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource
-forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to
-Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation
-of the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
+The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource 
+forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to 
+Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation of 
+the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
 
-The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the
+The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the 
 netatalk site:
 
 http://netatalk.sourceforge.net/2.0/htmldocs/upgrade.html
 
-It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4,
-the files are at:
+It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4, the 
+files are at:
 
-/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page
+/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page 
 25, document page 33.
 
 or
@@ -535,9 +689,9 @@
 xorg-x11
 
   * Users new to the X.org X11 implementation should take note of a
-few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
-which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In particular,
-the names of some files have changed:
+    few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
+    which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In
+    particular, the names of some files have changed:
 
 X Server Binary:
 
@@ -561,13 +715,13 @@
 sure that you are using the correct files.
 
   * There has been some confusion regarding font-related issues under
-the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and versions of
-Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there are two font
-subsystems, each with different characteristics:
+    the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and
+    versions of Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there
+    are two font subsystems, each with different characteristics:
 
 - The original (15+ year old) subsystem is referred to as the "core X
-font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
-anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
+  font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
+  anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
 
 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--10-100-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
 
@@ -580,10 +734,10 @@
 Luxi Sans-10
 
   * Over time, fontconfig/Xft will replace the core X font
-subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK 2
-toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use the
-fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses the
-core X fonts.
+    subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK
+    2 toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use
+    the fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses
+    the core X fonts.
 
 In the future, Fedora Core may support only fontconfig/Xft in place of
 the XFS font server as the default local font access method.
@@ -591,29 +745,28 @@
 NOTE: An exception to the font subsystem usage outlined above is
 OpenOffice.org (which uses its own font rendering technology).
 
-If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4 test 2 system, you
+If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4test3 system, you
 must be aware that the steps necessary depend on which font subsystem
 is to use the new fonts. For the core X font subsystem, you must:
 
-1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it doesn't already
-exist):
+1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it does not
+   already exist):
 
 mkdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 2. Copy the new font file into /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 3. Update the font information by issuing the following commands (note
-that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
-appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be entered
-on a single line):
+   that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
+   appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be
+   entered on a single line):
 
-ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o
-/usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
+ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o /usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
 
 mkfontdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 4. If you had to create /usr/share/fonts/local/, you must then add it
-to the X font server (xfs) path:
+   to the X font server (xfs) path:
 
 chkfontpath --add /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
@@ -639,10 +792,10 @@
 the fontconfig font subsystem can use the font.
 
   * Due to the transition to the new font system based on
-fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any changes
-made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these applications, a font
-can be configured by adding the following lines to the file
-~/.gtkrc.mine:
+    fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any
+    changes made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these
+    applications, a font can be configured by adding the following
+    lines to the file ~/.gtkrc.mine:
 
 style "user-font" {
 
@@ -650,7 +803,7 @@
 
 }
 
-widget_class " *" style "user-font"
+widget_class "  *" style "user-font"
 
 (Where <font-specification> represents a font specification in the
 style used by traditional X applications, such as
@@ -661,6 +814,17 @@
 This section contains information related to packages that do not fit
 in any of the proceeding categories.
 
+  OpenOffice and upgrading test releases
+
+If you choose to go counter to the recommendation to *not* upgrade
+from a previous test release, you may encounter a problem with
+OpenOffice following the upgrade.
+
+To resolve this, you must do the following command *before* doing the
+upgrade:
+
+  rm -rf /usr/lib/openoffice.org*/share/template/*/wizard/bitmap
+
 
 == Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked ==
 
@@ -670,61 +834,73 @@
 This section contains lists of packages that fit into the following
 categories:
 
-  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4test3
 
-  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4test3
 
   * Packages that have a changed version since Fedora Core 3
   
   * Packages that have been deprecated, and may be removed from a
-future
-    release of Fedora Core
+    future release of Fedora Core
 
 === Packages Added ===
 
-The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4test3.  This is
+based on a treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005:
 
- * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_2fc
+ * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_5fc
  * antlr-2.7.4-2jpp_1fc
  * aqbanking-1.0.4beta-2
  * aqhbci-1.0.2beta-2
+ * aspell-is-0.51.1-1
  * avalon-framework-4.1.4-2jpp_5fc
  * avalon-logkit-1.2-2jpp_4fc
  * bcel-5.1-1jpp_4fc
- * classpath-inetlib-1.0-1jpp_1fc
+ * ccs-0.25-0.1
  * classpathx-jaf-1.0-2jpp_3fc
  * classpathx-mail-1.0-3jpp_1fc
+ * cman-1.0-0.pre33.2
+ * cman-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.5
  * compat-gcc-296-2.96-132.fc4
  * compat-gcc-32-3.2.3-47.fc4
  * compat-readline43-4.3-2
- * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.12
- * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.19
+ * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.14
+ * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.20
  * cryptix-3.2.0-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptix-asn1-20011119-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptsetup-luks-1.0-1
  * dcraw-0.0.20050227-1
- * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-0.pre8.0
- * dmidecode-2.6-1.13
- * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M5.17
- * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-9
- * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M5.3
- * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-19
- * eclipse-pydev-0.9.0_fc-4
- * evince-0.1.9-1
- * fonts-chinese-2.15-1
+ * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-2.0
+ * dlm-1.0-0.pre21.2
+ * dlm-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.6
+ * dmidecode-2.6-1.14
+ * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M6.14
+ * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-14
+ * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M6.5
+ * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-21
+ * eclipse-pydev-0.9.3_fc-7
+ * evince-0.2.1-1
+ * fence-1.27-1
+ * fonts-chinese-2.15-2
  * fonts-indic-1.9-2
- * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-2
- * fonts-korean-1.0.11-2
- * gjdoc-0.7.3-1
- * gnome-doc-utils-0.1.3-1
- * gnome-menus-2.10.1-1
+ * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-3
+ * fonts-korean-1.0.11-4
+ * GFS-6.1-0.pre22.1
+ * GFS-kernel-2.6.11.4-20050503.144108.FC4.1
+ * gjdoc-0.7.4-4
+ * gnbd-1.0-0.pre13.1
+ * gnbd-kernel-2.6.11.2-20050420.133124.FC4.10
+ * gnome-doc-utils-0.2.0-2
+ * gnome-menus-2.10.1-3
  * gnome-python2-extras-2.10.0-2.1
- * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_1fc
+ * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_3fc
  * gnu.getopt-1.0.9-4jpp_1fc
+ * gulm-1.0-0.pre28.3
  * gwenhywfar-1.7.2-2
- * hardlink-1.0-1.11
- * iiimf-12.1.1-11.svn2435
- * ipv6calc-0.48-3
+ * hardlink-1.0-1.13
+ * iddev-1.9-19
+ * iiimf-12.2-0.7.svn2578
+ * ipv6calc-0.48-5
  * irqbalance-1.12-1.18
  * jakarta-commons-beanutils-1.7.0-1jpp_1fc
  * jakarta-commons-collections-3.1-1jpp_1fc
@@ -742,37 +918,45 @@
  * jakarta-taglibs-standard-1.1.1-4jpp_1fc
  * java_cup-0.10-0.k.1jpp_2fc
  * jdepend-2.6-2jpp_3fc
- * jessie-1.0.0-3
+ * jessie-1.0.0-6
  * jlex-1.2.6-1jpp_2fc
- * jsch-0.1.17-2jpp_1fc
+ * jsch-0.1.18-1jpp_1fc
  * junit-3.8.1-3jpp_4fc
  * jzlib-1.0.5-2jpp_1fc
  * kdeaccessibility-3.4.0-1
  * ksh-20050202-1
  * latex2html-2002.2.1-1
  * ldapjdk-4.17-1jpp_2fc
- * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-2
- * libgconf-java-2.10.0-1
- * libglade-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgnome-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgtk-java-2.6.1.1-1
+ * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-3
+ * libgconf-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libglade-java-2.10.1-3
+ * libgnome-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libgtk-java-2.6.2-1
  * linux-atm-2.5.0-0.20050118.2
  * lksctp-tools-1.0.2-5
  * log4j-1.2.8-7jpp_3fc
- * longrun-0.9-1.8
- * lvm2-cluster-2.00.29-1.22.FC4
+ * longrun-0.9-1.9
+ * lvm2-cluster-2.01.09-2.1
+ * magma-1.0-0.pre21.4
+ * magma-plugins-1.0-0.pre16.11
  * mcelog-0.4-1.8
  * microcode_ctl-1.11-1.21
- * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_1fc
- * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_2fc
- * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-5
+ * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_2fc
+ * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_5fc
+ * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-6
  * openhpi-2.0.3-2
  * OpenIPMI-1.4.11-5
  * openssl097a-0.9.7a-2
  * oro-2.0.8-1jpp_2fc
- * poppler-0.1.2-1
+ * perl-Archive-Zip-1.14-1
+ * perl-Carp-Clan-5.3-1
+ * perl-IO-String-1.06-3
+ * perl-IO-Zlib-1.04-4
+ * perl-Net-Telnet-3.03-4
+ * pm-utils-0.01-1
+ * poppler-0.3.0-2
  * puretls-0.9-0.b4.1jpp_2fc
- * python-docs-2.4-102
+ * python-docs-2.4.1-1
  * python-elementtree-1.2.6-4
  * python-numeric-23.7-2
  * python-sqlite-1.1.6-1
@@ -780,28 +964,28 @@
  * python-urlgrabber-2.9.6-1
  * readahead-1.0-1.7
  * regexp-1.3-1jpp_4fc
- * rng-utils-2.0-1.5
+ * rgmanager-1.9.31-0
+ * rng-utils-2.0-1.6
  * salinfo-0.5-1.4
- * servletapi5-5.0.18-1jpp_3fc
  * slib-3a1-2
  * smartmontools-5.33-1.5
- * sqlite-3.1.2-2
- * struts11-1.1-1jpp_2fc
- * system-config-lvm-0.9.22-1.0
+ * sqlite-3.1.2-3
+ * struts11-1.1-1jpp_4fc
+ * system-config-lvm-0.9.25-1.0
  * texi2html-1.76-2
- * tomcat5-5.0.30-1jpp_2fc
- * x86info-1.13-1.9
+ * tomcat5-5.0.30-5jpp_1fc
+ * x86info-1.13-1.10
  * xalan-j2-2.6.0-2jpp_1fc
- * xen-2-20050403
- * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_1fc
- * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_5fc
+ * xen-2-20050424
+ * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_4fc
+ * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_10fc
  * xml-commons-resolver-1.1-1jpp_4fc
 
 === Packages Moved Out Of Core ===
 
 This is a new section to the release notes.  This is based on a
-treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 14-MAR-2005.  The following
-packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005.  The following
+packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4test3:
 
  * abiword-2.0.12-3
  * aiksaurus-1.2.1-2
@@ -848,10 +1032,12 @@
  * grip-3.2.0-3
  * gv-3.5.8-29
  * im-sdk-12.1-4
+ * jcode.pl-2.13-11
  * jed-0.99.16-6
  * jisksp14-0.1-16
  * jisksp16-1990-0.1-16
  * kappa20-0.3-15
+ * katana-2.0.0-1
  * kdetoys-3.3.0-1
  * kernel-utils-2.4-13.1.39
  * kinput2-v3.1-23
@@ -927,6 +1113,7 @@
  * xsnow-1.42-15
  * ytalk-3.1.2-1
 
+
 == An Overview of the Fedora Project ==
 
 The goal of the Fedora Project is to work with the Linux community to
@@ -947,12 +1134,9 @@
 In addition to the website, the following mailing lists are available:
 
   * fedora-list at redhat.com -- For users of Fedora Core releases
-  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test
-releases
-  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers,
-developers
-  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs
-project
+  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test releases
+  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers, developers
+  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs project
 
 To subscribe to any of these lists, send an email with the word
 "subscribe" in the subject to <listname>-request (where <listname> is


Index: RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en	6 Apr 2005 21:33:20 -0000	1.3
+++ RELEASE-NOTES-ppc-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.4
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-== Fedora Core 4 test 2 Release Notes ==
+= Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes =
 
 Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
 Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
 copy of the license is available at
-http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
+[1]http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
 
 This document may be copied and distributed in any medium, either
 commercially or non-commercially, provided that the GNU Free
@@ -30,14 +30,13 @@
 All other trademarks and copyrights referred to are the property of
 their respective owners.
 
-The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key
-is:
+The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key is:
 
 CA B4 4B 99 6F 27 74 4E 86 12 7C DF B4 42 69 D0 4F 2A 6F D2
 
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-         1. Fedora Core 4 test2 Release Notes
+         1. Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes
          2. Introduction
          3. Hardware Requirements
                1. CPU Requirements
@@ -57,8 +56,7 @@
                8. Macintosh File Server
                9. X Window System
               10. Miscellaneous Notes
-         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or
-Deprecated/Nuked
+         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked
                1. Packages Added
                2. Packages Moved Out Of Core
          9. An Overview of the Fedora Project
@@ -77,7 +75,7 @@
 For more information, refer to the Fedora Project overview later in
 this document.
 
-The following topics related to Fedora Core 4 test 2 are covered in this
+The following topics related to Fedora Core 4test3 are covered in this
 document:
 
     * Introduction (this section)
@@ -91,29 +89,29 @@
 == Hardware Requirements ==
 
 The following information represents the minimum hardware requirements
-necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
-video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
-modes and/or post-installation usage.
+  The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
+  video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
+  modes and/or post-installation usage.
 
-=== CPU Requirements ===
+===  CPU Requirements ===
 
 This section lists the CPU specifications required by Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
-processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix, and
-VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following Intel
-processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
+  The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
+  processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix,
+  and VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following
+  Intel processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
 
     * Minimum: Pentium-class
 
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
+Fedora Core 4test3 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
 earlier CPUs (such as Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III,
 and including AMD and VIA variants). This approach has been taken
 because Pentium-class optimizations actually result in reduced
@@ -127,18 +125,17 @@
 
 === Hard Disk Space Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
-taken up by Fedora Core 4 test 2 after the installation is
-complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
-installation to support the installation environment. This additional
-disk space corresponds to the size of /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on
-CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in /var/lib/rpm on the installed
-system.
+  The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
+  taken up by Fedora Core 4test3 after the installation is
+  complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
+  installation to support the installation environment. This
+  additional disk space corresponds to the size of
+  /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in
+  /var/lib/rpm on the installed system.
 
 In practical terms, this means that as little as an additional 90MB
 can be required for a minimal installation, while as much as an
@@ -156,7 +153,7 @@
 
 === Memory Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
   * Minimum for text-mode: 64MB
   * Minimum for graphical: 192MB
@@ -164,120 +161,167 @@
 
 == Overview of This Release ==
 
-The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core
-4 test 2:
+The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core 4test3:
 
   * GCC 4.0
   * GNOME 2.10
   * KDE 3.4
-  * Native Eclipse 3.1M5
+  * Native Eclipse 3.1M6 - Part of free Java stack
   * MySQL 4.1
   * PHP 5.0
+  * Xen 2 - Virtualization to run multiple versions of an OS
+  * GFS 6.1-0.pre22 - Cluster file system
+  * Evince 0.2.1 - Universal document viewer
+  * GDM 2.6 - Includes early login capability
+
+  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy.
+    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .  This is a list of
+    daemons protected by the targeted policy:
 
-  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy For
-    more information, refer to the SELinux FAQ at
-    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .
+    * NetworkManager
     * amanda
     * apache
+    * apmd
+    * arpwatch
+    * auditd
+    * bluetooth
+    * canna
+    * cardmgr
+    * checkpolicy
     * chkpwd
+    * compat
+    * comsat
+    * consoletype
+    * cpucontrol
+    * cpuspeed
+    * crond
     * cups
+    * cvs
+    * cyrus
+    * dbskkd
+    * dbusd
     * dhcpc
     * dhcpd
     * dictd
+    * dmidecode
     * dovecot
     * fingerd
+    * fsadm
     * ftpd
+    * getty
+    * hald
+    * hostname
+    * hotplug
     * howl
+    * hwclock
     * i18n_input
     * ifconfig
+    * inetd
     * init
     * initrc
-    * inetd
     * innd
     * kerberos
+    * klogd
     * ktalkd
+    * kudzu
     * ldconfig
+    * load_policy
     * login
     * lpd
     * mailman
     * modutil
     * mta
     * mysqld
-    * NetworkManager
     * named
+    * netutils
     * nscd
     * ntpd
     * portmap
     * postgresql
+    * pppd
     * privoxy
     * radius
     * radvd
+    * restorecon
     * rlogind
     * rpcd
+    * rpm
     * rshd
     * rsync
     * samba
+    * saslauthd
+    * sendmail
+    * setfiles
     * slapd
     * snmpd
     * squid
+    * ssh
     * stunnel
     * syslogd
     * telnetd
     * tftpd
+    * udev
+    * updfstab
+    * uucpd
+    * webalizer
     * winbind
+    * xdm
     * ypbind
     * ypserv
     * zebra
 
+
 == Installation-Related Notes ==
 
 This section outlines anything noteworthy that is related to Anaconda
 (the Fedora Core installation program) and installing Fedora Core
-4 test 2 in general.
+4test3 in general.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4 test 2 DVD ISO image, keep
-in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
-larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File size
-limit exceeded error.
+  If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4test3 DVD ISO image, keep
+  in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
+  larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File
+  size limit exceeded error.
 
 The curl and ncftpget file downloading tools do not have this
 limitation, and can successfully download files larger than 2GB.
 
 Bittorrent is another method for downloading large files.
 
+
 Anaconda Notes
 
   * The Fedora Core installation program has the ability to test the
-integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD, hard
-drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat recommends that
-you test all installation media before starting the installation
-process, and before reporting any installation-related bugs (many of
-the bugs reported are actually due to improperly-burned CDs). To use
-this test, type linux mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
+    integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD,
+    hard drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat
+    recommends that you test all installation media before starting
+    the installation process, and before reporting any
+    installation-related bugs (many of the bugs reported are actually
+    due to improperly-burned CDs). To use this test, type linux
+    mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
 
   * Memory testing may be performed prior to installing Fedora Core by
-entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
-standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory testing
-continues until the Esc key is pressed.
+    entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
+    standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory
+    testing continues until the Esc key is pressed.
 
 NOTE: You must boot from CD-ROM 1 (or a rescue CD-ROM) in order to use
 this feature.
 
-  * Fedora Core 4 test 2 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
-installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
-installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM (or
-systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer image) can
-use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or less will continue
-to use the text-based installer.
+  * Fedora Core 4test3 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
+    installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
+    installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM
+    (or systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer
+    image) can use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or
+    less will continue to use the text-based installer.
 
 == Installation-Related Issues ==
 
   * Certain hardware configurations (particularly those with LCD
-displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
-installation program. In these instances, restart the installation,
-and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
+    displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
+    installation program. In these instances, restart the
+    installation, and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
 
 NOTE: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean graphical installations started
 using the "nofb" option will start in English, and then switch to the
@@ -285,9 +329,9 @@
 process begins.
 
   * Some Sony VAIO(R) notebook systems may experience problems
-installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
-installation process and add the following option to the boot command
-line:
+    installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
+    installation process and add the following option to the boot
+    command line:
 
 pci=off ide1=0x180,0x386
 
@@ -296,28 +340,28 @@
 first time Fedora Core is booted.
 
   * Serial mice are known to be inoperative during
-installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
-properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
-119474 for more information:
+    installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
+    properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
+    119474 for more information:
 
 [6]http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=119474
 
   * There have been issues observed when upgrading Red Hat Linux
-7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
-issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat Linux
-RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian RPMs. This
-configuration is not supported. You have several choices in resolving
-this issue:
-
-1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading to
-Fedora Core.
-
-2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall Ximian
-GNOME.
-
-3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
-remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding Fedora
-Core RPMs.
+    7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
+    issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat
+    Linux RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian
+    RPMs. This configuration is not supported. You have several
+    choices in resolving this issue:
+
+    1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading
+       to Fedora Core.
+
+    2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall
+       Ximian GNOME.
+
+    3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
+       remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding
+       Fedora Core RPMs.
 
 You must resolve the version overlap using one of the above choices.
 Failure to do so will result in an unstable GNOME configuration.
@@ -325,22 +369,95 @@
 == Package-Specific Notes ==
 
 The following sections contain information regarding packages that
-have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4 test 2. For easier
+have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4test3. For easier
 access, they are organized using the same groups used in Anaconda.
 
 === Base ===
 
 This section contains information related to basic system components.
 
+
+auditd and log files
+
+The audit daemon, auditd, is now enabled by default.  When auditd is
+running, the kernel directs audit messages to
+/var/log/audit/audit.log.  The location of this file is specified in
+/etc/auditd.conf.
+
+AVC messages for SELinux are sent using the audit infrastructure.
+These messages are now in /var/log/audit/audit.log.
+
+When auditd is not running, the kernel passes audit messages to
+syslog.  These logs are typically kept in /var/log/messages and are
+viewable using dmesg.
+
+Audit extensions are now compiled into PAM.  All programs that do
+grant entry to the system or change user account attributes will
+generate an audit message.
+
+To enable auditing within the kernel, you must pass the parameter
+audit=1 to the kernel during boot.  Otherwise, you can use this
+command to enable auditing during run time:
+
+  'auditctl -e 1'
+
+
+LinuxThreads v. NPTL
+
+As the next step in removing support for the obsolete LinuxThreads
+library, code compiled and linked on FC4 now automatically uses the NPTL
+headers and libraries.  
+
+In previous releases, since Red Hat Linux 9, the default was to use
+LinuxThreads since the interface is mostly forward compatible.  The
+advantages of the NPTL interface is that the cancellation handling is
+faster (when -fexception is used, even in C code) and that the
+additional interfaces are now available without special compiler and
+linker parameters.  In other words, you do not need to use
+-I/usr/include/nptl and -L/usr/lib{,64}/nptl any longer.  Note that
+lib{,64} is to be interpreted as lib64 on platforms which place DSOs
+in lib64 directories, and lib otherwise.
+
+In FC4 it is still possible to create code using the LinuxThreads
+definitions.  For this the linuxthreads-devel package must be
+installed and
+
+   -I/usr/include/linuxthreads -L/usr/lib{,64}/linuxthreads
+
+must be passed to the compiler.
+
+At runtime, it used to be possible to use the LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
+environment variable to select the appropriate version of glibc and the
+libpthread DSO.  Now it is additionally necessary to specify
+
+  LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib{,64}/obsolete/linuxthreads
+
+in the environment.  This is because the runtime libraries have also
+been moved out of the way.  There might programs that will not work if
+the program uses an unfortunate DT_RPATH (which overwrites the
+LD_LIBRARY_PATH setting).
+
+All this makes it more cumbersome to run programs which depend on
+LinuxThreads.  But this is intentional.  
+
+  Important
+
+  FC5 will not have LinuxThreads support and all programs have to be
+  converted to use NPTL by then.
+
+In general, conversion to using NPTL has not been an issue.
+
+
 slocate database
 
-The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by
-default.  Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to
-"yes" in /etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by default.
+Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to "yes" in
+/etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+
 
 openssh
 
-The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4 test 2 contains OpenSSH 3.9
+The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4test3 contains OpenSSH 3.9
 includes strict permission and ownership checks for the ~/.ssh/config
 file. These checks mean that ssh will exit if this file does not have
 appropriate ownership and permissions.
@@ -367,51 +484,63 @@
 This section contains the most elemental components of Fedora Core,
 including the kernel.
 
-  * In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a
-separate package for the kernel source code when that source code
-already exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4 test 2 no
-longer includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access
-to the kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To
-create an exploded source tree from this file, perform the following
-steps (note that <version> refers to the version specification for
-your currently-running kernel):
 
-        1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
-following sources:
+yum
+
+The sqllite database is now used by yum, and makes performance
+noticeably faster.
 
-          * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso
-image
+The Fedora Extras repository is now enabled by default.
 
-          * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-          * By running the following command:
+kernel source
 
-                up2date --get-source kernel
+In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a separate
+package for the kernel source code when that source code already
+exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4test3 no longer
+includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access to the
+kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To create an
+exploded source tree from this file, perform the following steps (note
+that <version> refers to the version specification for your
+currently-running kernel):
 
-        2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
-configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
-/usr/src/redhat/)
+  1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
+     following sources:
 
-        3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
-following command:
+     * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso image
 
-        rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+     * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-        (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+     * By running the following command:
 
-        On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be
-located in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+         up2date --get-source kernel
 
-        4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific
-kernels shipped in Fedora Core 4 test 2 are in the /configs/
-directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
-/configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following command
-to place the desired configuration file in the proper place for
-building:
+  2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
+     configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
+     /usr/src/redhat/)
+     
+       rpm -ivh kernel-<version>.src.rpm
+
+  3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
+     following command:
+
+       rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+
+       (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+
+     On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be located
+     in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+
+   4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific kernels
+      shipped in Fedora Core 4test3 are in the /configs/
+      directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
+      /configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following
+      command to place the desired configuration file in the proper
+      place for building:
 
         cp <desired-file> ./.config
 
-        5. Issue the following command:
+   5. Issue the following command:
 
         make oldconfig
 
@@ -425,11 +554,13 @@
 For example, to build the foo.ko module, create the following file
 (named Makefile) in the directory containing the foo.c file:
 
-obj-m := foo.o
+obj-m    := foo.o
 
-KDIR := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build PWD := $(shell pwd)
+KDIR    := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build
+PWD    := $(shell pwd)
 
-default: $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
+default:
+$(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
         
 
 Issue the make command to build the foo.ko module.
@@ -453,6 +584,17 @@
 
 This section contains information related to Web-related tools.
 
+
+mod_perl
+
+The "RC5" release of mod_perl 2.0 is now included; the API provided by
+this release is incompatible with previous 1.99_xx releases.  Please
+refer to the following document for discussion of how to adapt code to
+use the new API:
+
+   http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/rename.html 
+
+
 php
 
 Version 5.0 of PHP is now included, which includes a number of changes
@@ -462,6 +604,10 @@
 
 http://www.php.net/manual/en/migration5.php
 
+The /usr/bin/php binary is now built using the "CLI" command-line
+SAPI, rather than the CGI SAPI.  The CGI SAPI is now available as
+/usr/bin/php-cgi; this binary also includes FastCGI support.
+
 The following extensions have been added:
 
  * the "mysqli" extension, the newly MySQL interface designed
@@ -469,22 +615,29 @@
  * the "soap" extension, which can be used to implement a SOAP server
    or client
 
+The following extensions are now available as optional loadable
+extensions, rather than being built in to the php binaries:
+
+ * dba, now available in the php-dba package
+ * bcmath, now available in the php-bcmath package
+
 === Windows File Server ===
 
 This section contains information related to Samba, software that
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Windows systems.
 
+
 samba
 
 Browsing of Windows shares (also known as SMB browsing) fails on
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 systems that have the standard firewall
+Fedora Core 4test3 systems that have the standard firewall
 configured. This is most easily noticed in the failure of Nautilus to
 display shares. The failure is due to the firewall disrupting the
 broadcast mode of SMB browsing, which is Samba's default
 setting. There are two workarounds:
 
   * Configure a WINS server on the network, and set the "wins server"
-option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
+    option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
 
   * Disable the firewall
 
@@ -502,25 +655,26 @@
 
 === Macintosh File Server ===
 
-This section contains information related to netatalk, software that
+This section contains information related to netatalk, software that 
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Macintosh systems.
 
+
 netatalk
 
-The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource
-forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to
-Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation
-of the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
+The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource 
+forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to 
+Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation of 
+the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
 
-The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the
+The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the 
 netatalk site:
 
 http://netatalk.sourceforge.net/2.0/htmldocs/upgrade.html
 
-It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4,
-the files are at:
+It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4, the 
+files are at:
 
-/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page
+/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page 
 25, document page 33.
 
 or
@@ -535,9 +689,9 @@
 xorg-x11
 
   * Users new to the X.org X11 implementation should take note of a
-few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
-which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In particular,
-the names of some files have changed:
+    few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
+    which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In
+    particular, the names of some files have changed:
 
 X Server Binary:
 
@@ -561,13 +715,13 @@
 sure that you are using the correct files.
 
   * There has been some confusion regarding font-related issues under
-the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and versions of
-Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there are two font
-subsystems, each with different characteristics:
+    the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and
+    versions of Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there
+    are two font subsystems, each with different characteristics:
 
 - The original (15+ year old) subsystem is referred to as the "core X
-font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
-anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
+  font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
+  anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
 
 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--10-100-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
 
@@ -580,10 +734,10 @@
 Luxi Sans-10
 
   * Over time, fontconfig/Xft will replace the core X font
-subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK 2
-toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use the
-fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses the
-core X fonts.
+    subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK
+    2 toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use
+    the fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses
+    the core X fonts.
 
 In the future, Fedora Core may support only fontconfig/Xft in place of
 the XFS font server as the default local font access method.
@@ -591,29 +745,28 @@
 NOTE: An exception to the font subsystem usage outlined above is
 OpenOffice.org (which uses its own font rendering technology).
 
-If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4 test 2 system, you
+If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4test3 system, you
 must be aware that the steps necessary depend on which font subsystem
 is to use the new fonts. For the core X font subsystem, you must:
 
-1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it doesn't already
-exist):
+1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it does not
+   already exist):
 
 mkdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 2. Copy the new font file into /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 3. Update the font information by issuing the following commands (note
-that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
-appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be entered
-on a single line):
+   that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
+   appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be
+   entered on a single line):
 
-ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o
-/usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
+ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o /usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
 
 mkfontdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 4. If you had to create /usr/share/fonts/local/, you must then add it
-to the X font server (xfs) path:
+   to the X font server (xfs) path:
 
 chkfontpath --add /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
@@ -639,10 +792,10 @@
 the fontconfig font subsystem can use the font.
 
   * Due to the transition to the new font system based on
-fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any changes
-made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these applications, a font
-can be configured by adding the following lines to the file
-~/.gtkrc.mine:
+    fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any
+    changes made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these
+    applications, a font can be configured by adding the following
+    lines to the file ~/.gtkrc.mine:
 
 style "user-font" {
 
@@ -650,7 +803,7 @@
 
 }
 
-widget_class " *" style "user-font"
+widget_class "  *" style "user-font"
 
 (Where <font-specification> represents a font specification in the
 style used by traditional X applications, such as
@@ -661,6 +814,17 @@
 This section contains information related to packages that do not fit
 in any of the proceeding categories.
 
+  OpenOffice and upgrading test releases
+
+If you choose to go counter to the recommendation to *not* upgrade
+from a previous test release, you may encounter a problem with
+OpenOffice following the upgrade.
+
+To resolve this, you must do the following command *before* doing the
+upgrade:
+
+  rm -rf /usr/lib/openoffice.org*/share/template/*/wizard/bitmap
+
 
 == Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked ==
 
@@ -670,61 +834,73 @@
 This section contains lists of packages that fit into the following
 categories:
 
-  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4test3
 
-  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4test3
 
   * Packages that have a changed version since Fedora Core 3
   
   * Packages that have been deprecated, and may be removed from a
-future
-    release of Fedora Core
+    future release of Fedora Core
 
 === Packages Added ===
 
-The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4test3.  This is
+based on a treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005:
 
- * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_2fc
+ * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_5fc
  * antlr-2.7.4-2jpp_1fc
  * aqbanking-1.0.4beta-2
  * aqhbci-1.0.2beta-2
+ * aspell-is-0.51.1-1
  * avalon-framework-4.1.4-2jpp_5fc
  * avalon-logkit-1.2-2jpp_4fc
  * bcel-5.1-1jpp_4fc
- * classpath-inetlib-1.0-1jpp_1fc
+ * ccs-0.25-0.1
  * classpathx-jaf-1.0-2jpp_3fc
  * classpathx-mail-1.0-3jpp_1fc
+ * cman-1.0-0.pre33.2
+ * cman-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.5
  * compat-gcc-296-2.96-132.fc4
  * compat-gcc-32-3.2.3-47.fc4
  * compat-readline43-4.3-2
- * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.12
- * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.19
+ * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.14
+ * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.20
  * cryptix-3.2.0-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptix-asn1-20011119-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptsetup-luks-1.0-1
  * dcraw-0.0.20050227-1
- * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-0.pre8.0
- * dmidecode-2.6-1.13
- * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M5.17
- * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-9
- * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M5.3
- * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-19
- * eclipse-pydev-0.9.0_fc-4
- * evince-0.1.9-1
- * fonts-chinese-2.15-1
+ * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-2.0
+ * dlm-1.0-0.pre21.2
+ * dlm-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.6
+ * dmidecode-2.6-1.14
+ * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M6.14
+ * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-14
+ * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M6.5
+ * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-21
+ * eclipse-pydev-0.9.3_fc-7
+ * evince-0.2.1-1
+ * fence-1.27-1
+ * fonts-chinese-2.15-2
  * fonts-indic-1.9-2
- * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-2
- * fonts-korean-1.0.11-2
- * gjdoc-0.7.3-1
- * gnome-doc-utils-0.1.3-1
- * gnome-menus-2.10.1-1
+ * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-3
+ * fonts-korean-1.0.11-4
+ * GFS-6.1-0.pre22.1
+ * GFS-kernel-2.6.11.4-20050503.144108.FC4.1
+ * gjdoc-0.7.4-4
+ * gnbd-1.0-0.pre13.1
+ * gnbd-kernel-2.6.11.2-20050420.133124.FC4.10
+ * gnome-doc-utils-0.2.0-2
+ * gnome-menus-2.10.1-3
  * gnome-python2-extras-2.10.0-2.1
- * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_1fc
+ * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_3fc
  * gnu.getopt-1.0.9-4jpp_1fc
+ * gulm-1.0-0.pre28.3
  * gwenhywfar-1.7.2-2
- * hardlink-1.0-1.11
- * iiimf-12.1.1-11.svn2435
- * ipv6calc-0.48-3
+ * hardlink-1.0-1.13
+ * iddev-1.9-19
+ * iiimf-12.2-0.7.svn2578
+ * ipv6calc-0.48-5
  * irqbalance-1.12-1.18
  * jakarta-commons-beanutils-1.7.0-1jpp_1fc
  * jakarta-commons-collections-3.1-1jpp_1fc
@@ -742,37 +918,45 @@
  * jakarta-taglibs-standard-1.1.1-4jpp_1fc
  * java_cup-0.10-0.k.1jpp_2fc
  * jdepend-2.6-2jpp_3fc
- * jessie-1.0.0-3
+ * jessie-1.0.0-6
  * jlex-1.2.6-1jpp_2fc
- * jsch-0.1.17-2jpp_1fc
+ * jsch-0.1.18-1jpp_1fc
  * junit-3.8.1-3jpp_4fc
  * jzlib-1.0.5-2jpp_1fc
  * kdeaccessibility-3.4.0-1
  * ksh-20050202-1
  * latex2html-2002.2.1-1
  * ldapjdk-4.17-1jpp_2fc
- * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-2
- * libgconf-java-2.10.0-1
- * libglade-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgnome-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgtk-java-2.6.1.1-1
+ * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-3
+ * libgconf-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libglade-java-2.10.1-3
+ * libgnome-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libgtk-java-2.6.2-1
  * linux-atm-2.5.0-0.20050118.2
  * lksctp-tools-1.0.2-5
  * log4j-1.2.8-7jpp_3fc
- * longrun-0.9-1.8
- * lvm2-cluster-2.00.29-1.22.FC4
+ * longrun-0.9-1.9
+ * lvm2-cluster-2.01.09-2.1
+ * magma-1.0-0.pre21.4
+ * magma-plugins-1.0-0.pre16.11
  * mcelog-0.4-1.8
  * microcode_ctl-1.11-1.21
- * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_1fc
- * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_2fc
- * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-5
+ * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_2fc
+ * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_5fc
+ * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-6
  * openhpi-2.0.3-2
  * OpenIPMI-1.4.11-5
  * openssl097a-0.9.7a-2
  * oro-2.0.8-1jpp_2fc
- * poppler-0.1.2-1
+ * perl-Archive-Zip-1.14-1
+ * perl-Carp-Clan-5.3-1
+ * perl-IO-String-1.06-3
+ * perl-IO-Zlib-1.04-4
+ * perl-Net-Telnet-3.03-4
+ * pm-utils-0.01-1
+ * poppler-0.3.0-2
  * puretls-0.9-0.b4.1jpp_2fc
- * python-docs-2.4-102
+ * python-docs-2.4.1-1
  * python-elementtree-1.2.6-4
  * python-numeric-23.7-2
  * python-sqlite-1.1.6-1
@@ -780,28 +964,28 @@
  * python-urlgrabber-2.9.6-1
  * readahead-1.0-1.7
  * regexp-1.3-1jpp_4fc
- * rng-utils-2.0-1.5
+ * rgmanager-1.9.31-0
+ * rng-utils-2.0-1.6
  * salinfo-0.5-1.4
- * servletapi5-5.0.18-1jpp_3fc
  * slib-3a1-2
  * smartmontools-5.33-1.5
- * sqlite-3.1.2-2
- * struts11-1.1-1jpp_2fc
- * system-config-lvm-0.9.22-1.0
+ * sqlite-3.1.2-3
+ * struts11-1.1-1jpp_4fc
+ * system-config-lvm-0.9.25-1.0
  * texi2html-1.76-2
- * tomcat5-5.0.30-1jpp_2fc
- * x86info-1.13-1.9
+ * tomcat5-5.0.30-5jpp_1fc
+ * x86info-1.13-1.10
  * xalan-j2-2.6.0-2jpp_1fc
- * xen-2-20050403
- * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_1fc
- * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_5fc
+ * xen-2-20050424
+ * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_4fc
+ * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_10fc
  * xml-commons-resolver-1.1-1jpp_4fc
 
 === Packages Moved Out Of Core ===
 
 This is a new section to the release notes.  This is based on a
-treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 14-MAR-2005.  The following
-packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005.  The following
+packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4test3:
 
  * abiword-2.0.12-3
  * aiksaurus-1.2.1-2
@@ -848,10 +1032,12 @@
  * grip-3.2.0-3
  * gv-3.5.8-29
  * im-sdk-12.1-4
+ * jcode.pl-2.13-11
  * jed-0.99.16-6
  * jisksp14-0.1-16
  * jisksp16-1990-0.1-16
  * kappa20-0.3-15
+ * katana-2.0.0-1
  * kdetoys-3.3.0-1
  * kernel-utils-2.4-13.1.39
  * kinput2-v3.1-23
@@ -927,6 +1113,7 @@
  * xsnow-1.42-15
  * ytalk-3.1.2-1
 
+
 == An Overview of the Fedora Project ==
 
 The goal of the Fedora Project is to work with the Linux community to
@@ -947,12 +1134,9 @@
 In addition to the website, the following mailing lists are available:
 
   * fedora-list at redhat.com -- For users of Fedora Core releases
-  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test
-releases
-  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers,
-developers
-  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs
-project
+  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test releases
+  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers, developers
+  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs project
 
 To subscribe to any of these lists, send an email with the word
 "subscribe" in the subject to <listname>-request (where <listname> is


Index: RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en	6 Apr 2005 21:33:20 -0000	1.3
+++ RELEASE-NOTES-x86_64-en	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.4
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-== Fedora Core 4 test 2 Release Notes ==
+= Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes =
 
 Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
 Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
 copy of the license is available at
-http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
+[1]http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
 
 This document may be copied and distributed in any medium, either
 commercially or non-commercially, provided that the GNU Free
@@ -30,14 +30,13 @@
 All other trademarks and copyrights referred to are the property of
 their respective owners.
 
-The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key
-is:
+The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key is:
 
 CA B4 4B 99 6F 27 74 4E 86 12 7C DF B4 42 69 D0 4F 2A 6F D2
 
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-         1. Fedora Core 4 test2 Release Notes
+         1. Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes
          2. Introduction
          3. Hardware Requirements
                1. CPU Requirements
@@ -57,8 +56,7 @@
                8. Macintosh File Server
                9. X Window System
               10. Miscellaneous Notes
-         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or
-Deprecated/Nuked
+         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked
                1. Packages Added
                2. Packages Moved Out Of Core
          9. An Overview of the Fedora Project
@@ -77,7 +75,7 @@
 For more information, refer to the Fedora Project overview later in
 this document.
 
-The following topics related to Fedora Core 4 test 2 are covered in this
+The following topics related to Fedora Core 4test3 are covered in this
 document:
 
     * Introduction (this section)
@@ -91,29 +89,29 @@
 == Hardware Requirements ==
 
 The following information represents the minimum hardware requirements
-necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
-video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
-modes and/or post-installation usage.
+  The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
+  video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
+  modes and/or post-installation usage.
 
-=== CPU Requirements ===
+===  CPU Requirements ===
 
 This section lists the CPU specifications required by Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
-processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix, and
-VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following Intel
-processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
+  The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
+  processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix,
+  and VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following
+  Intel processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
 
     * Minimum: Pentium-class
 
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
+Fedora Core 4test3 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
 earlier CPUs (such as Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III,
 and including AMD and VIA variants). This approach has been taken
 because Pentium-class optimizations actually result in reduced
@@ -127,18 +125,17 @@
 
 === Hard Disk Space Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
-taken up by Fedora Core 4 test 2 after the installation is
-complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
-installation to support the installation environment. This additional
-disk space corresponds to the size of /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on
-CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in /var/lib/rpm on the installed
-system.
+  The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
+  taken up by Fedora Core 4test3 after the installation is
+  complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
+  installation to support the installation environment. This
+  additional disk space corresponds to the size of
+  /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in
+  /var/lib/rpm on the installed system.
 
 In practical terms, this means that as little as an additional 90MB
 can be required for a minimal installation, while as much as an
@@ -156,7 +153,7 @@
 
 === Memory Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
   * Minimum for text-mode: 64MB
   * Minimum for graphical: 192MB
@@ -164,120 +161,167 @@
 
 == Overview of This Release ==
 
-The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core
-4 test 2:
+The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core 4test3:
 
   * GCC 4.0
   * GNOME 2.10
   * KDE 3.4
-  * Native Eclipse 3.1M5
+  * Native Eclipse 3.1M6 - Part of free Java stack
   * MySQL 4.1
   * PHP 5.0
+  * Xen 2 - Virtualization to run multiple versions of an OS
+  * GFS 6.1-0.pre22 - Cluster file system
+  * Evince 0.2.1 - Universal document viewer
+  * GDM 2.6 - Includes early login capability
+
+  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy.
+    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .  This is a list of
+    daemons protected by the targeted policy:
 
-  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy For
-    more information, refer to the SELinux FAQ at
-    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .
+    * NetworkManager
     * amanda
     * apache
+    * apmd
+    * arpwatch
+    * auditd
+    * bluetooth
+    * canna
+    * cardmgr
+    * checkpolicy
     * chkpwd
+    * compat
+    * comsat
+    * consoletype
+    * cpucontrol
+    * cpuspeed
+    * crond
     * cups
+    * cvs
+    * cyrus
+    * dbskkd
+    * dbusd
     * dhcpc
     * dhcpd
     * dictd
+    * dmidecode
     * dovecot
     * fingerd
+    * fsadm
     * ftpd
+    * getty
+    * hald
+    * hostname
+    * hotplug
     * howl
+    * hwclock
     * i18n_input
     * ifconfig
+    * inetd
     * init
     * initrc
-    * inetd
     * innd
     * kerberos
+    * klogd
     * ktalkd
+    * kudzu
     * ldconfig
+    * load_policy
     * login
     * lpd
     * mailman
     * modutil
     * mta
     * mysqld
-    * NetworkManager
     * named
+    * netutils
     * nscd
     * ntpd
     * portmap
     * postgresql
+    * pppd
     * privoxy
     * radius
     * radvd
+    * restorecon
     * rlogind
     * rpcd
+    * rpm
     * rshd
     * rsync
     * samba
+    * saslauthd
+    * sendmail
+    * setfiles
     * slapd
     * snmpd
     * squid
+    * ssh
     * stunnel
     * syslogd
     * telnetd
     * tftpd
+    * udev
+    * updfstab
+    * uucpd
+    * webalizer
     * winbind
+    * xdm
     * ypbind
     * ypserv
     * zebra
 
+
 == Installation-Related Notes ==
 
 This section outlines anything noteworthy that is related to Anaconda
 (the Fedora Core installation program) and installing Fedora Core
-4 test 2 in general.
+4test3 in general.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4 test 2 DVD ISO image, keep
-in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
-larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File size
-limit exceeded error.
+  If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4test3 DVD ISO image, keep
+  in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
+  larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File
+  size limit exceeded error.
 
 The curl and ncftpget file downloading tools do not have this
 limitation, and can successfully download files larger than 2GB.
 
 Bittorrent is another method for downloading large files.
 
+
 Anaconda Notes
 
   * The Fedora Core installation program has the ability to test the
-integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD, hard
-drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat recommends that
-you test all installation media before starting the installation
-process, and before reporting any installation-related bugs (many of
-the bugs reported are actually due to improperly-burned CDs). To use
-this test, type linux mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
+    integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD,
+    hard drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat
+    recommends that you test all installation media before starting
+    the installation process, and before reporting any
+    installation-related bugs (many of the bugs reported are actually
+    due to improperly-burned CDs). To use this test, type linux
+    mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
 
   * Memory testing may be performed prior to installing Fedora Core by
-entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
-standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory testing
-continues until the Esc key is pressed.
+    entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
+    standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory
+    testing continues until the Esc key is pressed.
 
 NOTE: You must boot from CD-ROM 1 (or a rescue CD-ROM) in order to use
 this feature.
 
-  * Fedora Core 4 test 2 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
-installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
-installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM (or
-systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer image) can
-use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or less will continue
-to use the text-based installer.
+  * Fedora Core 4test3 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
+    installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
+    installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM
+    (or systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer
+    image) can use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or
+    less will continue to use the text-based installer.
 
 == Installation-Related Issues ==
 
   * Certain hardware configurations (particularly those with LCD
-displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
-installation program. In these instances, restart the installation,
-and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
+    displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
+    installation program. In these instances, restart the
+    installation, and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
 
 NOTE: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean graphical installations started
 using the "nofb" option will start in English, and then switch to the
@@ -285,9 +329,9 @@
 process begins.
 
   * Some Sony VAIO(R) notebook systems may experience problems
-installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
-installation process and add the following option to the boot command
-line:
+    installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
+    installation process and add the following option to the boot
+    command line:
 
 pci=off ide1=0x180,0x386
 
@@ -296,28 +340,28 @@
 first time Fedora Core is booted.
 
   * Serial mice are known to be inoperative during
-installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
-properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
-119474 for more information:
+    installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
+    properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
+    119474 for more information:
 
 [6]http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=119474
 
   * There have been issues observed when upgrading Red Hat Linux
-7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
-issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat Linux
-RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian RPMs. This
-configuration is not supported. You have several choices in resolving
-this issue:
-
-1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading to
-Fedora Core.
-
-2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall Ximian
-GNOME.
-
-3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
-remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding Fedora
-Core RPMs.
+    7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
+    issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat
+    Linux RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian
+    RPMs. This configuration is not supported. You have several
+    choices in resolving this issue:
+
+    1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading
+       to Fedora Core.
+
+    2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall
+       Ximian GNOME.
+
+    3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
+       remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding
+       Fedora Core RPMs.
 
 You must resolve the version overlap using one of the above choices.
 Failure to do so will result in an unstable GNOME configuration.
@@ -325,22 +369,95 @@
 == Package-Specific Notes ==
 
 The following sections contain information regarding packages that
-have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4 test 2. For easier
+have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4test3. For easier
 access, they are organized using the same groups used in Anaconda.
 
 === Base ===
 
 This section contains information related to basic system components.
 
+
+auditd and log files
+
+The audit daemon, auditd, is now enabled by default.  When auditd is
+running, the kernel directs audit messages to
+/var/log/audit/audit.log.  The location of this file is specified in
+/etc/auditd.conf.
+
+AVC messages for SELinux are sent using the audit infrastructure.
+These messages are now in /var/log/audit/audit.log.
+
+When auditd is not running, the kernel passes audit messages to
+syslog.  These logs are typically kept in /var/log/messages and are
+viewable using dmesg.
+
+Audit extensions are now compiled into PAM.  All programs that do
+grant entry to the system or change user account attributes will
+generate an audit message.
+
+To enable auditing within the kernel, you must pass the parameter
+audit=1 to the kernel during boot.  Otherwise, you can use this
+command to enable auditing during run time:
+
+  'auditctl -e 1'
+
+
+LinuxThreads v. NPTL
+
+As the next step in removing support for the obsolete LinuxThreads
+library, code compiled and linked on FC4 now automatically uses the NPTL
+headers and libraries.  
+
+In previous releases, since Red Hat Linux 9, the default was to use
+LinuxThreads since the interface is mostly forward compatible.  The
+advantages of the NPTL interface is that the cancellation handling is
+faster (when -fexception is used, even in C code) and that the
+additional interfaces are now available without special compiler and
+linker parameters.  In other words, you do not need to use
+-I/usr/include/nptl and -L/usr/lib{,64}/nptl any longer.  Note that
+lib{,64} is to be interpreted as lib64 on platforms which place DSOs
+in lib64 directories, and lib otherwise.
+
+In FC4 it is still possible to create code using the LinuxThreads
+definitions.  For this the linuxthreads-devel package must be
+installed and
+
+   -I/usr/include/linuxthreads -L/usr/lib{,64}/linuxthreads
+
+must be passed to the compiler.
+
+At runtime, it used to be possible to use the LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
+environment variable to select the appropriate version of glibc and the
+libpthread DSO.  Now it is additionally necessary to specify
+
+  LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib{,64}/obsolete/linuxthreads
+
+in the environment.  This is because the runtime libraries have also
+been moved out of the way.  There might programs that will not work if
+the program uses an unfortunate DT_RPATH (which overwrites the
+LD_LIBRARY_PATH setting).
+
+All this makes it more cumbersome to run programs which depend on
+LinuxThreads.  But this is intentional.  
+
+  Important
+
+  FC5 will not have LinuxThreads support and all programs have to be
+  converted to use NPTL by then.
+
+In general, conversion to using NPTL has not been an issue.
+
+
 slocate database
 
-The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by
-default.  Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to
-"yes" in /etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by default.
+Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to "yes" in
+/etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+
 
 openssh
 
-The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4 test 2 contains OpenSSH 3.9
+The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4test3 contains OpenSSH 3.9
 includes strict permission and ownership checks for the ~/.ssh/config
 file. These checks mean that ssh will exit if this file does not have
 appropriate ownership and permissions.
@@ -367,51 +484,63 @@
 This section contains the most elemental components of Fedora Core,
 including the kernel.
 
-  * In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a
-separate package for the kernel source code when that source code
-already exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4 test 2 no
-longer includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access
-to the kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To
-create an exploded source tree from this file, perform the following
-steps (note that <version> refers to the version specification for
-your currently-running kernel):
 
-        1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
-following sources:
+yum
+
+The sqllite database is now used by yum, and makes performance
+noticeably faster.
 
-          * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso
-image
+The Fedora Extras repository is now enabled by default.
 
-          * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-          * By running the following command:
+kernel source
 
-                up2date --get-source kernel
+In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a separate
+package for the kernel source code when that source code already
+exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4test3 no longer
+includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access to the
+kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To create an
+exploded source tree from this file, perform the following steps (note
+that <version> refers to the version specification for your
+currently-running kernel):
 
-        2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
-configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
-/usr/src/redhat/)
+  1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
+     following sources:
 
-        3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
-following command:
+     * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso image
 
-        rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+     * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-        (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+     * By running the following command:
 
-        On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be
-located in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+         up2date --get-source kernel
 
-        4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific
-kernels shipped in Fedora Core 4 test 2 are in the /configs/
-directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
-/configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following command
-to place the desired configuration file in the proper place for
-building:
+  2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
+     configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
+     /usr/src/redhat/)
+     
+       rpm -ivh kernel-<version>.src.rpm
+
+  3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
+     following command:
+
+       rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+
+       (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+
+     On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be located
+     in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+
+   4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific kernels
+      shipped in Fedora Core 4test3 are in the /configs/
+      directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
+      /configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following
+      command to place the desired configuration file in the proper
+      place for building:
 
         cp <desired-file> ./.config
 
-        5. Issue the following command:
+   5. Issue the following command:
 
         make oldconfig
 
@@ -425,11 +554,13 @@
 For example, to build the foo.ko module, create the following file
 (named Makefile) in the directory containing the foo.c file:
 
-obj-m := foo.o
+obj-m    := foo.o
 
-KDIR := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build PWD := $(shell pwd)
+KDIR    := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build
+PWD    := $(shell pwd)
 
-default: $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
+default:
+$(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
         
 
 Issue the make command to build the foo.ko module.
@@ -453,6 +584,17 @@
 
 This section contains information related to Web-related tools.
 
+
+mod_perl
+
+The "RC5" release of mod_perl 2.0 is now included; the API provided by
+this release is incompatible with previous 1.99_xx releases.  Please
+refer to the following document for discussion of how to adapt code to
+use the new API:
+
+   http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/rename.html 
+
+
 php
 
 Version 5.0 of PHP is now included, which includes a number of changes
@@ -462,6 +604,10 @@
 
 http://www.php.net/manual/en/migration5.php
 
+The /usr/bin/php binary is now built using the "CLI" command-line
+SAPI, rather than the CGI SAPI.  The CGI SAPI is now available as
+/usr/bin/php-cgi; this binary also includes FastCGI support.
+
 The following extensions have been added:
 
  * the "mysqli" extension, the newly MySQL interface designed
@@ -469,22 +615,29 @@
  * the "soap" extension, which can be used to implement a SOAP server
    or client
 
+The following extensions are now available as optional loadable
+extensions, rather than being built in to the php binaries:
+
+ * dba, now available in the php-dba package
+ * bcmath, now available in the php-bcmath package
+
 === Windows File Server ===
 
 This section contains information related to Samba, software that
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Windows systems.
 
+
 samba
 
 Browsing of Windows shares (also known as SMB browsing) fails on
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 systems that have the standard firewall
+Fedora Core 4test3 systems that have the standard firewall
 configured. This is most easily noticed in the failure of Nautilus to
 display shares. The failure is due to the firewall disrupting the
 broadcast mode of SMB browsing, which is Samba's default
 setting. There are two workarounds:
 
   * Configure a WINS server on the network, and set the "wins server"
-option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
+    option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
 
   * Disable the firewall
 
@@ -502,25 +655,26 @@
 
 === Macintosh File Server ===
 
-This section contains information related to netatalk, software that
+This section contains information related to netatalk, software that 
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Macintosh systems.
 
+
 netatalk
 
-The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource
-forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to
-Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation
-of the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
+The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource 
+forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to 
+Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation of 
+the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
 
-The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the
+The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the 
 netatalk site:
 
 http://netatalk.sourceforge.net/2.0/htmldocs/upgrade.html
 
-It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4,
-the files are at:
+It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4, the 
+files are at:
 
-/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page
+/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page 
 25, document page 33.
 
 or
@@ -535,9 +689,9 @@
 xorg-x11
 
   * Users new to the X.org X11 implementation should take note of a
-few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
-which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In particular,
-the names of some files have changed:
+    few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
+    which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In
+    particular, the names of some files have changed:
 
 X Server Binary:
 
@@ -561,13 +715,13 @@
 sure that you are using the correct files.
 
   * There has been some confusion regarding font-related issues under
-the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and versions of
-Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there are two font
-subsystems, each with different characteristics:
+    the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and
+    versions of Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there
+    are two font subsystems, each with different characteristics:
 
 - The original (15+ year old) subsystem is referred to as the "core X
-font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
-anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
+  font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
+  anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
 
 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--10-100-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
 
@@ -580,10 +734,10 @@
 Luxi Sans-10
 
   * Over time, fontconfig/Xft will replace the core X font
-subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK 2
-toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use the
-fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses the
-core X fonts.
+    subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK
+    2 toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use
+    the fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses
+    the core X fonts.
 
 In the future, Fedora Core may support only fontconfig/Xft in place of
 the XFS font server as the default local font access method.
@@ -591,29 +745,28 @@
 NOTE: An exception to the font subsystem usage outlined above is
 OpenOffice.org (which uses its own font rendering technology).
 
-If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4 test 2 system, you
+If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4test3 system, you
 must be aware that the steps necessary depend on which font subsystem
 is to use the new fonts. For the core X font subsystem, you must:
 
-1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it doesn't already
-exist):
+1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it does not
+   already exist):
 
 mkdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 2. Copy the new font file into /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 3. Update the font information by issuing the following commands (note
-that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
-appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be entered
-on a single line):
+   that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
+   appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be
+   entered on a single line):
 
-ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o
-/usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
+ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o /usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
 
 mkfontdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 4. If you had to create /usr/share/fonts/local/, you must then add it
-to the X font server (xfs) path:
+   to the X font server (xfs) path:
 
 chkfontpath --add /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
@@ -639,10 +792,10 @@
 the fontconfig font subsystem can use the font.
 
   * Due to the transition to the new font system based on
-fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any changes
-made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these applications, a font
-can be configured by adding the following lines to the file
-~/.gtkrc.mine:
+    fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any
+    changes made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these
+    applications, a font can be configured by adding the following
+    lines to the file ~/.gtkrc.mine:
 
 style "user-font" {
 
@@ -650,7 +803,7 @@
 
 }
 
-widget_class " *" style "user-font"
+widget_class "  *" style "user-font"
 
 (Where <font-specification> represents a font specification in the
 style used by traditional X applications, such as
@@ -661,6 +814,17 @@
 This section contains information related to packages that do not fit
 in any of the proceeding categories.
 
+  OpenOffice and upgrading test releases
+
+If you choose to go counter to the recommendation to *not* upgrade
+from a previous test release, you may encounter a problem with
+OpenOffice following the upgrade.
+
+To resolve this, you must do the following command *before* doing the
+upgrade:
+
+  rm -rf /usr/lib/openoffice.org*/share/template/*/wizard/bitmap
+
 
 == Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked ==
 
@@ -670,61 +834,73 @@
 This section contains lists of packages that fit into the following
 categories:
 
-  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4test3
 
-  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4test3
 
   * Packages that have a changed version since Fedora Core 3
   
   * Packages that have been deprecated, and may be removed from a
-future
-    release of Fedora Core
+    future release of Fedora Core
 
 === Packages Added ===
 
-The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4test3.  This is
+based on a treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005:
 
- * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_2fc
+ * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_5fc
  * antlr-2.7.4-2jpp_1fc
  * aqbanking-1.0.4beta-2
  * aqhbci-1.0.2beta-2
+ * aspell-is-0.51.1-1
  * avalon-framework-4.1.4-2jpp_5fc
  * avalon-logkit-1.2-2jpp_4fc
  * bcel-5.1-1jpp_4fc
- * classpath-inetlib-1.0-1jpp_1fc
+ * ccs-0.25-0.1
  * classpathx-jaf-1.0-2jpp_3fc
  * classpathx-mail-1.0-3jpp_1fc
+ * cman-1.0-0.pre33.2
+ * cman-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.5
  * compat-gcc-296-2.96-132.fc4
  * compat-gcc-32-3.2.3-47.fc4
  * compat-readline43-4.3-2
- * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.12
- * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.19
+ * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.14
+ * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.20
  * cryptix-3.2.0-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptix-asn1-20011119-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptsetup-luks-1.0-1
  * dcraw-0.0.20050227-1
- * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-0.pre8.0
- * dmidecode-2.6-1.13
- * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M5.17
- * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-9
- * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M5.3
- * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-19
- * eclipse-pydev-0.9.0_fc-4
- * evince-0.1.9-1
- * fonts-chinese-2.15-1
+ * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-2.0
+ * dlm-1.0-0.pre21.2
+ * dlm-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.6
+ * dmidecode-2.6-1.14
+ * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M6.14
+ * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-14
+ * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M6.5
+ * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-21
+ * eclipse-pydev-0.9.3_fc-7
+ * evince-0.2.1-1
+ * fence-1.27-1
+ * fonts-chinese-2.15-2
  * fonts-indic-1.9-2
- * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-2
- * fonts-korean-1.0.11-2
- * gjdoc-0.7.3-1
- * gnome-doc-utils-0.1.3-1
- * gnome-menus-2.10.1-1
+ * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-3
+ * fonts-korean-1.0.11-4
+ * GFS-6.1-0.pre22.1
+ * GFS-kernel-2.6.11.4-20050503.144108.FC4.1
+ * gjdoc-0.7.4-4
+ * gnbd-1.0-0.pre13.1
+ * gnbd-kernel-2.6.11.2-20050420.133124.FC4.10
+ * gnome-doc-utils-0.2.0-2
+ * gnome-menus-2.10.1-3
  * gnome-python2-extras-2.10.0-2.1
- * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_1fc
+ * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_3fc
  * gnu.getopt-1.0.9-4jpp_1fc
+ * gulm-1.0-0.pre28.3
  * gwenhywfar-1.7.2-2
- * hardlink-1.0-1.11
- * iiimf-12.1.1-11.svn2435
- * ipv6calc-0.48-3
+ * hardlink-1.0-1.13
+ * iddev-1.9-19
+ * iiimf-12.2-0.7.svn2578
+ * ipv6calc-0.48-5
  * irqbalance-1.12-1.18
  * jakarta-commons-beanutils-1.7.0-1jpp_1fc
  * jakarta-commons-collections-3.1-1jpp_1fc
@@ -742,37 +918,45 @@
  * jakarta-taglibs-standard-1.1.1-4jpp_1fc
  * java_cup-0.10-0.k.1jpp_2fc
  * jdepend-2.6-2jpp_3fc
- * jessie-1.0.0-3
+ * jessie-1.0.0-6
  * jlex-1.2.6-1jpp_2fc
- * jsch-0.1.17-2jpp_1fc
+ * jsch-0.1.18-1jpp_1fc
  * junit-3.8.1-3jpp_4fc
  * jzlib-1.0.5-2jpp_1fc
  * kdeaccessibility-3.4.0-1
  * ksh-20050202-1
  * latex2html-2002.2.1-1
  * ldapjdk-4.17-1jpp_2fc
- * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-2
- * libgconf-java-2.10.0-1
- * libglade-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgnome-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgtk-java-2.6.1.1-1
+ * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-3
+ * libgconf-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libglade-java-2.10.1-3
+ * libgnome-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libgtk-java-2.6.2-1
  * linux-atm-2.5.0-0.20050118.2
  * lksctp-tools-1.0.2-5
  * log4j-1.2.8-7jpp_3fc
- * longrun-0.9-1.8
- * lvm2-cluster-2.00.29-1.22.FC4
+ * longrun-0.9-1.9
+ * lvm2-cluster-2.01.09-2.1
+ * magma-1.0-0.pre21.4
+ * magma-plugins-1.0-0.pre16.11
  * mcelog-0.4-1.8
  * microcode_ctl-1.11-1.21
- * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_1fc
- * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_2fc
- * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-5
+ * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_2fc
+ * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_5fc
+ * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-6
  * openhpi-2.0.3-2
  * OpenIPMI-1.4.11-5
  * openssl097a-0.9.7a-2
  * oro-2.0.8-1jpp_2fc
- * poppler-0.1.2-1
+ * perl-Archive-Zip-1.14-1
+ * perl-Carp-Clan-5.3-1
+ * perl-IO-String-1.06-3
+ * perl-IO-Zlib-1.04-4
+ * perl-Net-Telnet-3.03-4
+ * pm-utils-0.01-1
+ * poppler-0.3.0-2
  * puretls-0.9-0.b4.1jpp_2fc
- * python-docs-2.4-102
+ * python-docs-2.4.1-1
  * python-elementtree-1.2.6-4
  * python-numeric-23.7-2
  * python-sqlite-1.1.6-1
@@ -780,28 +964,28 @@
  * python-urlgrabber-2.9.6-1
  * readahead-1.0-1.7
  * regexp-1.3-1jpp_4fc
- * rng-utils-2.0-1.5
+ * rgmanager-1.9.31-0
+ * rng-utils-2.0-1.6
  * salinfo-0.5-1.4
- * servletapi5-5.0.18-1jpp_3fc
  * slib-3a1-2
  * smartmontools-5.33-1.5
- * sqlite-3.1.2-2
- * struts11-1.1-1jpp_2fc
- * system-config-lvm-0.9.22-1.0
+ * sqlite-3.1.2-3
+ * struts11-1.1-1jpp_4fc
+ * system-config-lvm-0.9.25-1.0
  * texi2html-1.76-2
- * tomcat5-5.0.30-1jpp_2fc
- * x86info-1.13-1.9
+ * tomcat5-5.0.30-5jpp_1fc
+ * x86info-1.13-1.10
  * xalan-j2-2.6.0-2jpp_1fc
- * xen-2-20050403
- * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_1fc
- * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_5fc
+ * xen-2-20050424
+ * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_4fc
+ * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_10fc
  * xml-commons-resolver-1.1-1jpp_4fc
 
 === Packages Moved Out Of Core ===
 
 This is a new section to the release notes.  This is based on a
-treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 14-MAR-2005.  The following
-packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005.  The following
+packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4test3:
 
  * abiword-2.0.12-3
  * aiksaurus-1.2.1-2
@@ -848,10 +1032,12 @@
  * grip-3.2.0-3
  * gv-3.5.8-29
  * im-sdk-12.1-4
+ * jcode.pl-2.13-11
  * jed-0.99.16-6
  * jisksp14-0.1-16
  * jisksp16-1990-0.1-16
  * kappa20-0.3-15
+ * katana-2.0.0-1
  * kdetoys-3.3.0-1
  * kernel-utils-2.4-13.1.39
  * kinput2-v3.1-23
@@ -927,6 +1113,7 @@
  * xsnow-1.42-15
  * ytalk-3.1.2-1
 
+
 == An Overview of the Fedora Project ==
 
 The goal of the Fedora Project is to work with the Linux community to
@@ -947,12 +1134,9 @@
 In addition to the website, the following mailing lists are available:
 
   * fedora-list at redhat.com -- For users of Fedora Core releases
-  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test
-releases
-  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers,
-developers
-  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs
-project
+  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test releases
+  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers, developers
+  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs project
 
 To subscribe to any of these lists, send an email with the word
 "subscribe" in the subject to <listname>-request (where <listname> is


Index: fedora-release.spec
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/fedora-release.spec,v
retrieving revision 1.6
retrieving revision 1.7
diff -u -r1.6 -r1.7
--- fedora-release.spec	7 Apr 2005 03:01:03 -0000	1.6
+++ fedora-release.spec	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.7
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-%define release_version 3.91
+%define release_version 3.92
 %define release_name Pre-FC4
 %define builtin_release_version Rawhide
 %define builtin_release_name Rawhide


Index: index.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/fedora-release/index.html,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- index.html	6 Apr 2005 21:33:20 -0000	1.2
+++ index.html	4 May 2005 18:40:31 -0000	1.3
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@
 <a href="http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraDocsProject">FedoraDocsProject</a>.
 
 <pre>
-== Fedora Core 4 test 2 Release Notes ==
+= Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes =
 
 Copyright (c) 2005 Red Hat, Inc.
 
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@
 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
 Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
 copy of the license is available at
-http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
+[1]http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html.
 
 This document may be copied and distributed in any medium, either
 commercially or non-commercially, provided that the GNU Free
@@ -89,14 +89,13 @@
 All other trademarks and copyrights referred to are the property of
 their respective owners.
 
-The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key
-is:
+The GPG fingerprint of the "Fedora Project <fedora at redhat.com>" key is:
 
 CA B4 4B 99 6F 27 74 4E 86 12 7C DF B4 42 69 D0 4F 2A 6F D2
 
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-         1. Fedora Core 4 test2 Release Notes
+         1. Fedora Core 4test3 Release Notes
          2. Introduction
          3. Hardware Requirements
                1. CPU Requirements
@@ -116,8 +115,7 @@
                8. Macintosh File Server
                9. X Window System
               10. Miscellaneous Notes
-         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or
-Deprecated/Nuked
+         8. Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked
                1. Packages Added
                2. Packages Moved Out Of Core
          9. An Overview of the Fedora Project
@@ -136,7 +134,7 @@
 For more information, refer to the Fedora Project overview later in
 this document.
 
-The following topics related to Fedora Core 4 test 2 are covered in this
+The following topics related to Fedora Core 4test3 are covered in this
 document:
 
     * Introduction (this section)
@@ -150,29 +148,29 @@
 == Hardware Requirements ==
 
 The following information represents the minimum hardware requirements
-necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+necessary to successfully install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
-video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
-modes and/or post-installation usage.
+  The compatibility/availability of other hardware components (such as
+  video and network cards) may be required for specific installation
+  modes and/or post-installation usage.
 
-=== CPU Requirements ===
+===  CPU Requirements ===
 
 This section lists the CPU specifications required by Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
-processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix, and
-VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following Intel
-processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
+  The following CPU specifications are stated in terms of Intel
+  processors.  Other processors (notably, offerings from AMD, Cyrix,
+  and VIA) that are compatible with and equivalent to the following
+  Intel processors may also be used with Fedora Core.
 
     * Minimum: Pentium-class
 
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
+Fedora Core 4test3 is optimized for Pentium 4 CPUs, but also supports
 earlier CPUs (such as Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III,
 and including AMD and VIA variants). This approach has been taken
 because Pentium-class optimizations actually result in reduced
@@ -186,18 +184,17 @@
 
 === Hard Disk Space Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core
-4 test 2.
+This section lists the disk space required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
-taken up by Fedora Core 4 test 2 after the installation is
-complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
-installation to support the installation environment. This additional
-disk space corresponds to the size of /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on
-CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in /var/lib/rpm on the installed
-system.
+  The disk space requirements listed below represent the disk space
+  taken up by Fedora Core 4test3 after the installation is
+  complete. However, additional disk space is required during the
+  installation to support the installation environment. This
+  additional disk space corresponds to the size of
+  /Fedora/base/stage2.img (on CD-ROM 1) plus the size of the files in
+  /var/lib/rpm on the installed system.
 
 In practical terms, this means that as little as an additional 90MB
 can be required for a minimal installation, while as much as an
@@ -215,7 +212,7 @@
 
 === Memory Requirements ===
 
-This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4 test 2.
+This section lists the memory required to install Fedora Core 4test3.
 
   * Minimum for text-mode: 64MB
   * Minimum for graphical: 192MB
@@ -223,120 +220,167 @@
 
 == Overview of This Release ==
 
-The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core
-4 test 2:
+The following list highlights certain new features of Fedora Core 4test3:
 
   * GCC 4.0
   * GNOME 2.10
   * KDE 3.4
-  * Native Eclipse 3.1M5
+  * Native Eclipse 3.1M6 - Part of free Java stack
   * MySQL 4.1
   * PHP 5.0
+  * Xen 2 - Virtualization to run multiple versions of an OS
+  * GFS 6.1-0.pre22 - Cluster file system
+  * Evince 0.2.1 - Universal document viewer
+  * GDM 2.6 - Includes early login capability
+
+  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy.
+    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .  This is a list of
+    daemons protected by the targeted policy:
 
-  * SELinux -- New daemons have been added to the targeted policy For
-    more information, refer to the SELinux FAQ at
-    http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-faq/ .
+    * NetworkManager
     * amanda
     * apache
+    * apmd
+    * arpwatch
+    * auditd
+    * bluetooth
+    * canna
+    * cardmgr
+    * checkpolicy
     * chkpwd
+    * compat
+    * comsat
+    * consoletype
+    * cpucontrol
+    * cpuspeed
+    * crond
     * cups
+    * cvs
+    * cyrus
+    * dbskkd
+    * dbusd
     * dhcpc
     * dhcpd
     * dictd
+    * dmidecode
     * dovecot
     * fingerd
+    * fsadm
     * ftpd
+    * getty
+    * hald
+    * hostname
+    * hotplug
     * howl
+    * hwclock
     * i18n_input
     * ifconfig
+    * inetd
     * init
     * initrc
-    * inetd
     * innd
     * kerberos
+    * klogd
     * ktalkd
+    * kudzu
     * ldconfig
+    * load_policy
     * login
     * lpd
     * mailman
     * modutil
     * mta
     * mysqld
-    * NetworkManager
     * named
+    * netutils
     * nscd
     * ntpd
     * portmap
     * postgresql
+    * pppd
     * privoxy
     * radius
     * radvd
+    * restorecon
     * rlogind
     * rpcd
+    * rpm
     * rshd
     * rsync
     * samba
+    * saslauthd
+    * sendmail
+    * setfiles
     * slapd
     * snmpd
     * squid
+    * ssh
     * stunnel
     * syslogd
     * telnetd
     * tftpd
+    * udev
+    * updfstab
+    * uucpd
+    * webalizer
     * winbind
+    * xdm
     * ypbind
     * ypserv
     * zebra
 
+
 == Installation-Related Notes ==
 
 This section outlines anything noteworthy that is related to Anaconda
 (the Fedora Core installation program) and installing Fedora Core
-4 test 2 in general.
+4test3 in general.
 
-Note
+  Note
 
-If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4 test 2 DVD ISO image, keep
-in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
-larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File size
-limit exceeded error.
+  If you intend to download the Fedora Core 4test3 DVD ISO image, keep
+  in mind that not all file downloading tools can accommodate files
+  larger than 2GB in size. For example, wget will exit with a File
+  size limit exceeded error.
 
 The curl and ncftpget file downloading tools do not have this
 limitation, and can successfully download files larger than 2GB.
 
 Bittorrent is another method for downloading large files.
 
+
 Anaconda Notes
 
   * The Fedora Core installation program has the ability to test the
-integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD, hard
-drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat recommends that
-you test all installation media before starting the installation
-process, and before reporting any installation-related bugs (many of
-the bugs reported are actually due to improperly-burned CDs). To use
-this test, type linux mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
+    integrity of the installation media. It works with the CD, DVD,
+    hard drive ISO, and NFS ISO installation methods. Red Hat
+    recommends that you test all installation media before starting
+    the installation process, and before reporting any
+    installation-related bugs (many of the bugs reported are actually
+    due to improperly-burned CDs). To use this test, type linux
+    mediacheck at the boot: prompt.
 
   * Memory testing may be performed prior to installing Fedora Core by
-entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
-standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory testing
-continues until the Esc key is pressed.
+    entering memtest86 at the boot: prompt. This causes the Memtest86
+    standalone memory testing software to run. Memtest86 memory
+    testing continues until the Esc key is pressed.
 
 NOTE: You must boot from CD-ROM 1 (or a rescue CD-ROM) in order to use
 this feature.
 
-  * Fedora Core 4 test 2 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
-installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
-installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM (or
-systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer image) can
-use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or less will continue
-to use the text-based installer.
+  * Fedora Core 4test3 supports graphical FTP and HTTP
+    installations. However, due to the necessity of containing the
+    installer image in RAM, only systems with more than 128MB of RAM
+    (or systems booted from CD-ROM 1, which contains the installer
+    image) can use the graphical installer.  Systems with 128MB or
+    less will continue to use the text-based installer.
 
 == Installation-Related Issues ==
 
   * Certain hardware configurations (particularly those with LCD
-displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
-installation program. In these instances, restart the installation,
-and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
+    displays) may experience problems while starting the Fedora Core
+    installation program. In these instances, restart the
+    installation, and add the "nofb" option to the boot command line.
 
 NOTE: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean graphical installations started
 using the "nofb" option will start in English, and then switch to the
@@ -344,9 +388,9 @@
 process begins.
 
   * Some Sony VAIO(R) notebook systems may experience problems
-installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
-installation process and add the following option to the boot command
-line:
+    installing Fedora Core from CD-ROM. If this happens, restart the
+    installation process and add the following option to the boot
+    command line:
 
 pci=off ide1=0x180,0x386
 
@@ -355,28 +399,28 @@
 first time Fedora Core is booted.
 
   * Serial mice are known to be inoperative during
-installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
-properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
-119474 for more information:
+    installation. However, there are indications that serial mice work
+    properly in X after the installation has completed. Refer to bug
+    119474 for more information:
 
 [6]http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=119474
 
   * There have been issues observed when upgrading Red Hat Linux
-7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
-issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat Linux
-RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian RPMs. This
-configuration is not supported. You have several choices in resolving
-this issue:
-
-1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading to
-Fedora Core.
-
-2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall Ximian
-GNOME.
-
-3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
-remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding Fedora
-Core RPMs.
+    7.<x>, 8.0, 9, and Fedora Core 1 systems running Ximian GNOME. The
+    issue is caused by version overlap between the official Red Hat
+    Linux RPMs (or the ones from the Fedora Project) and the Ximian
+    RPMs. This configuration is not supported. You have several
+    choices in resolving this issue:
+
+    1) You may remove Ximian GNOME from your system prior to upgrading
+       to Fedora Core.
+
+    2) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately reinstall
+       Ximian GNOME.
+
+    3) You may upgrade your system, and then immediately remove all
+       remaining Ximian RPMs, replacing them with the corresponding
+       Fedora Core RPMs.
 
 You must resolve the version overlap using one of the above choices.
 Failure to do so will result in an unstable GNOME configuration.
@@ -384,22 +428,95 @@
 == Package-Specific Notes ==
 
 The following sections contain information regarding packages that
-have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4 test 2. For easier
+have undergone significant changes for Fedora Core 4test3. For easier
 access, they are organized using the same groups used in Anaconda.
 
 === Base ===
 
 This section contains information related to basic system components.
 
+
+auditd and log files
+
+The audit daemon, auditd, is now enabled by default.  When auditd is
+running, the kernel directs audit messages to
+/var/log/audit/audit.log.  The location of this file is specified in
+/etc/auditd.conf.
+
+AVC messages for SELinux are sent using the audit infrastructure.
+These messages are now in /var/log/audit/audit.log.
+
+When auditd is not running, the kernel passes audit messages to
+syslog.  These logs are typically kept in /var/log/messages and are
+viewable using dmesg.
+
+Audit extensions are now compiled into PAM.  All programs that do
+grant entry to the system or change user account attributes will
+generate an audit message.
+
+To enable auditing within the kernel, you must pass the parameter
+audit=1 to the kernel during boot.  Otherwise, you can use this
+command to enable auditing during run time:
+
+  'auditctl -e 1'
+
+
+LinuxThreads v. NPTL
+
+As the next step in removing support for the obsolete LinuxThreads
+library, code compiled and linked on FC4 now automatically uses the NPTL
+headers and libraries.  
+
+In previous releases, since Red Hat Linux 9, the default was to use
+LinuxThreads since the interface is mostly forward compatible.  The
+advantages of the NPTL interface is that the cancellation handling is
+faster (when -fexception is used, even in C code) and that the
+additional interfaces are now available without special compiler and
+linker parameters.  In other words, you do not need to use
+-I/usr/include/nptl and -L/usr/lib{,64}/nptl any longer.  Note that
+lib{,64} is to be interpreted as lib64 on platforms which place DSOs
+in lib64 directories, and lib otherwise.
+
+In FC4 it is still possible to create code using the LinuxThreads
+definitions.  For this the linuxthreads-devel package must be
+installed and
+
+   -I/usr/include/linuxthreads -L/usr/lib{,64}/linuxthreads
+
+must be passed to the compiler.
+
+At runtime, it used to be possible to use the LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
+environment variable to select the appropriate version of glibc and the
+libpthread DSO.  Now it is additionally necessary to specify
+
+  LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib{,64}/obsolete/linuxthreads
+
+in the environment.  This is because the runtime libraries have also
+been moved out of the way.  There might programs that will not work if
+the program uses an unfortunate DT_RPATH (which overwrites the
+LD_LIBRARY_PATH setting).
+
+All this makes it more cumbersome to run programs which depend on
+LinuxThreads.  But this is intentional.  
+
+  Important
+
+  FC5 will not have LinuxThreads support and all programs have to be
+  converted to use NPTL by then.
+
+In general, conversion to using NPTL has not been an issue.
+
+
 slocate database
 
-The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by
-default.  Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to
-"yes" in /etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+The database needed by the locate utility is no longer created by default.
+Enable the database creation by setting DAILY_UPDATE to "yes" in
+/etc/updatedb.conf if you want to use locate.
+
 
 openssh
 
-The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4 test 2 contains OpenSSH 3.9
+The version of OpenSSH in Fedora Core 4test3 contains OpenSSH 3.9
 includes strict permission and ownership checks for the ~/.ssh/config
 file. These checks mean that ssh will exit if this file does not have
 appropriate ownership and permissions.
@@ -426,51 +543,63 @@
 This section contains the most elemental components of Fedora Core,
 including the kernel.
 
-  * In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a
-separate package for the kernel source code when that source code
-already exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4 test 2 no
-longer includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access
-to the kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To
-create an exploded source tree from this file, perform the following
-steps (note that <version> refers to the version specification for
-your currently-running kernel):
 
-        1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
-following sources:
+yum
+
+The sqllite database is now used by yum, and makes performance
+noticeably faster.
 
-          * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso
-image
+The Fedora Extras repository is now enabled by default.
 
-          * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-          * By running the following command:
+kernel source
 
-                up2date --get-source kernel
+In order to eliminate the redundancy inherent in providing a separate
+package for the kernel source code when that source code already
+exists in the kernel's .src.rpm file, Fedora Core 4test3 no longer
+includes the kernel-source package. Users that require access to the
+kernel sources can find them in the kernel .src.rpm file. To create an
+exploded source tree from this file, perform the following steps (note
+that <version> refers to the version specification for your
+currently-running kernel):
 
-        2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
-configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
-/usr/src/redhat/)
+  1. Obtain the kernel-<version>.src.rpm file from one of the
+     following sources:
 
-        3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
-following command:
+     * The SRPMS directory on the appropriate "SRPMS" CD iso image
 
-        rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+     * The FTP site where you got the kernel package
 
-        (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+     * By running the following command:
 
-        On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be
-located in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+         up2date --get-source kernel
 
-        4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific
-kernels shipped in Fedora Core 4 test 2 are in the /configs/
-directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
-/configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following command
-to place the desired configuration file in the proper place for
-building:
+  2. Install kernel-<version>.src.rpm (given the default RPM
+     configuration, the files this package contains will be written to
+     /usr/src/redhat/)
+     
+       rpm -ivh kernel-<version>.src.rpm
+
+  3. Change directory to /usr/src/redhat/SPECS/, and issue the
+     following command:
+
+       rpmbuild -bp --target=<arch> kernel.spec
+
+       (Where <arch> is the desired target architecture.)
+
+     On a default RPM configuration, the kernel tree will be located
+     in /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/.
+
+   4. In resulting tree, the configurations for the specific kernels
+      shipped in Fedora Core 4test3 are in the /configs/
+      directory. For example, the i686 SMP configuration file is named
+      /configs/kernel-<version>-i686-smp.config. Issue the following
+      command to place the desired configuration file in the proper
+      place for building:
 
         cp <desired-file> ./.config
 
-        5. Issue the following command:
+   5. Issue the following command:
 
         make oldconfig
 
@@ -484,11 +613,13 @@
 For example, to build the foo.ko module, create the following file
 (named Makefile) in the directory containing the foo.c file:
 
-obj-m := foo.o
+obj-m    := foo.o
 
-KDIR := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build PWD := $(shell pwd)
+KDIR    := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build
+PWD    := $(shell pwd)
 
-default: $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
+default:
+$(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) SUBDIRS=$(PWD) modules
         
 
 Issue the make command to build the foo.ko module.
@@ -512,6 +643,17 @@
 
 This section contains information related to Web-related tools.
 
+
+mod_perl
+
+The "RC5" release of mod_perl 2.0 is now included; the API provided by
+this release is incompatible with previous 1.99_xx releases.  Please
+refer to the following document for discussion of how to adapt code to
+use the new API:
+
+   http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/rename.html 
+
+
 php
 
 Version 5.0 of PHP is now included, which includes a number of changes
@@ -521,6 +663,10 @@
 
 http://www.php.net/manual/en/migration5.php
 
+The /usr/bin/php binary is now built using the "CLI" command-line
+SAPI, rather than the CGI SAPI.  The CGI SAPI is now available as
+/usr/bin/php-cgi; this binary also includes FastCGI support.
+
 The following extensions have been added:
 
  * the "mysqli" extension, the newly MySQL interface designed
@@ -528,22 +674,29 @@
  * the "soap" extension, which can be used to implement a SOAP server
    or client
 
+The following extensions are now available as optional loadable
+extensions, rather than being built in to the php binaries:
+
+ * dba, now available in the php-dba package
+ * bcmath, now available in the php-bcmath package
+
 === Windows File Server ===
 
 This section contains information related to Samba, software that
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Windows systems.
 
+
 samba
 
 Browsing of Windows shares (also known as SMB browsing) fails on
-Fedora Core 4 test 2 systems that have the standard firewall
+Fedora Core 4test3 systems that have the standard firewall
 configured. This is most easily noticed in the failure of Nautilus to
 display shares. The failure is due to the firewall disrupting the
 broadcast mode of SMB browsing, which is Samba's default
 setting. There are two workarounds:
 
   * Configure a WINS server on the network, and set the "wins server"
-option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
+    option in smb.conf to the address of the WINS server.
 
   * Disable the firewall
 
@@ -561,25 +714,26 @@
 
 === Macintosh File Server ===
 
-This section contains information related to netatalk, software that
+This section contains information related to netatalk, software that 
 makes it possible to share files between Linux and Macintosh systems.
 
+
 netatalk
 
-The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource
-forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to
-Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation
-of the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
+The 2.x version of netatalk uses a different method to store resource 
+forks, and may use a different file name encoding scheme. Upgrading to 
+Fedora Core 4 may result in data loss. Please read the documentation of 
+the netatalk 1.x to 2.x upgrade before upgrading to Fedora Core 4.
 
-The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the
+The netatalk upgrade information is available directly from the 
 netatalk site:
 
 http://netatalk.sourceforge.net/2.0/htmldocs/upgrade.html
 
-It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4,
-the files are at:
+It is also included in the netatalk installation for Fedora Core 4, the 
+files are at:
 
-/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page
+/usr/share/doc/netatalk-2.0.2/doc/Netatalk-Manual.pdf - numbered page 
 25, document page 33.
 
 or
@@ -594,9 +748,9 @@
 xorg-x11
 
   * Users new to the X.org X11 implementation should take note of a
-few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
-which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In particular,
-the names of some files have changed:
+    few differences between it and the XFree86.org X11 implementation
+    which shipped in previous Red Hat operating systems. In
+    particular, the names of some files have changed:
 
 X Server Binary:
 
@@ -620,13 +774,13 @@
 sure that you are using the correct files.
 
   * There has been some confusion regarding font-related issues under
-the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and versions of
-Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there are two font
-subsystems, each with different characteristics:
+    the X Window System in recent versions of Fedora Core (and
+    versions of Red Hat Linux before it.) At the present time, there
+    are two font subsystems, each with different characteristics:
 
 - The original (15+ year old) subsystem is referred to as the "core X
-font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
-anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
+  font subsystem". Fonts rendered by this subsystem are not
+  anti-aliased, are handled by the X server, and have names like:
 
 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--10-100-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
 
@@ -639,10 +793,10 @@
 Luxi Sans-10
 
   * Over time, fontconfig/Xft will replace the core X font
-subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK 2
-toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use the
-fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses the
-core X fonts.
+    subsystem. At the present time, applications using the Qt 3 or GTK
+    2 toolkits (which would include KDE and GNOME applications) use
+    the fontconfig and Xft font subsystem; almost everything else uses
+    the core X fonts.
 
 In the future, Fedora Core may support only fontconfig/Xft in place of
 the XFS font server as the default local font access method.
@@ -650,29 +804,28 @@
 NOTE: An exception to the font subsystem usage outlined above is
 OpenOffice.org (which uses its own font rendering technology).
 
-If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4 test 2 system, you
+If you wish to add new fonts to your Fedora Core 4test3 system, you
 must be aware that the steps necessary depend on which font subsystem
 is to use the new fonts. For the core X font subsystem, you must:
 
-1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it doesn't already
-exist):
+1. Create the /usr/share/fonts/local/ directory (if it does not
+   already exist):
 
 mkdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 2. Copy the new font file into /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 3. Update the font information by issuing the following commands (note
-that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
-appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be entered
-on a single line):
+   that, due to formatting restrictions, the following commands may
+   appear on more than one line; in use, each command should be
+   entered on a single line):
 
-ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o
-/usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
+ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o /usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
 
 mkfontdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
 4. If you had to create /usr/share/fonts/local/, you must then add it
-to the X font server (xfs) path:
+   to the X font server (xfs) path:
 
 chkfontpath --add /usr/share/fonts/local/
 
@@ -698,10 +851,10 @@
 the fontconfig font subsystem can use the font.
 
   * Due to the transition to the new font system based on
-fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any changes
-made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these applications, a font
-can be configured by adding the following lines to the file
-~/.gtkrc.mine:
+    fontconfig/Xft, GTK+ 1.2 applications are not affected by any
+    changes made via the Font Preferences dialog. For these
+    applications, a font can be configured by adding the following
+    lines to the file ~/.gtkrc.mine:
 
 style "user-font" {
 
@@ -709,7 +862,7 @@
 
 }
 
-widget_class " *" style "user-font"
+widget_class "  *" style "user-font"
 
 (Where <font-specification> represents a font specification in the
 style used by traditional X applications, such as
@@ -720,6 +873,17 @@
 This section contains information related to packages that do not fit
 in any of the proceeding categories.
 
+  OpenOffice and upgrading test releases
+
+If you choose to go counter to the recommendation to *not* upgrade
+from a previous test release, you may encounter a problem with
+OpenOffice following the upgrade.
+
+To resolve this, you must do the following command *before* doing the
+upgrade:
+
+  rm -rf /usr/lib/openoffice.org*/share/template/*/wizard/bitmap
+
 
 == Packages Added, Moved From Core, Changed, or Deprecated/Nuked ==
 
@@ -729,61 +893,73 @@
 This section contains lists of packages that fit into the following
 categories:
 
-  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been added to Fedora Core 4test3
 
-  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4 test 2
+  * Packages that have been moved out of Fedora Core 4test3
 
   * Packages that have a changed version since Fedora Core 3
   
   * Packages that have been deprecated, and may be removed from a
-future
-    release of Fedora Core
+    future release of Fedora Core
 
 === Packages Added ===
 
-The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+The following packages have been added to Fedora Core 4test3.  This is
+based on a treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005:
 
- * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_2fc
+ * ant-1.6.2-3jpp_5fc
  * antlr-2.7.4-2jpp_1fc
  * aqbanking-1.0.4beta-2
  * aqhbci-1.0.2beta-2
+ * aspell-is-0.51.1-1
  * avalon-framework-4.1.4-2jpp_5fc
  * avalon-logkit-1.2-2jpp_4fc
  * bcel-5.1-1jpp_4fc
- * classpath-inetlib-1.0-1jpp_1fc
+ * ccs-0.25-0.1
  * classpathx-jaf-1.0-2jpp_3fc
  * classpathx-mail-1.0-3jpp_1fc
+ * cman-1.0-0.pre33.2
+ * cman-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.5
  * compat-gcc-296-2.96-132.fc4
  * compat-gcc-32-3.2.3-47.fc4
  * compat-readline43-4.3-2
- * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.12
- * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.19
+ * cpufreq-utils-0.2-1.1.14
+ * cpuspeed-1.2.1-1.20
  * cryptix-3.2.0-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptix-asn1-20011119-4jpp_1fc
  * cryptsetup-luks-1.0-1
  * dcraw-0.0.20050227-1
- * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-0.pre8.0
- * dmidecode-2.6-1.13
- * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M5.17
- * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-9
- * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M5.3
- * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-19
- * eclipse-pydev-0.9.0_fc-4
- * evince-0.1.9-1
- * fonts-chinese-2.15-1
+ * device-mapper-multipath-0.4.4-2.0
+ * dlm-1.0-0.pre21.2
+ * dlm-kernel-2.6.11.3-20050425.154843.FC4.6
+ * dmidecode-2.6-1.14
+ * eclipse-3.1.0_fc-0.M6.14
+ * eclipse-bugzilla-0.1.0_fc-14
+ * eclipse-cdt-3.0.0_fc-0.M6.5
+ * eclipse-changelog-2.0.1_fc-21
+ * eclipse-pydev-0.9.3_fc-7
+ * evince-0.2.1-1
+ * fence-1.27-1
+ * fonts-chinese-2.15-2
  * fonts-indic-1.9-2
- * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-2
- * fonts-korean-1.0.11-2
- * gjdoc-0.7.3-1
- * gnome-doc-utils-0.1.3-1
- * gnome-menus-2.10.1-1
+ * fonts-japanese-0.20050222-3
+ * fonts-korean-1.0.11-4
+ * GFS-6.1-0.pre22.1
+ * GFS-kernel-2.6.11.4-20050503.144108.FC4.1
+ * gjdoc-0.7.4-4
+ * gnbd-1.0-0.pre13.1
+ * gnbd-kernel-2.6.11.2-20050420.133124.FC4.10
+ * gnome-doc-utils-0.2.0-2
+ * gnome-menus-2.10.1-3
  * gnome-python2-extras-2.10.0-2.1
- * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_1fc
+ * gnu-crypto-2.0.1-1jpp_3fc
  * gnu.getopt-1.0.9-4jpp_1fc
+ * gulm-1.0-0.pre28.3
  * gwenhywfar-1.7.2-2
- * hardlink-1.0-1.11
- * iiimf-12.1.1-11.svn2435
- * ipv6calc-0.48-3
+ * hardlink-1.0-1.13
+ * iddev-1.9-19
+ * iiimf-12.2-0.7.svn2578
+ * ipv6calc-0.48-5
  * irqbalance-1.12-1.18
  * jakarta-commons-beanutils-1.7.0-1jpp_1fc
  * jakarta-commons-collections-3.1-1jpp_1fc
@@ -801,37 +977,45 @@
  * jakarta-taglibs-standard-1.1.1-4jpp_1fc
  * java_cup-0.10-0.k.1jpp_2fc
  * jdepend-2.6-2jpp_3fc
- * jessie-1.0.0-3
+ * jessie-1.0.0-6
  * jlex-1.2.6-1jpp_2fc
- * jsch-0.1.17-2jpp_1fc
+ * jsch-0.1.18-1jpp_1fc
  * junit-3.8.1-3jpp_4fc
  * jzlib-1.0.5-2jpp_1fc
  * kdeaccessibility-3.4.0-1
  * ksh-20050202-1
  * latex2html-2002.2.1-1
  * ldapjdk-4.17-1jpp_2fc
- * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-2
- * libgconf-java-2.10.0-1
- * libglade-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgnome-java-2.9.92-1
- * libgtk-java-2.6.1.1-1
+ * libdbi-drivers-0.7.1-3
+ * libgconf-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libglade-java-2.10.1-3
+ * libgnome-java-2.10.1-1
+ * libgtk-java-2.6.2-1
  * linux-atm-2.5.0-0.20050118.2
  * lksctp-tools-1.0.2-5
  * log4j-1.2.8-7jpp_3fc
- * longrun-0.9-1.8
- * lvm2-cluster-2.00.29-1.22.FC4
+ * longrun-0.9-1.9
+ * lvm2-cluster-2.01.09-2.1
+ * magma-1.0-0.pre21.4
+ * magma-plugins-1.0-0.pre16.11
  * mcelog-0.4-1.8
  * microcode_ctl-1.11-1.21
- * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_1fc
- * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_2fc
- * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-5
+ * mod_jk-1.2.6-3jpp_2fc
+ * mx4j-2.1.0-1jpp_5fc
+ * mysqlclient10-3.23.58-6
  * openhpi-2.0.3-2
  * OpenIPMI-1.4.11-5
  * openssl097a-0.9.7a-2
  * oro-2.0.8-1jpp_2fc
- * poppler-0.1.2-1
+ * perl-Archive-Zip-1.14-1
+ * perl-Carp-Clan-5.3-1
+ * perl-IO-String-1.06-3
+ * perl-IO-Zlib-1.04-4
+ * perl-Net-Telnet-3.03-4
+ * pm-utils-0.01-1
+ * poppler-0.3.0-2
  * puretls-0.9-0.b4.1jpp_2fc
- * python-docs-2.4-102
+ * python-docs-2.4.1-1
  * python-elementtree-1.2.6-4
  * python-numeric-23.7-2
  * python-sqlite-1.1.6-1
@@ -839,28 +1023,28 @@
  * python-urlgrabber-2.9.6-1
  * readahead-1.0-1.7
  * regexp-1.3-1jpp_4fc
- * rng-utils-2.0-1.5
+ * rgmanager-1.9.31-0
+ * rng-utils-2.0-1.6
  * salinfo-0.5-1.4
- * servletapi5-5.0.18-1jpp_3fc
  * slib-3a1-2
  * smartmontools-5.33-1.5
- * sqlite-3.1.2-2
- * struts11-1.1-1jpp_2fc
- * system-config-lvm-0.9.22-1.0
+ * sqlite-3.1.2-3
+ * struts11-1.1-1jpp_4fc
+ * system-config-lvm-0.9.25-1.0
  * texi2html-1.76-2
- * tomcat5-5.0.30-1jpp_2fc
- * x86info-1.13-1.9
+ * tomcat5-5.0.30-5jpp_1fc
+ * x86info-1.13-1.10
  * xalan-j2-2.6.0-2jpp_1fc
- * xen-2-20050403
- * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_1fc
- * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_5fc
+ * xen-2-20050424
+ * xerces-j2-2.6.2-4jpp_4fc
+ * xml-commons-1.0-0.b2.6jpp_10fc
  * xml-commons-resolver-1.1-1jpp_4fc
 
 === Packages Moved Out Of Core ===
 
 This is a new section to the release notes.  This is based on a
-treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 14-MAR-2005.  The following
-packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4 test 2:
+treediff of dist-fc3 and dist-fc4 on 04-MAY-2005.  The following
+packages have been moved out of core from Fedora Core 4test3:
 
  * abiword-2.0.12-3
  * aiksaurus-1.2.1-2
@@ -907,10 +1091,12 @@
  * grip-3.2.0-3
  * gv-3.5.8-29
  * im-sdk-12.1-4
+ * jcode.pl-2.13-11
  * jed-0.99.16-6
  * jisksp14-0.1-16
  * jisksp16-1990-0.1-16
  * kappa20-0.3-15
+ * katana-2.0.0-1
  * kdetoys-3.3.0-1
  * kernel-utils-2.4-13.1.39
  * kinput2-v3.1-23
@@ -986,6 +1172,7 @@
  * xsnow-1.42-15
  * ytalk-3.1.2-1
 
+
 == An Overview of the Fedora Project ==
 
 The goal of the Fedora Project is to work with the Linux community to
@@ -1006,12 +1193,9 @@
 In addition to the website, the following mailing lists are available:
 
   * fedora-list at redhat.com -- For users of Fedora Core releases
-  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test
-releases
-  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers,
-developers
-  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs
-project
+  * fedora-test-list at redhat.com -- For testers of Fedora Core test releases
+  * fedora-devel-list at redhat.com -- For developers, developers, developers
+  * fedora-docs-list at redhat.com -- For participants of the docs project
 
 To subscribe to any of these lists, send an email with the word
 "subscribe" in the subject to <listname>-request (where <listname> is




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