rolling-rhino
release
rolling-rhino | release | |
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16 | 1 | |
438 | 13 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
rolling-rhino
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Even though the VA-API has been droped for legal reasons, I still think fedora is one of the best distros out there.
Well there is a community project called Rolling Rhino that converts Ubuntu to a rolling release by activating the devel repos and a bit shenanigans. Look here I haven't tested it but maybe this a nice alternative
- convert Ubuntu into a rolling release
- We have launched the first release of Rolling Rhino Remix - A Linux distribution that turns Ubuntu into a rolling release.
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Me and a few people created a rolling release version of Ubuntu!
Where you are right is that, its not an official ubuntu project as far as I know (I believe it was a side project by Ubuntu Desktop's lead developer), but it was a thing before these guys, installable in a simila way as Debian Unstable is (install the nightly image and manually edit the sources.list or use the 'rolling rhino' script).
- New Linux desktop Page
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PipeWire 0.3.46 (2022-02-17)
But then, since before the 20.04 release, I just YOLO it and always update to the latest dev branch on my daily driver, a la Rolling Rhino.
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I can't update to 21.10 from 20.04
Personally I think of Fedora & Ubuntu (non-LTS cycle) as pretty equal; though Fedora gives you maybe 6-13 months before you need to release-upgrade which is longer than the 6-9 months of Ubuntu (that's the benefit of Fedora to me; though I prefer Debian/Ubuntu still myself). No one distribution is always ahead of the others, but it's rarely Fedora in my view, though I'm not including Fedora rawhide though as my Fedora install is rarely on that; my OpenSuSE tumbleweed box is usually used if I need a system that is equal or further ahead of my Ubuntu/Debian system... I'm involved with a flavor so if I've found a bug, I use the other systems to confirm the bug before filing upstream.. Other systems I use are Fedora (version varies), OpenSuSE tumbleweed & Debian testing. Debian testing is actually behind my current Ubuntu flavor & has been awhile.. but that'll change as I watch new packages enter Sid... My Ubuntu system sits on the development cycle.. so if you want the most up-to-date Ubuntu system, don't forget you can use development (currently jammy), or use rolling rhino. Yes of course they're not stable so problems may occur (and I'd always ensure you have a replacement system ready to use... hey I've got my Debian testing, my opensuse, my fedora, etc ; and this system is dual boot anyway; my other install being a rarely used Ubuntu focal/20.04).
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Ubuntu 21.04 is in it's last days before End Of Life
Ubuntu does have rolling rhino if sitting on the development cycle (currently jammy) isn't enough for you.
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About Ubuntu Release Cycles 🚀
I was giving this some thought the other day. I think the LTS release cycle is perfect for the average user. I wonder if the development releases could be replaced with a rolling release? I don't use the development releases, but I'd imagine it's tedious to perform an upgrade every six months. I'd imagine it would be easier for those users if Canonical released a mature implementation of something like Rolling Rhino.
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Ubuntu Should Opt for a Hybrid Rolling Release Model [Opinion]
Martin Wimpress’ Rolling Rhino project has a bit more info.
release
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Job creation from an other job with form
My understanding is your looking for several trigger job to trigger a third generic job but with different parameter. We do that on the Jenkins project and you can find an example here where we have a generic release job triggered with different parameter depending if we are doing a weekly release or a stable release. The jcasc for that Jenkins instance is also public if your wondering
What are some alternatives?
rhino-update - Rhino Update is a command-line utility script which will provide updates to items that do not hit the Ubuntu devel repositories, such as the latest Linux Kernel.
gh-action-pypi-publish - The blessed :octocat: GitHub Action, for publishing your :package: distribution files to PyPI: https://github.com/marketplace/actions/pypi-publish
zig-releaser - A simple hack to use GoReleaser to build, release, and publish Zig projects.
RSCalibration - Docs and scripts to estimate a camera's rolling shutter readout time
tag - Git utility to create tags in order to identify specific releases
docker-android - Android in docker solution with noVNC supported and video recording
toolbox - Tool for interactive command line environments on Linux
mkdkr - mkdkr = Makefile + Docker
TimeShift - System restore tool for Linux. Creates filesystem snapshots using rsync+hardlinks, or BTRFS snapshots. Supports scheduled snapshots, multiple backup levels, and exclude filters. Snapshots can be restored while system is running or from Live CD/USB.
crouton - Chromium OS Universal Chroot Environment