For the alpha I reported that I had problems (glacial speed being the main one) trying to do a live install on a machine with 512 MB. I'd like to report that for Beta a live install on the same machine went just fine.
I'm not sure what changed, but it is a nice improvement.
On Sat, 2013-11-09 at 08:57 -0600, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
For the alpha I reported that I had problems (glacial speed being the main one) trying to do a live install on a machine with 512 MB. I'd like to report that for Beta a live install on the same machine went just fine.
I'm not sure what changed, but it is a nice improvement.
Non-debug kernel.
Adam Williamson <awilliam <at> redhat.com> writes:
On Sat, 2013-11-09 at 08:57 -0600, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
For the alpha I reported that I had problems (glacial speed being the main one) trying to do a live install on a machine with 512 MB. I'd like to report that for Beta a live install on the same machine went just fine.
I'm not sure what changed, but it is a nice improvement.
Non-debug kernel.
Are you sure? I thought Alpha also had a non-debug kernel (3.11.0-300.fc20). I also thought someone mentioned a new policy where branched would always get a non-debug kernel immediately instead of waiting until after Alpha (which I personally think makes a lot of sense, since a debug kernel hinders testing of everything else, since it's hard to test something that runs like molasses, and someone who needs the debug kernel can install it).
On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 12:58 PM, Andre Robatino robatino@fedoraproject.org wrote:
Adam Williamson <awilliam <at> redhat.com> writes:
On Sat, 2013-11-09 at 08:57 -0600, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
For the alpha I reported that I had problems (glacial speed being the main one) trying to do a live install on a machine with 512 MB. I'd like to report that for Beta a live install on the same machine went just fine.
I'm not sure what changed, but it is a nice improvement.
Non-debug kernel.
Are you sure? I thought Alpha also had a non-debug kernel (3.11.0-300.fc20). I also thought someone mentioned a new policy where branched would always get a non-debug kernel immediately instead of waiting until after Alpha (which I personally think makes a lot of sense, since a debug kernel hinders testing of everything else, since it's hard to test something that runs like molasses, and someone who needs the debug kernel can install it).
There's no such new policy.
josh