From Fedora Project Wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 30: Line 30:
=== Current development releases ===
=== Current development releases ===


There are currently two development releases. Fedora 28 is in the stabilisation phase, Fedora rawhide (29) is in the development phase.
There development release is Fedora 29 (Rawhide):


*  [https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/28/ Fedora 28 ]
*  [https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/development/rawhide/ Fedora Rawhide ]
*  [https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/development/rawhide/ Fedora Rawhide ]



Revision as of 17:51, 2 May 2018

Shortcut:
Arch:ARM
Shortcut:
Arch:AArch64
Idea.png
Have a question?
Join the Fedora ARM team on IRC in #fedora-arm on Freenode

Introduction

Welcome to the architecture page for ARM. This covers both ARMv7 (aka armhfp and arm-32) and aarch64 (aka ARMv8 and arm-64).

Fedora on ARM supports a wide variety of hardware from large enterprise aarch64 SBSA compliant hardware down to cheap single board computers (SBCs). We're primarily focused on Server, SBCs, IoT and other usecases that are similar to the Fedora Workstation / Server / Cloud that other Fedora architectures support.

The Fedora software stack experience across both the 32 and 64 bit ARM architecture variants is very similar, and in most cases identical, to what you would find on any other Fedora architecture. We use solely upstream kernels and don't use different kernels for each different ARM device we support.

Getting started

The first starting point for ARM is the ARM Installation Guide or AARCH64 F27 Installation Guide

Download

Current stable release

Current development releases

There development release is Fedora 29 (Rawhide):

Supported Hardware and Devices

We support a wide variety of hardware and devices from numerous Single Board Computers (SBCs) like the Raspberry Pi 2 and 3 through to Chromebooks and SBSA compliant Servers.

Here is list of device pages based on device category or SoC:

We don't directly support devices such as phones and tablets but it's not to say that without the required kernel/bootloader know how that they don't work, it's just not our primary focus.

Supported Hardware Addons

Get Involved with Fedora ARM

Communication

Meetings

Scratch an itch

All architectures are now integrated into the standard Fedora process. We don't diverge in any way. So without even realising everyone is already involved. To get involved in something more specific whether that's support for particular pieces of hardware or hardware feature, a particular piece of software, to help test or to scratch an itch a good spot to start is the mailing list or IRC channel.

Bug Reporting

Bugs should be reported against their prospective packages as per standard Fedora process. Add a blocker of "ARMTracker" which will link to our ARM architecture tracker bug. If the bug is on a pre release version of Fedora and you feel it's release affecting it might be considered a Blocker Bug or Freeze Exception in which case it should be reported in the QA Blocker bug app.

Getting help with ARM build issues

The best place to get help with ARM issues is on #fedora-arm on Freenode. The Fedora users and developers from around the world will assist when they are available but due to the many time zones your question may not be answered right away so its best to remain in channel. You can also email the Fedora ARM mailing list for assistance.