Version: 12.3.11 (2013-08-22)
Copyright © 2013 Novell, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or 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 included as the fdl.txt
file.
If you upgrade from an older version to this openSUSE release, see previous release notes listed here: http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Release_Notes
These release notes cover the following areas:
Section 1, “Miscellaneous”: These entries are automatically included from openFATE, the Feature- and Requirements Management System (http://features.opensuse.org).
N/A
Section 2, “Installation”: Read this if you want to install the system from scratch.
Section 3, “General”: Information that everybody should read.
Section 4, “System Upgrade”: Issues related to the process if you run a system upgrade from the previous release to this openSUSE version.
Section 5, “Technical”: This section contains a number of technical changes and enhancements for the experienced user.
For detailed installation information, see Section 3.1, “openSUSE Documentation”.
Directly after installation, NetworkManager is not started automatically and thus WiFi cannot be configured. To enable networking (WiFi), reboot the machine once manually.
Default and new users are no longer added to the video
group automatically. But the proprietary NVIDIA driver requires users to have access to /dev/nvidia* devices.
Symptoms: OpenGL applications report that they cannot operate on /dev/nvidiactl
. Or GNOME only showing a blank screen with a mouse pointer.
Because the NVIDIA driver does not use the usual kernel methods that allow to install ACLs on the device nodes, users have to be added manually to the video
group; as root
call (replace $USER
with the actual username):
usermod -a -G video $USER
In Start-Up, find step-by-step installation instructions, as well as introductions to the KDE and Gnome desktops and to the LibreOffice suite. Also covered are basic administration topics such as deployment and software management and an introduction to the bash shell.
Reference covers administration, and system configuration in detail and explains how to set up various network services.
The Security Guide introduces basic concepts of system security, covering both local and network security aspects.
The System Analysis and Tuning Guide helps with problem detection, resolution and optimization.
Virtualization with KVM offers an introduction to setting up and managing virtualization with KVM, libvirt and QEMU tools.
Find the documentation in /usr/share/doc/manual/opensuse-manuals_$LANG
after installing the package opensuse-manuals_$LANG
, or online on http://doc.opensuse.org.
Prior to installing openSUSE on a system that boots using UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) you are urgently advised to check for any firmware updates the hardware vendor recommends and, if available, to install such an update. A pre-installed Windows 8 is a strong indication that your system boots using UEFI.
Background: Some UEFI firmware has bugs that cause it to break if too much data gets written to the UEFI storage area. Nobody really knows how much "too much" is, though. openSUSE minimizes the risk by not writing more than the bare minimum required to boot the OS. The minimum means telling the UEFI firmware about the location of the openSUSE boot loader. Upstream Linux Kernel features that use the UEFI storage area for storing boot and crash information (pstore
) have been disabled by default. Nevertheless it is recommended to install any firmware updates the hardware vendor recommends.
This only affects machines in UEFI mode with secure boot enabled.
YaST does not automatically detect if the machine has secure boot enabled and will therefore install an unsigned bootloader by default. But the unsigned bootloader will not be accepted by the firmware. To have a signed bootloader installed the option "Enable Secure Boot" has to be manually enabled.
This only affects machines in UEFI mode.
When using the installer on the live medium, YaST does not detect UEFI mode and therefore installs the legacy bootloader. This results in a not bootable system. The bootloader has to be switched from grub2 to grub2-efi manually.
This only affects machines in UEFI mode.
Our double signed shim on openSUSE 12.3 medium may be rejected by future firmwares.
If the openSUSE 12.3 medium does not boot on future secure boot enabled hardware, temporarily disable secure boot, install openSUSE and apply all online updates to get an updated shim.
After installing all updates secure boot can be turned on again.
This only affects installations in UEFI mode.
In the partitioning proposal when checking the option to use LVM (which is required for full disk encryption) YaST does not create a separate /boot
partition. That means kernel and initrd end up in the (potentially encrypted) LVM container, inaccessible to the boot loader. To get full disk encryption when using UEFI, partitioning has to be done manually.
sysvinit is no longer supported in this release. It has been deprecated since the last two releases.
By default, you use the YaST Network Settings dialog (yast2 network) to activate NetworkManager. If you want to activate NetworkManager, proceed as follows.
The NETWORKMANAGER
sysconfig variable in /etc/sysconfig/network/config
to activate NetworkManager has been replaced with a systemd network.service
alias link, which will be created with the
systemctl enable NetworkManager.service
command. It causes the creation of a network.service
alias link pointing to the NetworkManager.service
, and thus deactivates the /etc/init.d/network
script. The command
systemctl -p Id show network.service
allows to query the currently selected network service.
To enable NetworkManager, use:
First, stop the running service:
systemctl is-active network.service && \ systemctl stop network.service
Enable the NetworkManager service:
systemctl --force enable NetworkManager.service
Start the NetworkManager service (via alias link):
systemctl start network.service
To disable NetworkManager, use:
Stop the running service:
systemctl is-active network.service && \ systemctl stop network.service
Disable the NetworkManager service:
systemctl disable NetworkManager.service
Start the /etc/init.d/network service:
systemctl start network.service
To query the currently selected service, use:
systemctl -p Id show network.service
It returns "Id=NetworkManager.service
" if the NetworkManager service is enabled, otherwise "Id=network.service
" and /etc/init.d/network is acting as the network service.
The SYSLOG_DAEMON variable has been removed. Previously, it was used to select the syslog daemon. Starting with openSUSE 12.3, only one syslog implementation can be installed at a time on a system and will be selected automatically for usage.
For details, see the syslog(8) manpage.
With openSUSE 11.3 we switched to KMS (Kernel Mode Setting) for Intel, ATI and NVIDIA graphics, which now is our default. If you encounter problems with the KMS driver support (intel, radeon, nouveau), disable KMS by adding nomodeset
to the kernel boot command line. To set this permanently using Grub 2, the default boot loader, add it to the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
kernel default load options line in your /etc/default/grub
text file as root and running the terminal command
sudo /usr/sbin/grub2-mkconfig --output=/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
for the changes to take effect. Else, for Grub Legacy, add it to the kernel command line in /boot/grub/menu.lst
, also done as root. This option makes sure the appropriate kernel module (intel, radeon, nouveau) is loaded with modeset=0
in initrd
, i.e. KMS is disabled.
In the rare cases when loading the DRM module from initrd
is a general problem and unrelated to KMS, it is even possible to disable loading of the DRM module in initrd
completely. For this set the NO_KMS_IN_INITRD
sysconfig variable to yes
via YaST, which then recreates initrd
afterwards. Reboot your machine.
On Intel without KMS the Xserver falls back to the fbdev
driver (the intel
driver only supports KMS); alternatively, for legacy GPUs from Intel the "intellegacy" driver (xorg-x11-driver-video-intel-legacy
package) is available, which still supports UMS (User Mode Setting). To use it, edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/50-device.conf
and change the driver entry to intellegacy
.
On ATI for current GPUs it falls back to radeonhd
. On NVIDIA without KMS the nv
driver is used (the nouveau
driver supports only KMS). Note, newer ATI and NVIDIA GPUs are falling back to fbdev
, if you specify the nomodeset
kernel boot parameter.
By default, systemd cleans tmp directories daily as configured in /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf
. Users can change it by copying /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf
to /etc/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf
and modifying the copied file. It will override /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf
.
Note: systemd does not honor obsolete sysconfig variables in /etc/sysconfig/cron
such as TMP_DIRS_TO_CLEAR
.
On openSUSE 12.3, the systemd journal is not persistent across reboots. If you want to enable journal persistence, either create the /var/log/journal
directory (as root) or install the systemd-logger
package. Installing systemd-logger
package will signal a conflict with other syslog implementations, and thus ensuring that the system uses only the systemd journal, if installed.
If your system has been upgraded from openSUSE 12.2 (where /var/log/journal
was created by default) and if you want to disable journal persistence, just remove the /var/log/journal
directory.
The pwdutils package was replaced by the shadow package. The shadow package is mostly a drop-in replacement, but some commandline options have been removed or changed. See /usr/share/doc/packages/shadow/README.changes-pwdutils
for a list of all the changes.
The SuSEconfig.postfix
was renamed as /usr/sbin/config.postfix
. If you set sysconfig variables in /etc/sysconfig/postfix
or /etc/sysconfig/mail
, you must manually run /usr/sbin/config.postfix
as root.
Because the location of the fontconfig files was changed, Emacs and other applications linked against GTK+ output warning messages when started.
Move the files to the new location:
mkdir -p ~/.config/fontconfig mv ~/.fonts.conf ~/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf
In Gnome 3.6 use the following workaround to set Shift or Ctrl+Shift as shortcut keys for input source selection:
Install gnome-tweak-tool.
Start gnome-tweak-tool (
> ).Via the left menu, select
, in the right window, change the settings.This is also being tracked in the upstream bug report https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689839.
During the second stage of an SSH installation YaST freezes. It is blocked by the SuSEFirewall service because the SYSTEMCTL_OPTIONS
environment variable is not set properly.
Workaround: When logged in for the second time to start the second stage of the SSH installation, call yast.ssh with the --ignore-dependencies
as follows:
SYSTEMCTL_OPTIONS=--ignore-dependencies yast.ssh