Release Notes

42.1.20160127

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Table of Contents

Installation

    UEFI—Unified Extensible Firmware Interface
    UEFI, GPT, and MS-DOS Partitions

Technical

    Printing System: Improvements and Incompatible Changes

More Information and Feedback

Installation

UEFI—Unified Extensible Firmware Interface

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.

UEFI, GPT, and MS-DOS Partitions

Together with the EFI/UEFI specification, a new style of partitioning arrived:
GPT (GUID Partition Table). This new schema uses globally unique identifiers
(128-bit values displayed in 32 hexadecimal digits) to identify devices and
partition types.

Additionally, the UEFI specification also allows legacy MBR (MS-DOS)
partitions. The Linux boot loaders (ELILO or GRUB2) try to automatically
generate a GUID for those legacy partitions, and write them to the firmware.
Such a GUID can change frequently, causing a rewrite in the firmware. A rewrite
consist of two different operation: removing the old entry and creating a new
entry that replaces the first one.

Modern firmware has a garbage collector that collects deleted entries and frees
the memory reserved for old entries. A problem arises when faulty firmware does
not collect and free those entries; this may end up with a non-bootable system.

The workaround is simple: convert the legacy MBR partition to the new GPT to
avoid this problem completely.

Technical

Printing System: Improvements and Incompatible Changes

CUPS Version Upgrade to 1.7

The new CUPS version introduced some major changes compared to 1.5 that may
require manual configuration adjustments

  • PDF is now the standard print job format rather than PS. Therefore
    traditional PostScript printers now also need a filter driver for printing.

    See http://en.opensuse.org/Concepts_printing for details.

  • The network printer discovery protocol has changed. The native method to
    discover network printers is now based on DNS Service discovery (DNS-SD, ie
    via Avahi). The cups-browsed service from the cups-filters package can be
    used to bridge old and new protocols. Both cupsd and cups-browsed need to
    run to make "legacy" clients discover printers (that includes LibreOffice
    and KDE).

  • The IPP protocol default version changed from 1.1 to 2.0. Older IPP servers
    like CUPS 1.3.x (for example in SUSE Linux Enteprise 11) reject IPP 2.0
    requests with "Bad Request" (see http://www.cups.org/str.php?L4231).

    To be able to print to old servers the IPP protocol version must be
    specified explictly by appending '/version=1.1' to either

      □ the ServerName settings in client.conf (e.g., ServerName
        older.server.example.com/version=1.1)

      □ the CUPS_SERVER environment variable value

      □ the server name value of the -h option of the command line tools e.g.,

        lpstat -h older.server.example.com/version=1.1 -p

  • Some printing filters and back-ends were moved from the cups package to the
    cups-filters package

  • Some configuration directives were split from cupsd.conf into
    cups-files.conf (see http://www.cups.org/str.php?L4223, CVE-2012-5519, and
    https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789566).

  • CUPS banners and the CUPS test page were moved from the cups package the
    cups-filters package (see http://www.cups.org/str.php?L4120 and https://
    bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735404).

More Information and Feedback

  • Read the READMEs on the CDs.

  • Get detailed changelog information about a particular package from the RPM:

    rpm --changelog -qp <FILENAME>.rpm

    <FILENAME>. is the name of the RPM.

  • Check the ChangeLog file in the top level of the DVD for a chronological
    log of all changes made to the updated packages.

  • https://activedoc.opensuse.org/ contains additional or updated
    documentation.

  • Visit http://www.opensuse.org for the latest news from openSUSE.

Copyright © 2015 SUSE LLC

Thanks for using openSUSE.

The openSUSE Team.

