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From: redhat-announce-list-adminredhat.com
Date: Mon Apr 16 2001 - 16:24:45 CDT

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    April 16, 2001-- Red Hat, Inc. (Nasdaq:RHAT - news), the leader in
    developing, deploying and managing open source solutions, announced
    today the availability of Red Hat Linux 7.1, the latest version of the
    world's most popular open source server operating environment. Red Hat
    Linux 7.1 includes the new 2.4 kernel with improved SMP support for
    superior performance on Intel multi-processor platforms. Red Hat Linux
    7.1 also delivers new configuration tools that enable users to
    effortlessly set up and administer DNS, Web and print servers. This
    release features Red Hat Network connectivity, including software
    manager.

    ``Red Hat Linux is firmly embedded in today's computing
    infrastructure. The release of Red Hat Linux 7.1 and the first in a
    series of Red Hat Network subscription services makes it easy for
    organizations to quickly realize the benefits of open source
    computing,'' said Matthew Szulik, CEO of Red Hat, Inc. ``The elements of
    Red Hat Linux 7.1 work together to deliver the most powerful, automated
    open source operating system for fast-growing enterprise and Internet
    infrastructure users.''

    According to IDC Research, Linux is the second fastest growing server
    operating system (from 1999-2000).

    New Features and Benefits of Red Hat Linux 7.1:

      * 2.4 Kernel positions Red Hat Linux as an enterprise class operating
        system. It provides significantly improved multiprocessor support
        and support for 4GB userland process, eliminates PCI bus limit,
        makes virtual memory effectively limitless, supports 64 GB of
        physical RAM, supports greater number of users and groups, includes
        revised scheduler to handle more processes, carries increased and
        improved device support, as well as an improved multi-threaded
        network stack.

      * Red Hat Network Software Manager delivers Errata Alerts so users are
        automatically notified of new Errata and RPM updates that provide
        notification of new RPM packages.

      * Heightened Security delivers secure default settings that keep ports
        closed and Internet utilities inactive until needed. A new firewall
        screen enables user to turn on or off as many features as desired
        for totally customized security.

      * Configuration tools make system administration easier than ever with
        BIND (DNS), Apache and Print tool.

      * Installer enhancements improve the user experience by providing a
        graphical Kickstart configuration tool for unattended installation
        and a new install class for laptop users.

      * Increased internationalization supports global user communities with
        a fully translated GNOME interface in Japanese, Spanish, French,
        German and Italian.

      * Desktop Functionality includes updated GNOME & KDE, popular
        graphical environments where users can choose their preferred
        desktop, and Mozilla, a Web browser, email client and news reader
        that provides a complete open source Web and messaging client.

    * XFree86 4.0.3 interface supports 2D and 3D graphics.USB
    support for ``hot pluggable'' devices

    * New 200-page Customization Guide TUX - world's fastest web server(1)

    Holds SPECweb99(TM) benchmark records for 1, 2, 4 and 8 processor machines.(1)

    For a complete list of new features, visit:
    http://www.redhat.com/products/software/linux/rhl_new_features.html

    Widespread Industry Adoption

    Red Hat has partnered with industry leaders to provide its customers
    with the best solutions for Internet computing. Dell and IBM, leaders in
    the hardware space, continue to embrace Red Hat Linux.

    ``Dell continues to see growing demand for powerful servers,
    workstations and notebook computers running Red Hat Linux backed with
    Red Hat's industry-leading support,'' said Rick Hoffman, director and
    general manager of Linux Development, Dell Enterprise Systems
    Group. ``Red Hat Linux 7.1 offers our enterprise customers the
    scalability, performance and power they have been waiting for in their
    Linux-based infrastructures. Our direct model and global factory install
    process will allow us to be one of the first major systems manufacturers
    to ship Red Hat Linux 7.1 directly to customers--with no middleman
    required.''

    ``With the scalability enhancements in the new 2.4 kernel, Red Hat is
    delivering the most robust version of Linux to date,'' said Dick
    Sullivan, vice president, Solutions and Integration Marketing, IBM
    Software. ``When coupled with the proven enterprise capability of IBM's
    server and software products, including DB2 Universal Database,
    WebSphere Application Server, Lotus Domino and the xSeries eServer
    running Red Hat Linux 7.1 today, customers and solution providers should
    see an increase in overall performance to complement Linux's cost and
    reliability advantages.''

    Pricing (in USD) and Availability for Red Hat Linux 7.1

    Red Hat Linux 7.1 is available in three versions; all include the Red
    Hat Linux operating system, installation manual, support and Red Hat
    Network. Red Hat Linux Deluxe and Professional versions include
    productivity applications (some trial versions and some full),
    StarOffice Office Suite, Loki Games CD and user guides. The versions
    are: Standard: 30 days Web-based support and 30 days Red Hat Network
    Software Manager for 1 system. Pricing: $39.95.Deluxe: 60 days of Red
    Hat Network Software Manager for up to 5 systems and 60 days of
    telephone and Web support. Pricing: $79.95.Professional: 90 days of Red
    Hat Network Software Manager for up to 10 systems and 90 days of
    telephone and Web support. Red Hat Linux 7.1 Professional also includes
    support for Software RAID Configuration and Apache and BIND
    configuration. Pricing: $179.95.

    All versions are available for order immediately from redhat.com and
    through retail outlets worldwide beginning April 24.

    Red Hat's comprehensive services and support organization round out an
    enterprise solution that delivers the tools and performance necessary to
    translate the promise of open source into high-value, scalable Internet
    infrastructure implementations.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Download availability: Please check
    http://www.redhat.com/download/mirror.html for a mirror close to you
    before trying to download from ftp.redhat.com directly.

    Red Hat Linux 7.1 Release Notes
    -------------------------------

    This document describes features that are new to Red Hat Linux 7.1, but may
    not have been available prior to our documentation being finalized. For
    the very latest information, please read the RELEASE-NOTES file on the Red
    Hat Linux CD #1.

    Last-Minute Changes
    -------------------

        o The Oracle installation program (versions 8.1.7, 8.1.6, and possibly
          others) does not work properly with glibc 2.2 and above. The problem
          is that it is linking object files compiled against different glibc
          (binary compatibility is ensured only for linked executables and
          shared libraries through symbol versioning). You may work around
          this by installing the Red Hat Linux 6.2 compatibility packages
          (compat-egcs, compat-glibc and compat-libs) and issuing the following
          commands before running the Oracle installer:

            export LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5
            . /usr/i386-glibc21-linux/bin/i386-glibc21-linux-env.sh

          The second line exports environment variables which will cause gcc
          and ld to look for glibc 2.1.3 compatibility headers and libraries.

        o Reminder regarding NFS, FTP, or HTTP installations -- Because the Red
          Hat Linux 7.1 installation program is capable of installing Red Hat
          Linux from multiple CD-ROMs, if you intend to support NFS, FTP, or
          HTTP installations it is no longer possible to simply mount a single
          Red Hat Linux CD-ROM, and install from it.

          Instead, you must copy the RedHat directory from each CD-ROM
          comprising Red Hat Linux 7.1 onto a disk drive:

            - Insert CD 1
              mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
              cp -var /mnt/cdrom/RedHat /location/of/disk/space
              umount /mnt/cdrom

            - Insert CD 2
              mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
              cp -var /mnt/cdrom/RedHat /location/of/disk/space
              umount /mnt/cdrom

          You must then make /location/of/disk/space accessible to the
          installation program (for example, exporting it for NFS
          installations):

            - Export /location/of/disk/space

    Installation-Related Enhancements and Changes
    ---------------------------------------------

    The Red Hat Linux 7.1 installation program includes a number of new
    features. For more information, please refer to the Official Red Hat Linux
    Installation Guide.

        o Swap-related issues -- The 2.4 kernel is more aggressive than the 2.2
          kernel in its use of swap space. However, as with previous versions
          of the kernel, the optimal sizing of swap space remains dependent on
          the following:

            - The amount of RAM installed
            - The amount of disk space available for swap
            - The applications being run
            - The mix of applications that are run concurrently

          No rule-of-thumb can possibly take all these data points into
          account. However, we recommend the following swap sizes:

            - Single-user systems with less than 128MB physical RAM: 256MB

            - Single-user systems and low-end servers with more than 128MB
              physical RAM: two times physical RAM (2xRAM)

            - Dedicated servers with more than 512MB physical RAM: highly
              dependent on environment (must be determined on a case-by-case
              basis)

          While it is certainly possible for systems with specific
          configurations and application loads to run with less (or even no)
          swap space, these guidelines attempt to ensure that you will not run
          out of swap. The old saying certainly applies to swap space:

              "It's better to have it and not need it, than to need
               it and not have it."

        o Swap-related issues specific to upgrades -- If you are performing a
          fresh Red Hat Linux 7.1 installation, the sizing of swap partitions
          is a relatively-straightforward process. However, if you have an
          older Red Hat Linux system that you wish to upgrade to Red Hat Linux
          7.1, please keep in mind that the size of the swap partition(s) you
          had previously created may no longer be sufficient.

          The Red Hat Linux 7.1 installation program now examines the available
          swap space. If insufficient swap space exists, it will configure
          additional swap space in the form of a swap file. The installation
          program will do this by asking you to select a partition on which to
          create a swap file. You will also be asked for the desired size of
          the new swap file.

          (NOTE: In no instance will the Red Hat Linux 7.1 installation program
          create a swap partition or file larger than 2GB. Should your swap
          requirements exceed this size, you will need to address this after
          the installation has completed.)

        o XFree86 4.0.3 -- The Red Hat Linux 7.1 installation program includes
          improved test screens and better detection of video memory, doing
          more than ever to help you get everything correct with a minimum of
          fuss.

        o Firewall Configuration -- For added security, you can now configure a
          firewall as part of your system installation. You can choose from
          two levels of security, as well as choosing which common system
          services should be allowed or disallowed by default.

          Please note that both "medium" and "high" firewall settings will
          cause RPC-based services (such as NIS or NFS) to be blocked, and
          thus fail.

        o Hard Drive Installation - ISO images are now required for hard drive
          installations, making it no longer necessary to copy and install the
          entire tree. Instead, simply put the required ISO images in a
          directory. During the hard drive installation, point the Red Hat
          Linux installation program at that directory. In addition, since Red
          Hat publishes MD5 checksums for all ISO images, it is now possible to
          ensure that you are using officially-released software by running the
          md5sum program against your ISO images, and comparing the checksums
          against the ones published by Red Hat.

        o Language Selection -- Language selection has been significantly
          re-vamped. It is now possible to install in one language, but
          specify that the system, after installation, will operate in another
          language.

        o Laptop Installation Class -- A New "Laptop" installation class is
          available, which enables PCMCIA support by default. It should be
          detected automatically if your computer has a supported PCMCIA
          controller.

        o LBA32 Support -- There is now support for the LBA32 option in LILO.
          This makes it possible to boot from partitions partially or
          completely above cylinder 1024 (which had been a historical
          limitation). Note, however, that we have found that not all
          motherboards support this option, even when the BIOS claims support
          is available. Therefore, this option is disabled by default. Note
          also that this option is available ONLY when a partition has been
          created using fdisk, and that partition is then chosen as the /boot
          or / partition. The fdisk restriction is necessary as it is not
          possible to create a bootable partition above cylinder 1024 using
          Disk Druid.

        o Disk Druid Improvements -- Disk Druid now detects partition table
          inconsistencies, such as partitions that do not end on cylinder
          boundaries. This can be caused if the geometry of a hard disk drive
          is detected differently than when the drive was originally
          partitioned. In these cases, we recommend that you use the fdisk
          program to more closely inspect these inconsistencies, or choose to
          skip the drive entirely.

        o Graphical Kickstart Configuration -- Red Hat Linux 7.1 now provides a
          graphical interface for creating kickstart configurations, allowing
          custom, unattended installations to be created with greater ease than
          ever before.

        o Improved Rescue Mode -- Rescue mode now attempts to mount the
          filesystems listed in /etc/fstab (assuming the root filesystem can be
          found). The filesystems are mounted under /mnt/sysimage. This
          eliminates a very confusing step for users using rescue-mode for the
          first time.

        o New Authentication Configuration Security Option -- Authentication
          configuration now includes the ability to use Transport Layer
          Security (TLS) when performing lookups. TLS allows LDAP clients to
          use an encrypted connection when performing authentication.

        o Miscellaneous Installation Program Improvements -- Overall, there are
          many additional tests and checks performed to catch potential
          problems which previously caused tracebacks (installer crashes).
          This should reduce the number of poor out-of-box experiences for
          newer users.

    System-Related Enhancements and Changes
    ---------------------------------------

    There are many features new to Red Hat Linux 7.1 that are not part of the
    installation process. Some new features are server-oriented programs,
    while others are new applications or desktop environment changes. This
    list will provide a bit more information about what to expect from Red Hat
    Linux 7.1 once you are actually using the OS.

        o Upgraded Core System Components -- The following major system
          components have been upgraded in Red Hat Linux 7.1:

            - kernel 2.4.x (with additional fixes)
            - glibc 2.2.2
            - KDE 2.1.1
            - XFree86 4.0.3 with the Xft anti-aliased font render extension
            - GCC 2.96-RH, with many new fixes since the original 7.0 release

        o Improved USB Support -- The 2.4 kernel gives Red Hat Linux 7.1 more
          mature USB support than previous versions of Red Hat Linux. It
          contains more drivers, and includes support for storage devices such
          as CD-ROMs. It also supports "hot-pluggable" or removable devices --
          if a supported device is plugged in after booting, the necessary
          drivers will load automatically.

        o Removable media drives automatically added to /etc/fstab -- Red Hat
          Linux 7.1 now includes the ability for users to mount and unmount
          removable media drives. This is done by the updfstab program (which
          is part of the kudzu boot-time hardware configurator). It adds and
          removes the necessary entries in /etc/fstab. Note that each entry
          managed by updfstab contains the new "kudzu" option -- this acts as a
          token indicating that the entry may subsequently be removed; if you
          wish to permanently add such an entry to your fstab, simply remove
          the "kudzu" option.

          Hotpluggable devices are handled through a combination of cardmgr,
          hotplug, updfstab, and pam_console_apply. When the kernel notifies
          hotplug or cardmgr that a new storage device has been attached to the
          system, updfstab is run to add the new entries to the fstab. Then,
          updfstab runs pam_console_apply, which uses the rules specified in
          /etc/security/console.perms to give the current console user access
          to the device.

          GNOME users who run magicdev will see device icons appear on their
          desktop automatically. magicdev regularly checks the timestamp of
          /etc/fstab, and directs gmc to rescan devices when the fstab has
          changed. If you do not run magicdev, the "Rescan Devices" option on
          the root gmc menu (which appears when you right-click on the desktop)
          performs an equivalent function.

          KDE users will see similar functionality.

        o New and Updated Drivers -- Many drivers are new to Red Hat Linux 7.1,
          or have been upgraded as a result of switching to a 2.4-based kernel.
          Changes include:

            - Updated Adaptec AIC7XXX SCSI driver
            - IEEE1394 (FireWire(tm)) subsystem
            - Adaptec starfire quad ethernet
            - Aironet 802.11 WiFI ethernet
            - National Semiconductor DP83810 ethernet
            - ATM subsystem and various ATM drivers
            - DECnet subsystem
            - Cyclom 2X, DEFEA, and DEFPA FDDI
            - IPv6 support
            - NFS version 3
            - iptables, an improved firewall layer
            - Maestro3 sound
            - Broadcom BCM5700 PCI-X 10/100/1000BASE-T controller
            - IDE UltraDMA/66 and UltraDMA/100 contoller support

        o 3D acceleration under XFree86 4.0.3 -- A wide variety of 3DFX cards
          have been added to the list of cards supporting accelerated 3D
          graphics. In addition, Intel i810, Matrox G200, G400, G450 (NOTE:
          dual-head operation on the G450 is unsupported), and ATI Rage 128
          based cards also support accelerated 3D graphics. Please note that
          3D acceleration on ATI Radeon cards is not yet supported by XFree86
          4.0.3.

        o New Apache Configuration Tool -- apacheconf:

            - Helps manage virtual hosts in an intelligent fashion
            - Configured via the Alchemist Data Library

        o New BIND Configuration Tool -- bindconf:

            - Makes DNS configuration easier
            - Configured via the Alchemist Data Library

        o New Printing Configuration Tool -- printconf:

            - Filters are based on David Parson's magicfilter, the foomatic
              system, and the Linux Printing Database
              (http://linuxprinting.org).
            - Supports over 500 printers
            - Upgrades old systems configured with printtool
            - Configured via the Alchemist Data Library

        o Improvements to Red Hat Network, Software Manager service announced
           -- Red Hat Network, and its client program Update Agent, have been
           extended for this release of Red Hat Linux. In addition, a new
           service -- Software Manager -- has been announced. This technology
           includes the following enhancements over the previous release:

            - Update Agent now fully supports command-line operation.
            - Text-mode configuration utility is included.
            - Usage of the GUI mode can be disabled by specifying the "--nox"
              command line option.
            - More intelligent resolution of complex chains of package
              inter-dependencies.
            - "--whatprovides" and "--solvedeps" command line options allow
              querying of the Red Hat Network database to visually report
              package dependencies.
            - "--packagedir" command line option allows a list of directories
              to be specified. These directories will be searched for packages
              when satisfying dependencies.
            - Kernel upgrades can now be processed by Update Agent.

        o Emacs/XEmacs site-start.d Directories -- Emacs/XEmacs each support a
          site-start.d directory. Packages can now place emacs .el startup
          files in the appropriate directory, and they will be loaded when the
          editor starts. This eliminates the need to edit the site-start.el
          file directly. The directories are:

                /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/site-start.d
                /usr/lib/xemacs/xemacs-packages/lisp/site-start.d

        o New ADSL/ISDN Configuration Tool -- internet-config is a replacement
          for adsl-config and isdn-config. It guides new users through setting
          up networking for these popular connection methods.

        o PostgreSQL Upgrade-Related Notes -- If you are upgrading from Red Hat
          Linux 6.2 or earlier, your existing databases must undergo a dump and
          restore cycle. The best way to do this is to use pg_dumpall(1)
          BEFORE upgrading to Red Hat Linux 7.1. After the upgrade, please see
          the README.rpm file in /usr/share/doc/postgresql*/.

          Also note that the upgrade keeps the old binaries around (along with
          a helper script) after the upgrade, but doing the dump before the
          upgrade and restoring afterwards (after removing the old database) is
          highly recommended.

        o OpenLDAP Upgrade-Related Notes -- The on-disk storage format used by
          slapd, the standalone OpenLDAP server binary, has changed. Users
          upgrading LDAP servers from previous releases of Red Hat Linux will
          need to dump their directories to LDIF files using `ldbmcat -n' and
          re-import them into the new format using `slapadd'.

        o IMAP server changes -- The IMAP server now defaults to using its
          built-in SSL support instead of stunnel's tunneling support.
          Accordingly, the name of the certificate file used by imapd has
          changed from stunnel.pem to imapd.pem. Users upgrading from previous
          releases of Red Hat Linux will need to rename, copy, or create a
          symbolic link to their existing certificate.

        o Sendmail -- By default, sendmail does not accept network connections
          from any host other than the local computer. If you want to
          configure sendmail as a server for other clients, please edit
          /etc/mail/sendmail.mc and change DAEMON_OPTIONS to also listen on
          network devices, or comment out this option all together. You will
          need to regenerate /etc/sendmail.cf by running:

                m4 /etc/mail/sendmail.mc > /etc/sendmail.cf

          Note that you must have the sendmail-cf package installed for this to
          work.

        o Other package highlights:

            - Ogg Vorbis audio encoder/decoder
            - Mozilla Web browser
            - LSB-compliant SGML and XML packages
            - KDE 2.1 and KOffice
            - BIND 9.x with DNSsec support and remote named control
            - SSL support in links, slrn, OpenLDAP, and pine
            - Pine 4.33
            - Quanta HTML editor (on Powertools)
            - Postfix and exim (on Powertools) include SSL/TLS support
            - WINE (on Powertools) can directly execute Windows .exe binaries
              from Linux

        o Deprecated Packages -- the following packages are deprecated, and
          could disappear in a future release:

            - AfterStep
            - Netscape 4.x
            - Qt 1.x
            - KDE v1 compatibility libraries / build environment
            - elm
            - linuxconf
            - ncpfs
            - mars_nwe

    Known Issues / Trouble Spots:
    -----------------------------

        o PCMCIA support has changed greatly since Red Hat Linux 7; if you
          customized PCMCIA support under prior versions of Red Hat Linux, you
          should review your changes.

        o Some Java JVMs (both from Sun and IBM) don't work with the new
          floating stack feature of the i686 version of glibc. The failures
          are due to programming assumptions in the JVMs that are now invalid.
          JVM vendors are working on making the necessary corrections. Until
          corrected JVM packages are available, you may force glibc to use the
          deprecated stack model by setting the following environment variable:

                              LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5

    Documentation-Related Enhancements and Changes
    ----------------------------------------------

        o Additional documentation regarding the /etc/sysconfig/vncservers file
          -- Due to time constraints, the following information was not
          available prior to the Red Hat Linux Reference Guide's print date.

          The /etc/sysconfig/vncservers file configures how the Virtual Network
          Computing (VNC) server starts up. VNC is a remote display system
          which allows you to view a desktop environment not only on the
          machine where it is running but across different networks (from a LAN
          to the Internet) and using a wide variety of machine architectures.

          It may contain the following:

          VNCSERVERS=<value>, where <value> is set to something like "1:fred",
          to indicate that a VNC server should be started for user fred on
          display :1. User fred must have set a VNC passwd using vncpasswd
          before attempting to connect to the remote VNC server.

          Note that when you use a VNC server, your communication with it is
          unencrypted, and so it should not be used on an untrusted
          network. For specific instructions concerning the use of SSH to
          secure the VNC communication, please read the information found at
          http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/sshvnc.html. To find out more
          about SSH, please refer to the Red Hat Linux Reference and
          Customization Guides.

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