> Perhaps most exciting of this batch of approved changes are > the standalone XWayland package has been signed off on > for allowing newer XWayland code in the absence of new X.Org Server releases.
Today it is very common for open source projects to distribute their software via container images. But how can these containers be run securely in production? This article explains how to deploy a Matrix server on Fedora CoreOS.
What is Matrix? Matrix provides an open source, federated and optionally end-to-end encrypted communication platform.
From matrix.org:
Matrix is an open source project that publishes the Matrix open standard for secure, decentralised, real-time communication, and its Apache licensed reference implementations.
Matrix also includes bridges to other popular platforms such as Slack, IRC, XMPP and Gitter. Some open source communities are replacing IRC with Matrix or adding Matrix as an new communication channel (see for example Mozilla, KDE, and Fedora).
Matrix is a federated communication platform. If you host your own server, you can join conversations hosted on other Matrix instances. This makes it great for self hosting. 0092login:Penguin2021/01/19(火) 21:02:39.28ID:G8DOf2K2 What is Fedora CoreOS?
From the Fedora CoreOS docs:
Fedora CoreOS is an automatically updating, minimal, monolithic, container-focused operating system, designed for clusters but also operable standalone, optimized for Kubernetes but also great without it.
With Fedora CoreOS (FCOS), you get all the benefits of Fedora (podman, cgroups v2, SELinux) packaged in a minimal automatically updating system thanks to rpm-ostree.
To get more familiar with Fedora CoreOS basics, check out this getting started article: