I'm not sure how many other Linux users there are on here, but I've used openSUSE Leap (their regular release, i.e. not rolling) for a long time. I was reading up this morning on openSUSE Leap 16.0, which was released in October. They've disabled AppArmor and are using SELinux instead. SELinux is no doubt the more powerful technology, but it can break things. You need an expert in SELinux or you might as well disable it, which is what I inevitably do. How protected am I with SELinux if it's disabled? In 15 years of daily use of AppArmor, I've never seen it break anything.
They're also doing away with YaST (short for Yet another Setup Tool). It's an incredibly complete set of administrative tools, which was probably the one thing that most set openSUSE apart from other distributions. I first used SuSE Linux in late 1996, and it already had YaST. I CAN'T BELIEVE they're not going to continue to work on it. For now it's disabled by default but still available. Word is it will be removed down the line.
I switched my primary desktop OS to openSUSE in 2010 when Mandriva Linux disappeared. I love the distro. I've bought merchandise to support it. I have a picture of my four year old son in an openSUSE hoodie at a Paul McCartney concert in Houston in 2012. I have a picture of me taken in 2018 in Birmingham, England, and I'm in an openSUSE shirt. If not for my tennis shoes, no one would have known I was an American.
I will likely switch to Debian stable, which is a rock solid distro, but I'm honestly upset at what they've done with my favorite distro. openSUSE Leap 15.6 is supported until late April, so I have some time to think about it. I will build an openSUSE 16.0 VM this afternoon and try to give it a chance, but without YaST, I don't really see the point of it. It seems like a German Rocky Linux to me.
I'm pretty sure that these changes have already worked their way into SuSE's rolling releases and that Leap is that last of their releases to see them.
They're also doing away with YaST (short for Yet another Setup Tool). It's an incredibly complete set of administrative tools, which was probably the one thing that most set openSUSE apart from other distributions. I first used SuSE Linux in late 1996, and it already had YaST. I CAN'T BELIEVE they're not going to continue to work on it. For now it's disabled by default but still available. Word is it will be removed down the line.
I switched my primary desktop OS to openSUSE in 2010 when Mandriva Linux disappeared. I love the distro. I've bought merchandise to support it. I have a picture of my four year old son in an openSUSE hoodie at a Paul McCartney concert in Houston in 2012. I have a picture of me taken in 2018 in Birmingham, England, and I'm in an openSUSE shirt. If not for my tennis shoes, no one would have known I was an American.
I will likely switch to Debian stable, which is a rock solid distro, but I'm honestly upset at what they've done with my favorite distro. openSUSE Leap 15.6 is supported until late April, so I have some time to think about it. I will build an openSUSE 16.0 VM this afternoon and try to give it a chance, but without YaST, I don't really see the point of it. It seems like a German Rocky Linux to me.
I'm pretty sure that these changes have already worked their way into SuSE's rolling releases and that Leap is that last of their releases to see them.