Table of Contents

Introduction

The Ubuntu developers are moving quickly to bring you the absolute latest and greatest software the Open Source community has to offer. The Precise Pangolin Alpha 1 Release of Ubuntu 12.04 is a developer snapshot to give you a very early glance at the next version of Ubuntu.

Get Ubuntu 12.04

Upgrading from Ubuntu 11.10

To upgrade from Ubuntu 11.10 on a desktop system, press Alt+F2 and type in "update-manager -d" (without the quotes) into the command box. Update Manager should open up and tell you: New distribution release '12.04' is available. Click Upgrade and follow the on-screen instructions.

To upgrade from Ubuntu 11.10 on a server system: install the update-manager-core package if it is not already installed; launch the upgrade tool with the command sudo do-release-upgrade -d; and follow the on-screen instructions. Note that the server upgrade is now more robust and will utilize GNU screen and automatically re-attach in case of e.g. dropped connection problems.

Download the Alpha 1

This release is for developers only. The Ubuntu Desktop i386 image is oversized; you can use either a DVD or USB for installation instead of a CD.

You can download Alpha 1 ISOs from:

http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/releases/precise/alpha-1/ (Ubuntu Desktop and Server)
http://uec-images.ubuntu.com/releases/precise/alpha-1/ (Ubuntu Cloud Server)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/netboot/precise/ (Ubuntu Netboot)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/xubuntu/releases/precise/alpha-1/ (Xubuntu)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/releases/precise/alpha-1/ (Lubuntu)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/edubuntu/releases/precise/alpha-1/ (Edubuntu DVD)

New features in Precise

Please see the Precise blueprint list for details.

Please test and report any bugs you find:

Updated Packages

As with every new release, packages--applications and software of all kinds--are being updated at a rapid pace. Many of these packages came from an automatic sync from Debian's testing branch, others have been explicitly pulled in for 12.04 Precise Pangolin.

For a list of all packages being accepted for 12.04 Precise Pangolin, please subscribe to precise-changes: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/precise-changes

Linux kernel 3.2

Alpha 1 includes the 3.2.0-2.5 Ubuntu kernel which is based on the latest mainline v3.2-rc3 kernel. This is an update from the v3.0 kernel in Ubuntu 11.10. Another noticeable change is the consolidation of the amd64 server flavor into the generic flavor. This will help minimize the maintenance burden over the life of this LTS release. The Alpha 1 kernel also adds support for additional ALPS touchpads, contains an updated seccomp patch set, and numerous config changes such as CONFIG_PANEL_DVI=y on omap, CONFIG_EXT2_FS=m, and CONFIG_SATA_AHCI=y.

General

Until Ubuntu 11.10, the Unix group for administrators with root privileges through sudo had been admin. Starting with Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, it is now sudo, for compatibility with Debian and sudo itself. However, for backwards compatibility, admin group members are still recognized as administrators.

Automatic Apport crash reporting has been enabled by default again to catch problems early on. It now checks for duplicates on the client side, which will avoid uploading debug data and creating Launchpad bug reports unnecessarily in many cases now.

Ubuntu

The default music player has been switched to Rhythmbox. There is no UbuntuOne Music Store yet, this still needs to be ported to GTK 3.

Ubuntu ARM

In the Ubuntu ARM world the automatic building of hardfloat packages for the newly indroduced armhf architecture has started which should gain a good performance increase for floating point operations. At feature freeze time it will be decided if the builds progressed enough to switch to this architecture by default for the 12.04 release. If you are a developer and encounter problems with your package builds on armhf, please contact the ubuntu-arm team in the #ubuntu-arm channel on freenode or drop a mail to the ubuntu-devel mailing list.

Ubuntu Server

There are many general package updates. Some that are noteworthy are:

Ubuntu Server Cloud images

There are no significant changes in Alpha 1, only general package updates.

Xubuntu

Ristretto 0.3.0 uploaded in Precise, should fix all open bugs and issues reported

Edubuntu

Edubuntu Precise alpha-1 is pretty similar to Ubuntu 11.10. Edubuntu kept in sync with Ubuntu, so gbrainy, tomboy are now gone and rhythmbox replaces banshee.

Lubuntu

Lubuntu switched to Lightdm for the standard display manager.

Known issues

As is to be expected, at this very early stage of the release process, there are some significant known bugs that developers may run into with the Precise Alpha 1 Release. The ones we know about at this point (and some of the workarounds), are documented here so you don't need to spend time reporting these bugs again:

Boot, installation and post-install

Graphics and Display

Desktop

Kernel

Ubuntu Cloud

Ubuntu Core

Edubuntu

Xubuntu

Lubuntu

For a listing of more known issues, please refer to the Precise Pangolin bug tracker in Launchpad.

Reporting bugs

It should come as no surprise that this Alpha 1 release of Precise Pangolin contains other bugs. Your comments, bug reports, patches and suggestions will help fix bugs and improve the quality of future releases. Please report bugs using the tools provided.

If you want to help out with bugs, the Bug Squad is always looking for help.

Participate in Ubuntu

If you would like to help shape Ubuntu, take a look at the list of ways you can participate at

More information

You can find out more about Ubuntu on the Ubuntu website and Ubuntu wiki.

To sign up for future Ubuntu development announcements, please subscribe to Ubuntu's development announcement list at:

PrecisePangolin/TechnicalOverview/Alpha1 (last edited 2011-12-01 15:50:17 by 99-191-111-134)