Fedora AppsFedora AppsAccountsAccountsAmbassadors MapAmbassadors MapFedoraPeopleFedoraPeopleFedora AccountsFedora AccountsNotificationsNotificationsBadgesBadgesContentContentAsk FedoraAsk FedoraThe WikiThe WikiFedora MagazineFedora MagazineThe PlanetThe PlanetDocsDocsQAQAProblem TrackerProblem TrackerBlocker BugsBlocker BugsBugzillaBugzillaReview StatusReview StatusKerneltestKerneltestKoscheiKoscheiCoordinationCoordinationAsknotAsknotElectionsElectionsNuancierNuancierThe Mailing listsThe Mailing listsFedoCalFedoCalMeetbotMeetbotPackagingPackagingPackagesPackagesCOPRCOPRKojiKojiBodhiBodhiPackage SourcesPackage SourcesMdapiMdapiUpstreamUpstreamRelease MonitoringRelease Monitoringgithub2fedmsggithub2fedmsgPagurePagureInfrastructureInfrastructureGeoIPGeoIPEasyfixEasyfixDataGrepperDataGrepperStatusStatusMirrorManagerMirrorManagerNagiosNagiosCollectdCollectdHAProxyHAProxyIn DevelopmentIn DevelopmentProduct Definition CenterProduct Definition CenterIpsilonIpsilon

Accounts

Tools for everybody -- use these things to manage your Fedora Account.

Ambassadors Map

Ambassadors are the representatives of Fedora. Ambassadors ensure the public understand Fedora's principles and the work that Fedora is doing. Additionally Ambassadors are responsible for helping to grow the contributor base, and to act as a liaison between other FLOSS projects and the Fedora community. This thing is a map of where all the Fedora Ambassadors live showing just how vibrant the Fedora Community really is. (It's easy to add yourself to the map too, if you can't find yourself on it.)

FedoraPeople

Being a community member you gain access to fedorapeople which provides you with a space on the web where you can upload files to share them with the community.

Fedora Accounts

Fedora Accounts. Update your profile information and apply for membership in groups.

Notifications

Centrally managed preferences for Fedora Infrastructure notifications to your inbox, irc client, and mobile device.

Badges

An achievements system for Fedora Contributors! "Badges" are awarded based on activity in the community. Can you unlock them all? You can export your badges to Mozilla's Open Badges Infrastructure

Content

Tools for wordsmiths -- the apps that store and archive the troves of content that Fedora authors produce. Blog posts, the wiki, and more..

Ask Fedora

Any question at all about Fedora? Ask it here.

The Wiki

Maintain your own user profile page, contribute to documents about features, process, and governance.

Fedora Magazine

Fedora Magazine is a WordPress-based site which delivers all the news of the Fedora Community. (It replaces the previous Fedora Weekly News.)

The Planet

The planet is a blog aggregator, a space accessible to you as a community member where you can express your opinion and talk about what you are doing for Fedora.

Docs

RTFM! Everything you could ever want to know. Probably the best place to find documentation about Fedora, including the changes between releases (and a big kudos to the translation teams to keep this resource up to date in the different languages!)

QA

Tools for testers -- the people who tell us its broken so we can fix it.

Problem Tracker

The Problem Tracker is a platform for collecting and analyzing package crashes reported via ABRT (Automatic Bug Reporting Tool). It makes it easy to see what problems users are hitting the most, and allows you to filter them by Fedora release, associate, or component.

Blocker Bugs

The Fedora Blocker Bug Tracker tracks release blocking bugs and related updates in Fedora releases currently under development.

Bugzilla

The Fedora Community makes use of a bugzilla instance run by Red Hat. Notice something wrong with a Fedora package? You can file an official bug here.

Review Status

These pages contain periodically generated reports with information on the current state of all Fedora package review tickets -- a super useful window on bugzilla.

Kerneltest

As part of the kernel testing initiative we provide a webapp where users and automated systems can upload test results. If you have access to hardware where we could catch tricky driver issues, your assistance here would be much appreciated.

Koschei

Koschei is a continuous integration system for RPM packages. It tracks dependency changes done in Koji repositories and rebuilds packages whose dependencies change. It can help packagers to detect failures early and provide relevant information to narrow down the cause.

Coordination

Tools for people -- so we can talk to each other and share content and ideas.

Asknot

Ask not what Fedora can do for you, but what you can do for Fedora? This site is a starting place for brand new contributors to help them figure out where they can hop on board!

Elections

As a member of the community, you can now vote for the different steering committees and for this you will use the Election application. Voting is a right and a duty as a member of the community; it is one of the things you can do to influence the development of Fedora.

Nuancier

Nuancier is a simple voting application for the supplementary wallpapers included in Fedora.

The Mailing lists

Mailing lists are used for communication within the community. There are lists for generic topics and lists more dedicated to a specific topic, there is for sure one for you.

FedoCal

The Fedora Calendar (or fedocal), you might have already guessed, is a public calendar service. You can create your own calendar, or subscribe to others. Want to be kept abrest of releases, freezes, and events? This is the tool for you.

Meetbot

Fedora Infrastructure runs a friendly IRC bot that you may know named zodbot. Among its many and varied functions is logging IRC meetings, the archives of which you can find here.

Packaging

Tools for packagers -- where the pieces of the distribution get built.

Packages

A meta-app over the other packaging apps; the best place to find out what is in the Fedora repositories. Which packages are present in which version, who is maintaining them, what patches have been applied, what bugs have been reported against them. All these kind of questions can be answered here. It is sometimes called "Fedora Community v2" after the old Fedora Community site.

COPR

Copr is an easy-to-use automatic build system providing a package repository as its output. You can make your **own** repositories!

Koji

Koji is the software that builds RPM packages for the Fedora project. It uses Mock to create chroot environments to perform builds that are both safe and trusted.

Bodhi

The tool you will use to push your packages to the Fedora repositories as an update, first an update to be tested (repository: updates-testing) then a stable update (repository: updates). Behold -- the Magic Cabbage.

Package Sources

Ever wonder exactly what is in the new release of a Fedora package? This is where the change histories of all the packages in Fedora for every release of Fedora (and EPEL) are kept.. forever! A gold mine.

Mdapi

mdapi is a small API exposing the metadata contained in different RPM repositories.

Upstream

Tools for upstream developers -- because we love you.

Release Monitoring

Code named anitya, this project is slated to replace the old wiki page for Upstream Release Monitoring. It will track upstream tarball locations and publish notifications to the fedmsg bus when new ones are found. Other daemons will then be responsible for filing bugs, attempting to automatically build packages, perform some preliminary QA checks, etc..

github2fedmsg

github2fedmsg is a web service that bridges upstream development activity from GitHub into the Fedora Infrastructure message bus. Visit the self-service dashboard to toggle the status of your repositories.

Pagure

Pagure is a git-centered forge, python based using pygit2. With pagure you can host your project with its documentation, let your users report issues or request enhancements using the ticketing system and build your community of contributors by allowing them to fork your projects and contribute to it via the now-popular pull-request mechanism.

Infrastructure

Tools for sysadmins -- the people who run the servers that run Fedora (and otherwise).

GeoIP

A simple web service running geoip-city-wsgi that will return geoip information to you.

Easyfix

A list of easy-to-fix problems for the different projects in Fedora. Interested in getting into helping out with sysadmin work or web application development? This should be useful to you.

DataGrepper

DataGrepper is an HTTP API for querying the datanommer database. You can use it to dig into the history of the fedmsg message bus. You can grab events by username, by package, by message source, by topic... you name it.

Status

Sometimes the Fedora Infrastructure team messes up (or lightning strikes our datacenter(s)). Sorry about that. You can use this website to check the status. Is it "down for everyone, or just me?"
Notice the favicon in your browser tab. It changes based on the status, so if you keep this open you can check back to it at a glance.

MirrorManager

Fedora is distributed to millions of systems globally. This would not be possible without the donations of time, disk space, and bandwidth by hundreds of volunteer system administrators and their companies or institutions. Your fast download experience is made possible by these donations. The list on the MirrorManager site is dynamically generated every hour, listing only up-to-date mirrors.

Nagios

"Is telia down?" The answer can most definitively be found here (and in detail). The Fedora Infrastructure team uses Nagios to monitor the servers that serve Fedora. Accessing most details requires membership in the sysadmin group.

Collectd

Tracks and displays statistics on the Fedora Infrastructure machines over time. Useful for debugging ineffeciencies and problems.

HAProxy

Shows the health of our proxies. How many bytes? Concurrent sessions? Health checks?

In Development

These are the apps that we're working on, but that aren't quite ready for prime-time yet. Try and use them, and report bugs when they're broken -- it's a big help!. Check back here from time to time, as this section will change.

Product Definition Center

The Product Definition Center (PDC) is a new app we're working on which will track 1) all of the artifacts that release engineering *should* be producing and 2) all of the artifacts taht release engineering *did* produce. The web interface isn't much to write home about, but the API is where it's at.

Ipsilon

Ipsilon is our central authentication agent that is used to authenticate users agains FAS. It is seperate from FAS. The only service that is not using this currently is the wiki. It is a web service that is presented via httpd and is load balanced by our standard haproxy setup.