“In this release, we celebrate the Raspberry Pi Foundation’s commitment to put open computing in the hands of people all over the world. We are honored to support that initiative by optimizing Ubuntu on the Raspberry Pi, whether for personal use, educational purposes or as a foundation for their next business venture,” Mark Shuttleworth, CEO at Canonical explains. This release comes with updated packages, toolchain upgrades, security improvements and more. Ubuntu 20.10 is the first Ubuntu release to feature desktop images for the Raspberry Pi 4. This is only built for the arm64 architecture and also supports only models with 4GB of RAM or higher for the desktop image. According to the company, Groovy Gorilla uses the latest version of GNOME, version 3.38, with an enhanced Activities Overview, User Experience improvements, better performance, and more. Ubuntu 20.10 also comes with refreshed state-of-the-art toolchain including new upstream releases of glibc 2.32, OpenJDK 11, rustc 1.41, GCC 10, LLVM 11, Python 3.8.6, ruby 2.7.0, php 7.4.9, perl 5.30, golang 1.13. This release integrates recent innovations from key virtualization and infrastructure projects like QEMU 5.0, libvirt 6.6 and OpenStack Victoria. Ubuntu Server now ships Telegraf, the metrics collecting agent that together with Prometheus and Grafana form the basis of strong and reliable logging, monitoring and alerting solution that can be deployed on Ubuntu systems. Canonical shares, “On top of Raspberry Pi desktop support, Ubuntu 20.10 includes GNOME 3.38, which tweaks the apps grid, removes the frequents tab and allows apps to be ordered and organised however users prefer. The battery percentage display toggle has been exposed in power settings, private WiFi hotspots can be shared using uniquely generated QR codes and a restart option has been added to the status menu next to logout/power off.” According to the Ubuntu 20.10 release notes, Kernel 5.8 adds the following:
Airtime Queue limits for better WiFi connection quality Btrfs RAID1 with 3 and 4 copies and more checksum alternatives USB 4 (Thunderbolt 3 protocol) support added X86 Enable 5-level paging support by default Intel Gen11 (Ice Lake) and Gen12 (Tiger Lake) graphics support Initial support for AMD Family 19h (Zen 3) Thermal pressure tracking for systems for better task placement wrt CPU core XFS online repair OverlayFS pairing with VirtIO-FS General Notification Queue for key/keyring notification, mount changes, etc. Active State Power Management (ASPM) for improved power savings of PCIe-to-PCI devices Initial support for POWER10
You can go to the Ubuntu website to download the new release Groovy Gorilla now or find upgrade instructions.