Gnome 3.32 in Ubuntu 18.10





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Will gnome shell 3.32 be back ported to 18.10? I'm interested to see if the wayland support is better (since this is the only way I can realistically use two 4K monitors of different sizes).



I've looked around and haven't managed to find a way to try it out yet (though my google fu may be lacking).



I see that it will be in 19.04, but would really like to try it out now if I can.



Ta
Peter.










share|improve this question























  • Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

    – guiverc
    Feb 15 at 11:29











  • @user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

    – jnns
    Mar 22 at 12:17




















1















Will gnome shell 3.32 be back ported to 18.10? I'm interested to see if the wayland support is better (since this is the only way I can realistically use two 4K monitors of different sizes).



I've looked around and haven't managed to find a way to try it out yet (though my google fu may be lacking).



I see that it will be in 19.04, but would really like to try it out now if I can.



Ta
Peter.










share|improve this question























  • Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

    – guiverc
    Feb 15 at 11:29











  • @user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

    – jnns
    Mar 22 at 12:17
















1












1








1








Will gnome shell 3.32 be back ported to 18.10? I'm interested to see if the wayland support is better (since this is the only way I can realistically use two 4K monitors of different sizes).



I've looked around and haven't managed to find a way to try it out yet (though my google fu may be lacking).



I see that it will be in 19.04, but would really like to try it out now if I can.



Ta
Peter.










share|improve this question














Will gnome shell 3.32 be back ported to 18.10? I'm interested to see if the wayland support is better (since this is the only way I can realistically use two 4K monitors of different sizes).



I've looked around and haven't managed to find a way to try it out yet (though my google fu may be lacking).



I see that it will be in 19.04, but would really like to try it out now if I can.



Ta
Peter.







gnome-shell 18.10






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











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asked Feb 15 at 11:19









Peter NUnnPeter NUnn

1741111




1741111













  • Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

    – guiverc
    Feb 15 at 11:29











  • @user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

    – jnns
    Mar 22 at 12:17





















  • Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

    – guiverc
    Feb 15 at 11:29











  • @user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

    – jnns
    Mar 22 at 12:17



















Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

– guiverc
Feb 15 at 11:29





Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no.

– guiverc
Feb 15 at 11:29













@user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

– jnns
Mar 22 at 12:17







@user535733 Gnome 3.32 will be in Ubuntu 19.04 — only gnome-software will stay on 3.30!

– jnns
Mar 22 at 12:17












2 Answers
2






active

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2














Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no



The primary reason is it's not worth the effort. GNOME 3.32 requires you run the GTK+ [software] stack 3.32 as well, meaning most of the software will need changing, turning your machine into in effect 19.04 (with a 18.10 kernel). It's a lot of work which requires a lot of testing just to get it a few weeks early... Ubuntu is based on releases, and minimal packages get backported as it requires more devs, more testers than exist.



fyi: I'm running 19.04 now, and have been for some months now. If you want to run it now, you can. It's currently a development release so you won't get support here (but irc ubuntu+1 is still an option) and there is a greater chance of issues, but if you want to try it - give the latest daily ISO a spin? (and if you want to help, record it on http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/ so it's recorded as a QA (quality assurance) test. Daily ISO's can be run in live mode if you just want to try it. Downloads come from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/






share|improve this answer


























  • Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

    – Peter NUnn
    Feb 16 at 22:20



















0














Without having the facts and figures, I am pretty sure it won't. It never happened before. Yet wait about two months, and Ubuntu 19.04 will ship with Gnome 3.32.






share|improve this answer
























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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no



    The primary reason is it's not worth the effort. GNOME 3.32 requires you run the GTK+ [software] stack 3.32 as well, meaning most of the software will need changing, turning your machine into in effect 19.04 (with a 18.10 kernel). It's a lot of work which requires a lot of testing just to get it a few weeks early... Ubuntu is based on releases, and minimal packages get backported as it requires more devs, more testers than exist.



    fyi: I'm running 19.04 now, and have been for some months now. If you want to run it now, you can. It's currently a development release so you won't get support here (but irc ubuntu+1 is still an option) and there is a greater chance of issues, but if you want to try it - give the latest daily ISO a spin? (and if you want to help, record it on http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/ so it's recorded as a QA (quality assurance) test. Daily ISO's can be run in live mode if you just want to try it. Downloads come from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/






    share|improve this answer


























    • Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

      – Peter NUnn
      Feb 16 at 22:20
















    2














    Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no



    The primary reason is it's not worth the effort. GNOME 3.32 requires you run the GTK+ [software] stack 3.32 as well, meaning most of the software will need changing, turning your machine into in effect 19.04 (with a 18.10 kernel). It's a lot of work which requires a lot of testing just to get it a few weeks early... Ubuntu is based on releases, and minimal packages get backported as it requires more devs, more testers than exist.



    fyi: I'm running 19.04 now, and have been for some months now. If you want to run it now, you can. It's currently a development release so you won't get support here (but irc ubuntu+1 is still an option) and there is a greater chance of issues, but if you want to try it - give the latest daily ISO a spin? (and if you want to help, record it on http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/ so it's recorded as a QA (quality assurance) test. Daily ISO's can be run in live mode if you just want to try it. Downloads come from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/






    share|improve this answer


























    • Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

      – Peter NUnn
      Feb 16 at 22:20














    2












    2








    2







    Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no



    The primary reason is it's not worth the effort. GNOME 3.32 requires you run the GTK+ [software] stack 3.32 as well, meaning most of the software will need changing, turning your machine into in effect 19.04 (with a 18.10 kernel). It's a lot of work which requires a lot of testing just to get it a few weeks early... Ubuntu is based on releases, and minimal packages get backported as it requires more devs, more testers than exist.



    fyi: I'm running 19.04 now, and have been for some months now. If you want to run it now, you can. It's currently a development release so you won't get support here (but irc ubuntu+1 is still an option) and there is a greater chance of issues, but if you want to try it - give the latest daily ISO a spin? (and if you want to help, record it on http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/ so it's recorded as a QA (quality assurance) test. Daily ISO's can be run in live mode if you just want to try it. Downloads come from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/






    share|improve this answer















    Ubuntu 19.04 reaches feature-freeze within a week so its release approaches. Usually backports are only performed for LTS releases, after all why backport to a normal release when they will release-upgrade to the next release in a few months. I'd say extremely unlikely officially, so unless you use a PPA (which could possibly complicate the coming release-upgrade) I'd say no



    The primary reason is it's not worth the effort. GNOME 3.32 requires you run the GTK+ [software] stack 3.32 as well, meaning most of the software will need changing, turning your machine into in effect 19.04 (with a 18.10 kernel). It's a lot of work which requires a lot of testing just to get it a few weeks early... Ubuntu is based on releases, and minimal packages get backported as it requires more devs, more testers than exist.



    fyi: I'm running 19.04 now, and have been for some months now. If you want to run it now, you can. It's currently a development release so you won't get support here (but irc ubuntu+1 is still an option) and there is a greater chance of issues, but if you want to try it - give the latest daily ISO a spin? (and if you want to help, record it on http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/ so it's recorded as a QA (quality assurance) test. Daily ISO's can be run in live mode if you just want to try it. Downloads come from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/







    share|improve this answer














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    edited Feb 15 at 11:53

























    answered Feb 15 at 11:44









    guivercguiverc

    5,18921723




    5,18921723













    • Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

      – Peter NUnn
      Feb 16 at 22:20



















    • Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

      – Peter NUnn
      Feb 16 at 22:20

















    Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

    – Peter NUnn
    Feb 16 at 22:20





    Just ran it.. its fast... i'll record it and add some notes... wayland seems to work OK too once you work out how to enable it.

    – Peter NUnn
    Feb 16 at 22:20













    0














    Without having the facts and figures, I am pretty sure it won't. It never happened before. Yet wait about two months, and Ubuntu 19.04 will ship with Gnome 3.32.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      Without having the facts and figures, I am pretty sure it won't. It never happened before. Yet wait about two months, and Ubuntu 19.04 will ship with Gnome 3.32.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        Without having the facts and figures, I am pretty sure it won't. It never happened before. Yet wait about two months, and Ubuntu 19.04 will ship with Gnome 3.32.






        share|improve this answer













        Without having the facts and figures, I am pretty sure it won't. It never happened before. Yet wait about two months, and Ubuntu 19.04 will ship with Gnome 3.32.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Feb 15 at 11:28









        vanadiumvanadium

        7,83311532




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