![]() My private home setup is a Raspberry Pi 4 8GB with 1TB SDD connected via USB 3.0 to SATA III. My personal use case for Leap Micro is to have as much ad-free browsing as possible, DNS entries for local services, and a Nextcloud instance as a bridge to share pictures and videos in between my wife’s iPhone, kids’ tablet and my Android phone. This tutorial should take less than 15 minutes, on top of instructions the from previous hands-on. Such a solution is appealing especially to users valuing their privacy or just like me looking to bridge Apple and Android devices. In this article, we’ll leverage our existing Pi-hole from the previous article and setup up a home instance of a Nextcloud AIO. This article is a continuation of our previous practical hands-on article, which focuses on ad-free browsing at home with Pi-hole. Let’s make some practical use of the new Leap Micro 5.4! Please bear in mind that we’re switching to SELinux enforcing by default, therefore you might have an easier life if you do a clean build instead.Įspecially on slower storage if you’d be subject to relabeling. Users can upgrade to Leap Micro 5.4 by running the following command Users who would like to receive support and updates for up to 4 years for a given release should consider switching to SLE Micro. Leap Micro 5.3 users can still remain on the existing release and enjoy updates until the next Leap Micro release is out, which should be in Fall 2023. To remain secure, Leap Micro 5.2 users can either do a fresh deployment, which should be under 5-minutes, or upgrade. From this point, Leap Micro 5.2 will no longer receive updates. The availability of Leap Micro 5.4 automatically marks Leap Micro 5.2 as End of Life. Leap Micro is not a traditional distribution, but rather a lightweight HostOS for running virtual machines and containerized workloads. This update brings SELinux in enforcing mode by default as well as tuning. The final release of our immutable HostOS Leap Micro 5.4 is now available. ![]() Leap 15.5 enters the Release Candidate phase! According to the roadmap users can expect the final release shortly after the openSUSE Conference 2023 on June 7th.
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