Ubuntu 16.04 Release Schedule. Ubuntu 16.04 (LTS) release will be coming on 21 April 2016. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS will be called Xenial Xerus. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, due to be released on 21 April 2016, is expected to include Unity 8 running natively on Mir. It will use systemd instead of Upstart as its init system.
Ubuntu 16.04 Release Schedule
Important dates of Ubuntu 16.04 release schedule are:
29 October 2015 Toolchain Uploaded- 26 November 2015 Feature Definition Freeze
- 31 December 2015 Alpha 1 (for opt-in flavors)
- 28 January 2016 Alpha 2 (for opt-in flavors)
- 18 February 2016 Feature Freeze, Debian Import Freeze
- 25 February 2016 Beta 1 Freeze (Monday), Beta 1 (for opt-in flavors)
- 10 March 2016 User Interface Freeze
- 17 March 2016 Documentation String Freeze
- 24 March 2016 Final Beta Freeze, Final Beta
- 07 April 2016 Kernel Freeze, Non Language Pack Translation Deadline
- 14 April 2016 Final Freeze, Release Candidate, Language Pack Translation Deadline
- 21 April 2016 Final Release Ubuntu 16.04
Mark Shuttleworth announced on 21 October 2015, that Ubuntu 16.04 LTS will be called Xenial Xerus and Ubuntu 16.04 LTS will have the combination of various cutting-edge technologies that will mark the beginning of a new era in Ubuntu computing. Of all the things that comprises Ubuntu 16.04 are LXD, MAAS, JuJu and Snappy.
Here’s what Mark Shuttleworth wrote:
X marks the spot
Wednesday, October 21st, 2015
http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1479?utm_source=omgubuntu
What a great Wily it’s been, and for those of you who live on the latest release and haven’t already updated, the bits are baked and looking great. You can jump the queue if you know where to look while we spin up the extra servers needed for IMG and ISO downloads 🙂
Utopic, Vivid and Wily have been three intense releases, packed with innovation, and now we intend to bring all of those threads together for our Long Term Support release due out in April 2016.
LXD is the world’s fastest hypervisor, led by Canonical, a pure-container way to run Linux guests on Linux hosts. If you haven’t yet played with LXD (a.k.a LXC 2.0-b1) it will blow you away. It will certainly transform your expectations of virtualisation, from slow-and-hard to amazingly light and fast. Imagine getting a full machine running any Linux you like, as a container on your laptop, in less than a second. For me, personally, it has become a fun way to clean up my build processes, spinning up a container on demand to make sure I always build in a fresh filesystem.
Snappy is the world’s most secure packaging system, delivering crisp and transaction updates with rollback for both applications and the system, from phone to appliance. We’re using snappy on high-end switches and flying wonder-machines, on raspberry pi’s and massive clouds. Ubuntu Core is the all-snappy minimal server, and Ubuntu Personal will be the all-snappy phone / tablet / pc. With a snap you get to publish exactly the software you want to your device, and update it instantly over the air, just like we do the Ubuntu Phone. Snappy packages are automatically confined to ensure that a bug in one app doesn’t put your data elsewhere at risk. Amazing work, amazing team, amazing community!
MAAS is your physical cloud, with bare-metal machines on demand, supporting Ubuntu, CentOS and Windows. Drive your data centre from a single dashboard, bond network interfaces, raid your disks and rock the cloud generation. Led by Canonical, loved by the world leaders of big, and really big, deployments. MAAS gives you high availability DNS, DHCP, PXE and other critical infrastructure, for huge and dynamic data centres. Also pretty fun to run at home.
Juju is… model-driven application orchestration, that lets communities define how big topological apps like Hadoop and OpenStack map onto the cloud of your choice. The fastest way to find the fastest way to spin those applications into the cloud you prefer. With traditional configuration managers like Puppet now also saying that model-driven approaches are the way to the future, I’m very excited to see the kinds of problems that huge enterprises are starting to solve with Juju, and equally excited to see start-ups using Juju to speed their path to adoption. Here’s the Hadoop, Spark, IPython Notebook coolness I deployed live on stage at Apache Hadoopcon this month:
All of these are coming together beautifully, making Ubuntu the fastest path to magic of all sorts. And that magic will go by the codename… xenial xerus!
What fortunate timing that our next LTS should be X, because “xenial” means “friendly relations between hosts and guests”, and given all the amazing work going into LXD and KVM for Ubuntu OpenStack, and beyond that the interoperability of Ubuntu OpenStack with hypervisors of all sorts, it seems like a perfect fit.
And Xerus, the African ground squirrels, are among the most social animals in my home country. They thrive in the desert, they live in small, agile, social groups that get along unusually well with their neighbours (for most mammals, neighbours are a source of bloody competition, for Xerus, hey, collaboration is cool). They are fast, feisty, friendly and known for their enormous… courage. That sounds just about right. With great… courage… comes great opportunity!