Not all Linux distributions will offer packages for KDE 4.5 upgrades, and none of them, at this time, are supporting them in their official repositories. This takes time, and most distros will include a version of KDE 4.5 with their next official releases. Therefore, keep in mind that the packages you are about to install may not be supported by your distribution. Some are included in their distribution’s “unstable” or “testing” repositories, while others are from third-party packagers. I tried to include as many major Linux distributions as possible, but if I missed your favorite distro, feel free to add instructions for it in the comments section.

Kubuntu

Kubuntu 10.04 packages are available in the backports repository, but they are not officially supported as part of the distribution. The development release (Maverick) 10.10 includes KDE 4.5 packages by default.

  1. Add the following repository through KPackageKit or using apt-get in a terminal. sudo add-apt-repository ppa:kubuntu-ppa/beta Update: It should be the backport repository, not the beta.
  2. Run a full upgrade using the graphical package manager or the following commands:

OpenSUSE

Packages for OpenSUSE are available in the 11.3 KDE repositories.

  1. If you have not already, add the repository with:
  2. Upgrade with:

Mandriva

  1. Remove repositories from previous versions, with a command like this:
  2. Add the KDE 4.5 repository. For 32-bit systems, enter as root: For 64-bit systems, type:
  3. Update repository list and test:
  4. Finally, type:

Fedora

  1. Enable the KDE repositories using the instructions found here
  2. Enable kde-testing and kde-unstable in KPackageKit
  3. In a terminal, type as root:

Slackware

AlienBOB has published instructions on upgrading to KDE 4.5. Users should follow them to get the latest packages.

Gentoo

According to the Gentoo KDE guide, an official release of KDE 4.5 will not be made until KDE-PIM, which was delayed, is made available. This will probably be in KDE 4.5.1. There are also other bugs that Gentoo developers said KDE developers have not yet address. Users who still want KDE 4.5 can compile it themselves, as they normally would, and just use KDE-PIM 4.4.5. A full explanation is available at the KDE4 guide website.

PCLinuxOS

At the time of this writing, PCLinuxOS developers were preparing KDE 4.5 packages, and they should be available soon. There was one bug in Konqueror that prevented YouTube from playing correctly, and they have already received help from KDE developers to fix it. You can receive updates by following them on Twitter.

Linux Mint

Linux Mint users can follow the Kubuntu instructions to upgrade to KDE 4.5. Simply add the Kubuntu backports ppa and run: For other Linux distributions, FreeBSD, and other operating systems, you should check the official websites, wikis, announcement sections of forums, and mailing lists to see if KDE 4.5 will be included in their repositories and/or future releases.