Thank you, that provides a welcome solution.  The Fedora case is
slightly different:

    [ryniker@RPi3-1 ~]$ ls /sys/class/gpio
    export      gpiochip970  unexport
    [ryniker@RPi3-1 ~]$ cat /sys/class/gpio/gpiochip970/base
    970

Now the following works (at least there is no complaint; I will run a
real application later to check actual output, but expect no trouble):

    [root@RPi3-1 ryniker]# echo 993 >/sys/class/gpio/export

    [ryniker@RPi3-1 ~]$ ls   /sys/class/gpio/gpio993
    active_low  device  direction  edge  power  subsystem  uevent  value

    [root@RPi3-1 ryniker]# echo 993 >/sys/class/gpio/unexport

I wonder how stable the "970" is.  Will it be the same for all Raspberry
Pi models?  Will it be the same for all Fedora builds to run on a
specific hardware model?  I suspect the safe answer is "No."  Even if
this has been true for previous cases, without some explicit design
assurance it may change in the future.

Next question: how do I get /dev/i2c and /dev/spi in Fedora when there is
no /boot/config.txt file?
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