|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 19:00:51 +0000 |
|
The European Commission has opened
a "call
for evidence" to help shape its European Open Digital Ecosystem
Strategy. The commission is looking to reduce its dependence on
software from non-EU countries:
The EU faces a significant problem of dependence on non-EU countries
in the digital sphere. This reduces users' choice, hampers EU
companies' competitiveness and can raise supply chain security issues
as it makes it difficult to control our digital infrastructure (both
physical and software components), potentially creating
vulnerabilities including in critical sectors. In the last few years,
it has been widely acknowledged that open source – which is a public
good to be freely used, modified, and redistributed – has the strong
potential to underpin a diverse portfolio of high-quality and secure
digital solutions that are valid alternatives to proprietary ones. By
doing so, it increases user agency, helps regain control and boost the
resilience of our digital infrastructure.
The feedback period runs until midnight (Brussels time)
February 3, 2026. The commission seeks input from all interested
stakeholders, "in particular the European open-source community
(including individual contributors, open-source companies and
foundations), public administrations, specialised business sectors,
the ICT industry, academia and research institutions ".
|
|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 17:24:50 +0000 |
|
|
|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 16:08:04 +0000 |
|
Last year we
revived the tradition of publishing a timeline of
notable events from the previous year. Since that seemed to go over
well, we decided we should continue the practice and look back on some
of the most noteworthy events and releases of 2025.
|
|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 15:45:10 +0000 |
|
The IPFire project, an
open-source firewall Linux distribution, has released version
2.29 - Core Update 199. Notable changes in this release include an
update to Linux 6.12.58, support for WiFi 6 and 7 features on
wireless access points, as well as native support for link-local
discovery protocol (LLDP) and Cisco discovery protocol (CDP).
|
|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 14:54:12 +0000 |
|
Android Authority reports
that Google will be reducing the frequency of releases of code to the
Android Open Source Project to only twice per year.
A spokesperson for Google offered some additional context on this
decision, stating that it helps simplify development, eliminates
the complexity of managing multiple code branches, and allows them
to deliver more stable and secure code to Android platform
developers. The spokesperson also reiterated that Google's
commitment to AOSP is unchanged and that this new release schedule
helps the company build a more robust and secure foundation for the
Android ecosystem.
The release schedule for security patches is unchanged.
|
|
Wed, 07 Jan 2026 14:26:11 +0000 |
|
Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (resource-agents, ruby:3.3, thunderbird, and xorg-x11-server), Fedora (libpcap), Red Hat (brotli), Slackware (libsodium), SUSE (dcmtk, govulncheck-vulndb, libpcap, mozjs60, qemu, rsync, and usbmuxd), and Ubuntu (glib2.0 and linux-raspi, linux-raspi-5.4).
|
|
Tue, 06 Jan 2026 17:14:57 +0000 |
|
The nature and role of the Linux Foundation's Technical Advisory Board (TAB) is
not well-understood, though
a recent LWN article shed some light on its
role and
history. At the 2025
Linux Plumbers Conference (LPC), the TAB held a question and
answer session to address whatever it was the community wanted to know
(video).
Those questions ended up covering the role of large language models in kernel
development, what it is like to be on the TAB, how the TAB can help grease the
wheels of corporate bureaucracy, and more.
|
|
Tue, 06 Jan 2026 17:14:43 +0000 |
|
Aleksa Sarai, as the maintainer of the
runc container runtime, faces a
constant battle against security problems. Recently, runc has seen
another
instance of a security vulnerability that can be traced back to the difficulty
of handling file paths on Linux. Sarai spoke at the 2025
Linux Plumbers Conference
(slides;
video)
about
some of the problems runc has had with path-traversal vulnerabilities, and to
ask people to please use
libpathrs, the library that he has been developing for
safe path traversal.
|
|
Tue, 06 Jan 2026 16:30:48 +0000 |
|
Version
26.0 ("Anh-Linh") of the Arch-based Manjaro Linux distribution has been
released. Manjaro 26.0 includes Linux 6.18, GNOME 49,
KDE Plasma 6.5, Xfce 4.20, and more.
|
|
Tue, 06 Jan 2026 14:09:03 +0000 |
|
Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (kernel, ruby, and thunderbird), Debian (libsodium and ruby-rmagick), Fedora (gnupg2 and proxychains-ng), Oracle (gcc-toolset-14-binutils, rsync, tar, and thunderbird), Red Hat (buildah, mariadb, mariadb10.11, podman, and tar), SUSE (alloy, apache2, buildah, erlang26, glib2, ImageMagick, kernel, libsoup, pgadmin4, python-tornado6, python3, python312, python313, qemu, webkit2gtk3, and xen), and Ubuntu (webkit2gtk).
|
|
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 18:16:41 +0000 |
|
The calendar has flipped over to 2026; a new year has begun. That means
the moment we all dread has arrived: it is time for LWN to put out a set of
lame predictions for what may happen in the coming year. Needless to say,
we do not know any more than anybody else, but that doesn't stop us from
making authoritative-sounding pronouncements anyway.
|
|
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 14:27:52 +0000 |
|
Version 1.30 of the GNU
ddrescue data recovery tool has been released. Notable changes in
this release include improvements to automatic recovery of a drive
with a dead head, addition of a --no-sweep option to disable
reading of skipped areas, and more.
|
|
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 14:19:28 +0000 |
|
Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (tar), Debian (curl and gimp), Fedora (doctl, gitleaks, gnupg2, grpcurl, nginx, nginx-mod-brotli, nginx-mod-fancyindex, nginx-mod-headers-more, nginx-mod-modsecurity, nginx-mod-naxsi, nginx-mod-vts, and usd), Mageia (cups), Red Hat (container-tools:rhel8, go-toolset:rhel8, grafana, and skopeo), and SUSE (dirmngr, fluidsynth, gnu-recutils, libmatio-devel, python311-marshmallow, python312-Django6, rsync, and thunderbird).
|
|
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 01:16:43 +0000 |
|
The 6.19-rc4 kernel prepatch is out for
testing.
So this rc is still a bit smaller than usual, but it's not _much_
smaller, and I think next week is likely going to be more or less
back to normal.
Which is all exactly as expected, and nothing here looks
particularly odd. I'll make an rc8 this release just because of the
time lost to the holidays, not because it looks like we'd have any
particular issues pending (knock wood).
|
|
Fri, 02 Jan 2026 15:37:52 +0000 |
|
Greg Kroah-Hartman has written an
overview of how the kernel's security team works.
The members of the security team contain a handful of core kernel
developers that have experience dealing with security bugs, and
represent different major subsystems of the kernel. They do this
work as individuals, and specifically can NOT tell their employer,
or anyone else, anything that is discussed on the security alias
before it is resolved. This arrangement has allowed the kernel
security team to remain independent and continue to operate across
the different governments that the members operate in, and it looks
to become the normal way project security teams work with the
advent of the European Union's new CRA law coming into effect.
|