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Thu, 18 Jun 2026 00:55:14 +0000 |
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Inside this week's LWN.net Weekly Edition:
- Front: State of Fedora; mTHP creation; overlayfs; buffer-heads cleanup; 7.1 statistics.
- Briefs: curl summer of bliss; 7.1 kernel; AUR compromise; Fedora election; FairScan 2.0; Firefox 152.0; Homebrew 6.0.0; KDE Plasma 6.7; LWN topic list; Quotes; ...
- Announcements: Newsletters, conferences, security updates, patches, and more.
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Wed, 17 Jun 2026 15:50:07 +0000 |
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The results
are in for Fedora's F44 election cycle for seats on the Fedora
Council, Fedora Engineering
Steering Committee, Fedora
Mindshare Committee, and EPEL
Steering Committee.
Miro Hrončok and Aleksandra Fedorova have won
seats on the council. Neal Gompa, Fabio Valentini, Michel Lind,
Maxwell G, and Simon de Vlieger have been elected to FESCo. Samyak
Jain, Akashdeep Dhar, Luis Bazan, and Mat Holmes have all been elected
to the Mindshare Committee. The four candidates for the EPEL
committee, Carl George, Diego Hererra, Jonathan Wright, and Troy
Dawson were all automatically elected as there were an equal number of
candidates and seats open. Congratulations to all the winners.
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Wed, 17 Jun 2026 15:30:12 +0000 |
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The Python Software Foundation blog has a post
with a summary of the security-related content at PyCon US 2026 with links to
slides from important sessions. The recordings will be published to
the PyCon US channel on
YouTube, and the post will be updated with links to those videos as
they are made available.
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Wed, 17 Jun 2026 14:05:04 +0000 |
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Wed, 17 Jun 2026 13:26:41 +0000 |
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Version
2.0 of the FairScan document-scanning app for Android has been
released. The headline feature for this release is the addition of
optical-character-recognition (OCR) support using Tesseract to produce PDFs
with searchable text from scans. FairScan developer Pierre-Yves
Nicolas has written a detailed
blog about adding the feature and explaining why it had not been added
previously.
That looks nice, so why didn't FairScan have it before? That's
because FairScan wasn't ready for it: I wouldn't be comfortable if
FairScan was giving you wrong text half of the time. To get good
results from an OCR engine, you need to provide it a readable
image. If it's hard to read for a human, it's certainly also hard to
read for an OCR engine.
Over the past year, I worked on different parts of FairScan's
automatic processing to transform photos of documents into PDFs that
are easy for humans to read:
- document detection
- perspective correction
- shadow reduction
- brightness and contrast enhancement
All this work on image processing helped FairScan produce clean
PDFs and can now also contribute to making text recognition effective.
FairScan is available via Google
Play or F-Droid.
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Wed, 17 Jun 2026 13:25:51 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (hplip, kernel, kernel-rt, libpng12, libpng15, libxml2, libxslt, mysql:8.0, mysql:8.4, opencryptoki, openssl, postfix, postgresql:15, rsync, and webkit2gtk3), Debian (asterisk, atril, gsasl, and libreoffice), Fedora (ack, bird, chromium, firefox, ldns, librabbitmq, nextcloud, nss, openslide, perl-Protocol-HTTP2, tig, vorbis-tools, and xen), Mageia (coturn, log4cxx, and python-tornado), SUSE (389-ds, buildah, container-suseconnect, distribution, editorconfig-core-c, elemental-system-agent, glib-networking, google-guest-agent, google-osconfig-agent, kernel, libcaca, libXpm, opensc, openssl-3, openvswitch, perl-Crypt-PBKDF2, python-python-dotenv, python311-aiosmtplib, python311-zeroconf, runc, shim, and sqlite3), and Ubuntu (ca-certificates, keystone, librabbitmq, linux, linux-aws, linux-kvm, linux-aws-hwe, linux-azure, linux-gcp, linux-hwe, linux-oracle, linux-azure, linux-azure, linux-gcp, linux-hwe, linux-oracle, linux-azure-6.8, linux-oracle-5.15, nova, openimageio, qemu, and squid).
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Tue, 16 Jun 2026 17:22:38 +0000 |
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Part of running LWN is keeping a list of potentially interesting topics
that may merit the effort to turn into articles. As an experiment, we are
now exposing that list to our subscribers at the
Project Leader and Supporter levels. The hope is that this list will
provide useful insights into what is on our radar and which might be coming
to LWN in the near future.
With this feature, we hope to give our most committed subscribers a look
behind the curtain and the ability to provide input on the topics they are
most interested in reading about. There, is, thus, a simple voting
mechanism built into this list. No topic will be chosen (or rejected)
solely on the basis of votes; there are a lot of considerations that go
into topic selection, and that will not change. But more information about
where our readers' interests lie will, hopefully, be helpful.
For all readers: we are always happy to welcome topic suggestions sent to
lwn@lwn.net.
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Tue, 16 Jun 2026 15:31:20 +0000 |
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On June 15 at Fedora's Flock conference, held in
Prague, Fedora Project Leader (FPL) Jef Spaleta delivered a short "State of
Fedora" keynote that provided a bit of insight into the status of the
project. Topics included the overall growth for Fedora usage, ways to increase
contributions, and an alarming decline in the number of active packagers working
on the project.
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Tue, 16 Jun 2026 14:18:07 +0000 |
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Version
152.0 of the Firefox web browser has been released. Notable
changes in this release include a brand-new look for the Firefox
Settings interface, the ability to disable tracker blocking in private
browsing tabs, a feature to mute browser sound from the address bar,
experimental support for the JPEG
XL image format, and more.
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Tue, 16 Jun 2026 13:22:04 +0000 |
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Version
6.7 of KDE's Plasma desktop has been released. Notable changes in
this release include per-screen virtual desktops, faster desktop
switching, introduction of the Union
theming system as a tech preview, as well as many other improvements and bug
fixes. The release is dedicated to Eric Laffoon, a longtime KDE
supporter, who passed away in May.
See the KDE
wiki for a full list of new features, and the Changelog
for a list of all commits in this release.
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Tue, 16 Jun 2026 13:05:20 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (mod_http2, postfix, and webkit2gtk3), Debian (bird2, libgd-perl, and libreoffice), Fedora (7zip, ack, hugo, and perl-Mojo-JWT), Mageia (atril, evince, xreader, emacs, lcms2, libgcrypt, libinput, libsndfile, putty, and sudo), Red Hat (openssl and osbuild-composer), SUSE (cheat, chromedriver, containerized-data-importer, cyrus-imapd, freeipmi, graphicsmagick, java-11-openj9, java-17-openj9, kitty, kubevirt, kubevirt-1.6, libcaca, libopenssl-3-devel, librav1e0_8, neonmodem, opensc, openssh, openssl-1_0_0, openssl-1_1, openssl-3, perl-HTTP-Daemon, perl-XML-LibXML, python-python-dotenv, python311-paramiko, python311-PyJWT, python311-starlette, python311-tornado6, qemu, restic, and trivy), and Ubuntu (adsys, cups, fastnetmon, freerdp2, freerdp3, mesa, nginx, rsync, ruby2.3, ruby2.5, and tmux).
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Mon, 15 Jun 2026 16:36:39 +0000 |
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Linus Torvalds released
the 7.1 kernel as expected on June 14. This development cycle
brought in a lot of new features — and a lot of new developers as well.
The time has come for our traditional look at where the changes in 7.1 came
from, with a digression into how our community may be changing in general.
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Mon, 15 Jun 2026 13:32:22 +0000 |
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Daniel Stenberg has announced
that curl will not be accepting vulnerability reports from July 1
through August 3, unless the submitter has a paid support
contract. He is calling it the "curl summer of bliss".
As previously mentioned, we have been under a huge pressure
for the last four months or so. Now we need some rest. We do not
expect this deluge to be over.
[...] If you and your Open Source projects also want to participate
in the summer of bliss 2026: just do it and let us know! I would of
course encourage you to do so. To take care of yourself as a top
priority.
The project's issue and pull-request trackers on GitHub will remain
open. The planned release date for curl 8.22.0 has been pushed back
two weeks to September 2, 2026.
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Mon, 15 Jun 2026 13:04:38 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (.NET 9.0), Debian (apache2, chromium, jpeg-xl, librabbitmq, and openssl), Fedora (apptainer, bind9-next, chezmoi, chromium, collectd, composer, dnsdist, gh, python-django5, python-python-multipart, varnish, varnish-modules, vmod-querystring, vmod-uuid, weasyprint, and xorg-x11-server-Xwayland), Mageia (cups, expat, libpng, libssh, memcached, nghttp2, openimageio, packages, proftpd, and radare2), Oracle (.NET 10.0, .NET 8.0, .NET 9.0, and firefox), Red Hat (postfix and valkey), and SUSE (afl, alloy, ansible-core, apache-pdfbox, chromedriver, chromium, cpp-httplib-devel, dpkg, elemental-operator, elemental-toolkit, enc, erlang, ffmpeg-7, firewalld, git-bug, golang-github-prometheus-prometheus, grafana, GraphicsMagick, graphite2, kernel, kernel-devel, lcms2, ldns, libsoup, libyang, libzypp, logback, mariadb, NetworkManager, openssh, openvswitch, perl-GD, perl-XML-LibXML, polkit, postgresql-jdbc, postgresql18, python, python-django, python-M2Crypto-doc, python-Pygments, python-pygments, python-requests, python313-Django6, qemu, rpcbind, samba, strongswan, tmux, uriparser, and xdg-dbus-proxy).
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Sun, 14 Jun 2026 18:47:53 +0000 |
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Linus has released the 7.1 kernel.
"So it's only Sunday morning back home, but it's Sunday afternoon where
I am right now, so I'm doing the 7.1 release at the regular time -
just not in the regular timezone. "
Significant changes in 7.1 include
the removal of support for some old 486-based architectures,
some new clone() flags making
process management easier,
BPF support for io_uring,
zero-copy-I/O support for the ublk user-space block
driver,
initial (incomplete) sub-scheduler support
in sched_ext,
more swapping improvements,
a completely rewritten NTFS
implementation,
and much more. See the LWN merge-window summaries (part 1, part 2) for details.
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