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Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:45:40 +0000 |
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The
6.18.8,
6.12.68, and
6.6.122 stable kernel updates have been
released; each contains another set of important fixes.
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Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:43:59 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (curl, gimp:2.8, glibc, grafana, grafana-pcp, kernel, osbuild-composer, php:8.3, python-urllib3, python3.11, and python3.12), Debian (chromium), Mageia (ceph, gpsd, libxml2, openjdk, openssl, and xen), SUSE (abseil-cpp, assertj-core, coredns, freerdp, java-11-openjdk, java-25-openjdk, libxml2, openssl-1_0_0, openssl-1_1, python, python-filelock, and python311-sse-starlette), and Ubuntu (kernel, linux, linux-aws, linux-aws-hwe, linux-hwe, linux-kvm, linux-oracle, linux, linux-aws, linux-kvm, linux-lts-xenial, linux-aws-fips, linux-fips, linux-fips, and texlive-bin).
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Thu, 29 Jan 2026 15:44:17 +0000 |
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Jeff Mahoney, who
holds a vice-president position at SUSE, has posted a detailed
proposal for improving the governance of the openSUSE project.
It's meant to be a way to move from governance by volume or
persistence toward governance by legitimacy, transparency, and
process - so that disagreements can be resolved fairly and the
project can keep moving forward. Introducing structure and
predictability means it easier for newcomers to the project to
participate without needing to understand decades of accumulated
history. It potentially could provide a clearer roadmap for
developers to find a place to contribute.
The stated purpose is to start a discussion; this is openSUSE, so he is
likely to succeed.
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Thu, 29 Jan 2026 15:36:23 +0000 |
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The extensible scheduler class (sched_ext)
allows the installation of a custom CPU scheduler built as a set of BPF
programs. Its merging for the 6.12 kernel release moved the kernel away
from the "one scheduler fits all" approach that had been taken until then;
now any system can have its own scheduler optimized for its workloads.
Within any given machine, though, it's still "one scheduler fits all"; only
one scheduler can be loaded for the system as a whole. The sched_ext
sub-scheduler patch series from Tejun Heo aims to change that situation
by allowing multiple CPU schedulers to run on a single system.
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Thu, 29 Jan 2026 14:33:18 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (java-25-openjdk, openssl, and python3.9), Debian (gimp, libmatio, pyasn1, and python-django), Fedora (perl-HarfBuzz-Shaper, python-tinycss2, and weasyprint), Mageia (glib2.0), Oracle (curl, fence-agents, gcc-toolset-15-binutils, glibc, grafana, java-1.8.0-openjdk, kernel, mariadb, osbuild-composer, perl, php:8.2, python-urllib3, python3.11, python3.11-urllib3, python3.12, and python3.12-urllib3), SUSE (alloy, avahi, bind, buildah, busybox, container-suseconnect, coredns, gdk-pixbuf, gimp, go1.24, go1.24-openssl, go1.25, helm, kernel, kubernetes, libheif, libpcap, libpng16, openjpeg2, openssl-1_0_0, openssl-1_1, openssl-3, php8, python-jaraco.context, python-marshmallow, python-pyasn1, python-urllib3, python-virtualenv, python311, python313, rabbitmq-server, xen, zli, and zot-registry), and Ubuntu (containerd, containerd-app and wlc).
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Thu, 29 Jan 2026 01:01:12 +0000 |
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Inside this week's LWN.net Weekly Edition:
- Front: PostmarketOS; LKRG 1.0; Fedora elections; EROFS, NTFS, and XFS; Fedora and GPG 2.5; BPF kfuncs.
- Briefs: curl bounties; GPG security; Guix 1.5.0; ReactOS turns 30; glibc 2.43; Rust 1.93; Xfwl4; Quotes; ...
- Announcements: Newsletters, conferences, security updates, patches, and more.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 18:41:25 +0000 |
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We have received the sad news that Didier Spaier, maintainer of the
blind-friendly Slackware-based Slint distribution, has recently passed
away. Philippe Delavalade, who posted the announcement to the
Slint mailing list, said:
Early 2015, I asked on the slackware list if brltty could be added
in the installer; Didier answered promptly that he could do it on
slint. Afterwards, he worked hard so that slint became as accessible
as possible for visually impaired people.
You all know that all these years, he tried and succeeded to answer
as quickly as possible to our issues and questions.
He will be irreplaceable.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 18:13:39 +0000 |
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The Open Source Initiative (OSI) has announced
that it will not be holding the 2026 spring board election. Instead,
it will be creating a working group to "review and improve OSI's
board member selection process " and provide recommendations by
September 2026:
The public election process was designed to gather community
priorities and improve board member selection, while final
appointments remained with the board.
Over time, that nuance has become a source of understandable
confusion for community members. Many reasonably expected elections to
function as elections normally do, and in fact, the board has
generally adopted the electorate's recommendations. When a process
feels unclear, trust suffers. When trust suffers, engagement becomes
harder. This is especially problematic for an organization whose
mission depends on legitimacy and credibility. [...]
OSI tried its experiment for the right reasons, but a variety of
factors resulted in "elections" that are performatively democratic
while being gameable and representative of only a small group, and
we've learned from the results. Now we are making space to align our
director selection process with our bylaws, to rebuild trust, and to
develop better, more durable and truly representative participation in
which the global stakeholder community can be heard.
LWN covered the
previous OSI election in March 2025.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 17:46:40 +0000 |
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Phones running Linux are ubiquitous these days and it has been that way
since Android started working toward dominance in the smartphone market.
Unfortunately, Android has slowly increased its freedom-unfriendliness and
has become something of a privacy nightmare. In a talk entitled "We need
an open-source phone OS" at Open
Source Summit Japan 2025, Luca Weiss described the smartphone landscape
and gave an overview of postmarketOS as an alternative Linux
operating system for mobile handsets.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 16:00:06 +0000 |
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PC Gamer has run an
amusing review of the scx_horoscope
scheduler for Linux, which uses astrology to optimize scheduling
decisions.
The scheduler is full of bizarre features, like its ability to
perform real planetary calculations based on accurate geocentric
planetary positions, lunar phase scheduling (the full moon gives a
1.4x boost to tasking, apparently) and "zodiac-based task
classification".
That latter feature is easily one of my favourite bits. Specific
planetary bodies "rule" over specific system tasks, so the Sun is
in charge of critical system processes, the Moon (tied to emotions,
of course) rules over interactive tasks, and Jupiter is assigned to
memory-heavy applications, among others.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 15:51:06 +0000 |
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Creating fair governance models for open-source projects is not
easy; defining criteria for participants to receive membership and
voting rights is a particularly thorny problem for projects that have
elections for representative bodies. The Fedora
Council, the project's top-level governance body, is wrestling
with that conundrum now. This was triggered by a Fedora special-interest
group (SIG) granting temporary membership to at least one person for the
sole purpose of allowing them to vote in the most recent Fedora
Engineering Steering Council (FESCo) election. That opened a large can
of worms about what it means to be a contributor and how contributors
can be identified for voting purposes.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 14:09:50 +0000 |
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Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (java-1.8.0-openjdk), Debian (openssl), Fedora (assimp, chromium, curl, freerdp, gimp, and harfbuzz), Mageia (glibc, haproxy, iperf, and python-pyasn1), Red Hat (image-builder, openssl, and osbuild-composer), Slackware (mozilla), SUSE (avahi, cups, gio-branding-upstream, google-osconfig-agent, java-11-openjdk, java-17-openjdk, java-21-openjdk, kernel-firmware, libmatio-devel, libopenjp2-7, nodejs22, php8, python-python-multipart, python311-urllib3_1, qemu, and xen), and Ubuntu (ffmpeg, jaraco.context, openssl, and openssl, openssl1.0).
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Tue, 27 Jan 2026 17:31:31 +0000 |
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There is a new GnuPG update for a "critical security bug " in recent
GnuPG releases.
A crafted CMS (S/MIME) EnvelopedData message carrying an oversized
wrapped session key can cause a stack buffer overflow in gpg-agent
during the PKDECRYPT--kem=CMS handling. This can easily be used
for a DoS but, worse, the memory corruption can very likley also be
used to mount a remote code execution attack. The bug was
introduced while changing an internal API to the FIPS required KEM
API.
Only versions 2.5.13 through 2.5.16 are affected.
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Tue, 27 Jan 2026 16:58:54 +0000 |
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GNU C Library maintainer Carlos O'Donell has announced
that the project will be moving its core services away from Sourceware in favor of services hosted
at the Linux Foundation.
While it was clear to the GNU Toolchain leadership that
requirements were coming to improve the toolchain cyber-security
posture, these requirements were not clear to all project
developers. As part of receiving this feedback we have worked to
document and define a secure development policy for glibc and at a
higher level the GNU Toolchain. While Sourceware has started
making some critical technical changes, the GNU Toolchain still
faces serious, systemic concerns about securing a global, highly
available service and building a sustainable, diverse sponsorship
model.
This has been a long-running discussion; see this 2022 article for some background.
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Tue, 27 Jan 2026 15:41:37 +0000 |
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The kernel's "kfunc" mechanism is a way of exporting kernel functions so
that they can be called directly from BPF programs. There are over 300
kfuncs in current kernels, ranging in functionality from string processing
(bpf_strnlen())
to custom schedulers (scx_bpf_kick_cpu())
and beyond. Sometimes these kfuncs need access to context information that
is not directly available to BPF programs, and which thus cannot be passed
in as arguments. The implicit
arguments patch set from Ihor Solodrai is the latest attempt to solve
this problem.
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