RSS 생중계
The AI Therapist Can See You Now
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
[$] Debian Project Leader election 2025 edition
Four candidates have stepped up to run in the 2025 Debian Project Leader (DPL) election. Andreas Tille, who is in his first term as DPL, is running again. Sruthi Chandran, Gianfranco Costamagna, and Julian Andres Klode are the other candidates running for a chance to serve a term as DPL. The campaigning phase ended on April 5, and Debian members began voting on April 6. Voting ends on April 19. This year, the campaign period has been lively and sometimes contentious, touching on problems with Debian team delegations and finances.
[$] A new type of spinlock for the BPF subsystem
The 6.15 merge window saw the inclusion of a new type of lock for BPF programs: a resilient queued spinlock that Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi has been working on for some time. Eventually, he hopes to convert all of the spinlocks currently used in the BPF subsystem to his new lock. He gave a remote presentation about the design of the lock at the 2025 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management, and BPF summit.
Samsung and Google Partner To Launch Ballie Home Robot with Built-in Projector
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
[$] Improving hot-page detection and promotion
[$] Two approaches to better kernel samepage merging
PackageMgmt
OpenSSH 10.0 released
OpenSSH 10.0 has been released. Support for the DSA signature algorithm, which was disabled by default beginning in 2015, has been removed. Other notable changes include using the post-quantum algorithm mlkem768x25519-sha256 for key agreement by default, support for systemd-style socket activation in Portable OpenSSH, and moving code for user authentication from the sshd-session binary to the new ssh-auth binary:
Splitting this code into a separate binary ensures that the crucial pre-authentication attack surface has an entirely disjoint address space from the code used for the rest of the connection. It also yields a small runtime memory saving as the authentication code will be unloaded after the authentication phase completes. This change should be largely invisible to users, though some log messages may now come from "sshd-auth" instead of "sshd-session". Downstream distributors of OpenSSH will need to package the sshd-auth binary.The release notes also warn that "software that naively matches versions using patterns like "OpenSSH_1*"" may be confused by the new version number.
Security updates for Wednesday
China Raises Tariffs on US Goods To 84% as Rift Escalates
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Enterprises Are Shunning Vendors in Favor of DIY Approach To AI, UBS Says
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Clean Energy Powered 40% of Global Electricity in 2024, Report Finds
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Fake Job Seekers Are Flooding US Companies
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hackers Spied on 100 US Bank Regulators' Emails for Over a Year
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
UK Creating 'Murder Prediction' Tool To Identify People Most Likely To Kill
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft Cancels $1 Billion Ohio Data Center Projects
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Razer Pauses Direct Laptop Sales in the US as New Tariffs Loom
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
OpenSSL 3.5.0 released
Version 3.5.0 of OpenSSL has been released. This release adds support for server-side QUIC (RFC 9000), a new configuration option (no-tls-deprecated-ec) that disables support for TLS groups deprecated in RFC 8422, and more.
Middle-Aged Man Trading Cards Go Viral in Rural Japan Town
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
FreeDOS 1.4 released
Version 1.4 of FreeDOS has been released. This is the first stable release since 2022, and includes improvements to the Fdisk hard-disk-management program, and reliability updates for the mTCP set of TCP/IP applications for DOS.
This version was much smoother because Jerome Shidel, our distribution manager, had an idea after FreeDOS 1.3 that we could have a rolling test release that collected all of the changes that people make over time. Previous to this, each new FreeDOS distribution (like 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, and 1.3) required bundling up packages into a "release candidate," and we would go through several iterations of updating the release candidates.
Jerome's method of building the FreeDOS distribution made it easier to automate a test release, which we decided to update every month. As the test releases accumulated enough changes to warrant a release, we could then make the next test release a "release candidate" which would iterate to the next version of the FreeDOS distribution. Since 2022, we've released monthly test releases. Thanks Jerome!
LWN covered FreeDOS last year for its 30th anniversary.
페이지
