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LPI

A Curiosity For Linux: Alejandraโ€™s Foss Path

What begins with curiosity can shape a career. In this interview, we meet Alejandra Retana Piedra, whose first encounter with Linux as a child in Costa Rica quietly sparked a journey into IT and open source. Today, her passion and ... Read more The post A Curiosity For Linux: Alejandraโ€™s Foss Path appeared first on Linux Professional Institute (LPI).

LWN.net

[$] KASAN for JIT-compiled BPF code

Alexis Lothorรฉ has been working to add support for the kernel's memory-access checker, KASAN, to just-in-time-compiled BPF code. He spoke about that work at the 2026 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management, and BPF Summit. KASAN support is needed, he said, to help catch bugs in the BPF just-in-time (JIT) compiler. KASAN is a great tool for catching memory-management problems in the kernel, but only in code that can be monitored by it.

LWN.net

Sunsetting Tor 0.4.8

The Tor Project has announced that it is planning to actively stop supporting Tor 0.4.8 and earlier C Tor versions soon. Usually, we try not to break existing releases, even if they are unsupported, unless we have a pretty good reason. In this case, we have several reasons. [...] The most important reason is this: in 0.4.9, we have made some former fields in our directory data obsolete -- specifically, TAP onion keys and family lines. Removing these fields will let us save a great deal of client directory bandwidth for everyone. This, in turn, will make all Tor clients bootstrap a little faster, especially those on slow connections. But when we remove these fields, clients and relays running earlier versions of Tor will no longer work, since they expect the TAP onion keys to be present. Therefore, in order to deliver improved performance faster, we need to accelerate the date on which 0.4.8 will stop working. The target sunset date is currently September 1, 2026, after which any versio

LWN.net

Security updates for Tuesday

Security updates have been issued by Debian (ffmpeg), Fedora (erlang, ffmpeg, prometheus, python-scrapy, python3-docs, python3.14, thorvg, tigervnc, and vips), Mageia (mumble and sslh), Oracle (389-ds:1.4, dracut, firefox, hplip, kernel, openssh, postgresql:15, redis:6, and uek-kernel), Red Hat (delve, gvisor-tap-vsock, nginx, nginx:1.24, nginx:1.26, osbuild-composer, podman, rhc, skopeo, and yggdrasil), SUSE (containerized-data-importer, graphite2, kernel, libarchive, openssh, openssh-askpass-gnome, openvswitch, openvswitch3, postfix, python-lxml, python-nltk, python-python-multipart, python-urllib3, rmt-server, terraform-provider-local, terraform-provider-null, and util-linux), and Ubuntu (google-guest-agent, haproxy, libxml2, linux-azure, linux-intel-iotg-5.15, linux-lowlatency, linux-lowlatency-hwe-5.15, linux-oracle-5.15, mysql-8.0, mysql-8.4, and nginx).

Phoronix

Linux 7.2 Showing Some Unexpected & Nice Performance Gains On AMD EPYC Sorano

While the Linux 7.2 merge window doesn't wrap up until this weekend as the feature cut-off for new material, I have already begun some early benchmarks of the code currently staged for this next version of the Linux kernel. Linux 7.2 already was looking quite exciting with cache aware scheduling and other exciting new features while an unexpected surprise in my early testing this week was seeing some local network/socket performance improvements...