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Date: 2026-04-29 10:35 | Last update:



2026-04-29

Drivers 3026 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

NVIDIA just pushed Linux x64 Display Driver 595.71.05 to fix a nasty bug that blanks out OpenGL apps after waking from sleep on Wayland sessions. The patch forces the graphics stack to properly restore framebuffer mappings during resume, which saves users from restarting their entire desktop environment. Outside of this targeted fix, the release only bundles routine stability tweaks and minor Vulkan updates without any major performance gains. X11 or headless setups can safely skip this update, but Wayland users dealing with black screens should grab it immediately.

Reviews 52624 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The MSI QD OLED monitor pushes refresh rates to five hundred hertz while maintaining excellent motion clarity for competitive players. Racing sim fans will appreciate the Thrustmaster wheel bundle, which combines precise force feedback with straightforward console support despite its unconventional base shape. Graphics enthusiasts can explore an ASUS RTX 5090 model boasting a massive power delivery system alongside new thermal safety cables and modular designs from Corsair and Sapphire. Meanwhile audio gear and motherboard selections round out the roundup with a compact Astro headset dock and versatile Intel and AMD boards that cater to both budget builders and high end enthusiasts.

Displays: MSI MPG 271QR QD-OLED X50 Review - 500 Hz for the Elite Few
Gaming: Thrustmaster T598 Direct Axial Drive Force Feedback Racing Wheel Bundle Review
Graphics Cards: ASUS GeForce RTX 5090 Matrix Platinum Review - 800 W Powerhouse, Corsair ThermalProtect Cable for Graphics Cards Review: Between 12V2x6 Cables, Protection Promises, and the Laws of Physics, Sapphire NITRO+ PhantomLink X870EA and Radeon RX 9070 XT review
Headphones: Astro A20 X review: For PC gamers with a console
Motherboards: ASRock B860 Rock WiFi 7 Motherboard Review, Gigabyte X870E Aorus Xtreme X3D AI Top motherboard review: The latest and greatest Xtreme

Bazzite 32 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Bazzite Linux 44 delivers a major desktop update featuring GNOME 50 and KDE Plasma 6.6 with improved scaling defaults and a refreshed login manager. The release upgrades to the OGC kernel 6.19.x and Mesa 26.0.5 while trimming over a gigabyte from the base image by moving QEMU and ROCm to a separate repository. Sunshine is no longer preinstalled but remains available through ujust, alongside newly added native Elgato capture card support and enhanced ISO security signing. Current users can upgrade via the bazzite-rollback-helper command, though Steam Deck builds are temporarily on hold while developers verify stability across the framework changes.

Software 44322 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

PHP 8.5.6 RC2 targets the memory leaks and segmentation faults that routinely crash heavy workloads and background workers. Core engine updates resolve garbage collection conflicts with fibers and generators while patching JIT compilation bugs in Opcache that previously caused random shutdowns. Deployment reliability improves through fixed Phar archive handlers, corrected HTTPS proxy streams, and a critical URI parsing security update. Teams should run this release candidate against their test suites early to catch lingering edge cases before the final stable build ships.

Ubuntu 7069 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Ubuntu issued a series of security notices that address critical flaws across several widely used software packages. The updates patch numerous vulnerabilities in tools like jq, NLTK, Tornado, and the Linux kernel that could otherwise allow attackers to execute arbitrary code or trigger denial of service attacks. Some issues specifically compromise session management in Rack::Session, expose sensitive data through follow-redirects, or cause memory leaks within UltraJSON when processing large files. System administrators should apply these patches immediately using standard update commands and reboot machines running the NVIDIA low latency kernel to fully resolve the problems.

[USN-8202-2] jq vulnerabilities
[USN-8214-1] NLTK vulnerability
[USN-8190-2] Rack::Session vulnerability
[USN-8136-2] Dovecot regression
[USN-8185-2] Linux kernel (Low Latency NVIDIA) vulnerabilities
[USN-8198-2] Tornado vulnerabilities
[USN-8217-1] follow-redirects vulnerabilities
[USN-8219-1] UltraJSON vulnerabilities

SUSE 5633 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

MariaDB receives an important security patch for openSUSE Leap 16.0 that resolves a heap buffer overflow capable of triggering crashes or remote code execution. A moderate update for container-suseconnect on the same platform simply switches its build environment to Go version 1.25 without addressing specific exploits. Users running openSUSE Tumbleweed should apply a patch for pocketbase to fix a security issue linked to CVE-2026-33809. The Xen virtualization suite also gets an important update that closes three separate vulnerabilities across several SUSE distributions and mandates a system reboot once applied.

openSUSE-SU-2026:20629-1: important: Security update for mariadb
openSUSE-SU-2026:20628-1: moderate: Security update for container-suseconnect
openSUSE-SU-2026:10628-1: moderate: pocketbase-0.37.3-1.1 on GA media
SUSE-SU-2026:1645-1: important: Security update for xen

Slackware 1253 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Slackware recently pushed out new proftpd packages for both the 15.0 release and the current development stream. The update targets a dangerous SQL injection flaw that could let malicious users bypass login checks, gain elevated access, or run arbitrary code on vulnerable servers

proftpd (SSA:2026-118-01)

Rocky Linux 898 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Rocky Linux administrators need to install several critical security patches across their infrastructure immediately. These updates target essential packages including the kernel, Firefox, sudo, python3.12, and grafana on releases eight through ten. Each patch resolves known vulnerabilities that could otherwise compromise system stability or expose sensitive data.

RLSA-2026:10950: Important: python3.12 security update
RLSA-2026:10741: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RLSA-2026:10707: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RLSA-2026:10767: Important: firefox security update
RLSA-2026:9264: Important: kernel security update
RLSA-2026:10758: Important: sudo security update
RLSA-2026:10223: Important: grafana security update
RLSA-2026:10757: Important: firefox security update

Red Hat 9400 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Red Hat recently rolled out a series of security patches for various packages running on RHEL systems from version six through ten. These updates address vulnerabilities in familiar tools like freerdp, bind, grafana, and vim, plus several core libraries including gdk-pixbuf2 and libxml2. While the majority of these advisories carry an Important severity rating, a few specific fixes for OpenStack operators and XML processing are marked as Moderate.

RHSA-2026:11333: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:11336: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:11332: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:11328: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:11327: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:11326: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:11325: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:11323: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:11329: Important: webkit2gtk3 security update
RHSA-2026:11352: Important: xorg-x11-server-Xwayland security update
RHSA-2026:11360: Important: LibRaw security update
RHSA-2026:11375: Important: yggdrasil security update
RHSA-2026:11371: Important: bind security update
RHSA-2026:11372: Important: bind security update
RHSA-2026:11369: Important: xorg-x11-server-Xwayland security update
RHSA-2026:7885: Moderate: Red Hat OpenStack Services on OpenShift 18.0.18 (golang-github-openstack-k8s-operators-os-diff) security update
RHSA-2026:11416: Important: grafana security update
RHSA-2026:11417: Important: grafana security update
RHSA-2026:11413: Important: yggdrasil security update
RHSA-2026:11412: Important: yggdrasil-worker-package-manager security update
RHSA-2026:11389: Important: vim security update
RHSA-2026:11388: Important: xorg-x11-server security update
RHSA-2026:11349: Moderate: libxml2 security update
RHSA-2026:11344: Important: kea security update

Oracle Linux 6474 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Oracle has released a comprehensive batch of security advisories and bug fixes for Oracle Linux versions seven through ten, supporting both x86_64 and aarch64 architectures. The updates primarily target critical vulnerabilities in widely used software like OpenJDK Java, multiple Python releases, Firefox ESR, and essential system libraries such as gdk-pixbuf2 and webkit2gtk3. Administrators will also find important patches addressing race conditions in Kerberos, privilege escalation risks in sudo, and memory leaks within mdadm utilities.

ELBA-2026-9327 Oracle Linux 9 microcode_ctl bug fix and enhancement update
ELSA-2026-9683 Important: Oracle Linux 9 java-1.8.0-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10949 Important: Oracle Linux 9 python3.9 security update
ELSA-2026-9689 Important: Oracle Linux 9 java-21-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10757 Important: Oracle Linux 9 firefox security update
ELSA-2026-10745 Important: Oracle Linux 9 python3.12 security update
ELSA-2026-10739 Important: Oracle Linux 9 tigervnc security update
ELSA-2026-10708 Important: Oracle Linux 9 gdk-pixbuf2 security update
ELBA-2026-9328 Oracle Linux 9 krb5 bug fix and enhancement update
ELSA-2026-9689 Important: Oracle Linux 10 java-21-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10767 Important: Oracle Linux 10 firefox security update
ELSA-2026-10758 Important: Oracle Linux 10 sudo security update
ELSA-2026-10711 Important: Oracle Linux 10 python3.12 security update
ELSA-2026-10707 Important: Oracle Linux 10 gdk-pixbuf2 security update
ELSA-2026-10774 Important: Oracle Linux 9 python3.11 security update
ELSA-2026-10741 Important: Oracle Linux 8 gdk-pixbuf2 security update
ELSA-2026-11077 Important: Oracle Linux 8 python3 security update
ELSA-2026-9683 Important: Oracle Linux 8 java-1.8.0-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-9689 Important: Oracle Linux 8 java-21-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10766 Important: Oracle Linux 8 firefox security update
ELSA-2026-11062 Important: Oracle Linux 8 python3.11 security update
ELSA-2026-10950 Important: Oracle Linux 8 python3.12 security update
ELBA-2026-50242 Oracle Linux 8 mdadm bug fix update
ELSA-2026-10702 Important: Oracle Linux 8 webkit2gtk3 security update
ELSA-2026-7032 Important: Oracle Linux 7 libpng12 security update

Fedora Linux 9333 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora has released important security updates for Chromium, Vim, and EDK2 across its recent distribution versions. The new Chromium build addresses critical memory corruption flaws that could compromise DevTools or GPU rendering processes. Vim receives a targeted patch to prevent arbitrary code execution through its NetBeans interface integration. Meanwhile, the EDK2 firmware upgrade for Fedora 43 restores reliable HTTPS booting, bumps OpenSSL to version 3.5.6, and resolves a denial of service vulnerability in CMS processing.

Fedora 44 Update: chromium-147.0.7727.116-1.fc44
Fedora 44 Update: vim-9.2.390-1.fc44
Fedora 43 Update: edk2-20260213-4.fc43

Debian 10883 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Recent Debian security advisories highlight critical flaws across several widely used software packages including webkit2gtk, node-tar, and various DNS tools. Attackers could exploit these weaknesses to bypass security restrictions, trigger system crashes, or execute arbitrary code through malicious web content or archives. The fixes are already available for current stable distributions while older releases like Debian 11 receive targeted patches from the long term support team.

Debian GNU/Linux 9 (Stretch) Extended LTS:
ELA-1699-1 ffmpeg security update

Debian GNU/Linux 11 (Bullseye) LTS:
[DLA 4552-1] node-tar security update

Debian GNU/Linux 13 (Trixie):
[DSA 6232-1] webkit2gtk security update
[DSA 6235-1] dnsdist security update
[DSA 6234-1] pdns-recursor security update
[DSA 6233-1] pdns security update
2026-04-28

Fedora Linux 9333 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora Asahi Remix 44 finally ports the full Fedora Linux 44 stack to Apple Silicon Macs and ditches custom Mesa builds for upstream packages that actually play nice with kernel updates. New installations skip the old Calamares wizard in favor of a Plasma-native setup flow, while KDE Plasma 6.6 and GNOME 50 now match their upstream counterparts without heavy patching. Users will need to run the upgrade through DNF or KDE Discover since GNOME Software tends to drop dependencies during major desktop shifts, so keeping a terminal window open saves headaches later.

Fedora Linux 9333 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora Linux 44 officially lands today as a bit-for-bit copy of last week’s RC 1.7, so anyone who already grabbed that image can skip the download and jump straight to upgrading or installing. The desktop experience gets a solid bump with GNOME 50 on Workstation and KDE Plasma 6.6 featuring a cleaner first-boot setup that actually guides you through configuration instead of dumping you into a blank screen. Under the hood, the release swaps in faster OpenSSL certificate handling, makes MariaDB 11.8 the default database package, auto-enables NTSYNC kernel support for Wine and Steam, and shrinks cloud images by switching to Btrfs boot subvolumes. Moving from an older Fedora version just requires a standard dnf upgrade with a repo refresh and a quick config backup before rebooting into the new release.

Software 44322 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Proton 11 Beta 2 drops a quick compatibility patch that finally stops the EA App from freezing your desktop when launching games. Valve also smoothed out frame drops during the opening cinematic in They Are Billions and fixed DirectX 12 translation glitches that were breaking Marvel's Avengers. The update relies on an updated Xalia component and a newer vkd3d-proton branch to handle these Windows layer hiccups without introducing major new features. Steam users should only force this beta onto specific titles they actually need to test, since experimental builds still carry enough risk of broken controller profiles or audio routing to make a full library update a headache.

Security 10946 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

IPFire 2.29 Core Update 201 finally delivers the DNS Firewall feature that blocks malware, phishing, and ads at the network gateway before any malicious traffic ever reaches connected devices. This new system replaces clunky URL filters and external Pi-hole setups by routing all domain queries through an updated proxy that pulls fresh blocklists automatically via IXFR transfers. Beyond the headline feature, the update rebases the core toolchain on newer glibc and binutils versions, patches a web proxy rule race condition, and drops unmaintained packages like 7zip to shrink the attack surface. 

Reviews 52624 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Today's reviews are exploring compact computing options like the DFRobot LattePanda Iota, which combines x86 processing power with a flexible modular ecosystem for edge deployments. Enthusiast hardware continues to push boundaries with liquid coolers featuring large integrated screens and QD-OLED monitors that deliver blistering 500 Hz refresh rates for competitive gaming. The latest graphics cards prioritize efficient cooling and compact designs to handle demanding workloads, while innovative peripherals like the Valve Steam Controller bring flexible input options directly from your couch. Mobile gaming phones now incorporate advanced liquid cooling systems to sustain peak performance, and magnetic portable SSDs finally solve the hassle of tethered storage for modern smartphone creators.

Computers: DFRobot LattePanda Iota Review
Cooling: DeepCool LT360 Vision ARGB Review: Large Screen with Silent Cooling
Displays: MSI MPG 271QR QD-OLED X50 Review - 500 Hz for the Elite Few, Gigabyte Aorus FO27Q5P Review (500Hz QD-OLED)
Gaming: Pokémon Champions Review – Confined Competition
Graphics Cards: MSI GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16G VENTUS 2X OC PLUS Review, GIGABYTE GeForce RTX 5080 WINDFORCE SFF 16G Video Card Review
Input: Valve Steam Controller review: Every input to PC game from the sofa
Mobile: REDMAGIC 11 Pro review: A powerful gaming phone with liquid cooling
Storage: ADATA SR800 Magnetic Power Bank SSD Review

Debian 10883 Ubuntu 7069 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

XanMod has released kernel versions 7.0.2 and 6.18.25 LTS to deliver faster scheduling, improved memory management, and modern network optimizations for Debian-based systems. The builds ship with LLVM ThinLTO, Google's multigenerational LRU framework, BBRv3 congestion control, and dedicated drivers for AMD V-Cache hardware. Before upgrading, users should verify that their third-party modules like NVIDIA graphics or virtualization software support the new kernel, as DKMS compilation failures are common. Installing requires adding the official GPG key, pointing APT to the custom repository, pulling in build dependencies, and rebooting to activate the performance tweaks.

Software 44322 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The latest Zen Browser update finally patches that nasty startup crash which left users staring at a completely unresponsive window. It also adds a quick alt or opt key combined with a click to instantly split merged tabs without digging through menus. Compact mode video controls now stay properly visible, and dragging tabs between separate windows correctly hides the sidebar instead of leaving it glitched in place. Workflow heavy users will appreciate how these targeted fixes clean up the daily routine without padding the release with unnecessary features.

Qubes OS 63 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Qubes OS 4.2 officially drops all security support, leaving any lingering installations completely exposed to unpatched vulnerabilities. Users must migrate to version 4.3 through either a clean install that wipes dom0 customizations or an in-place upgrade tool designed to preserve them. The fresh installation route avoids technical headaches but forces a rebuild of modified settings, while the migration path keeps existing setups intact at the cost of navigating a fragile multi-stage process. Since every patch within the 4.2 branch shares the exact same expiration date, waiting past June guarantees running an unsupported system with zero maintenance backing it up.

Linux 3345 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Linux Kernel 6.6.136 LTS drops a heavy batch of patches aimed at closing memory safety holes in the networking stack and file system drivers. The update specifically targets out-of-bounds writes and use-after-free conditions in ksmbd, OCFS2, F2FS, and NTFS3 that could trigger kernel panics or leak sensitive data to untrusted clients. Virtualization gets a targeted fix for KVM MMIO fragment handling, while networking receives stricter validation checks for rxrpc tickets and packet socket headers to prevent race condition exploits. Hardware support rounds out the release with corrected driver lifecycle management for media devices and fresh audio quirks for several modern laptops and desktops.

Linux 3345 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The Linux kernel 7.0.2 release drops a heavy batch of SMB server fixes that finally patch out-of-bounds writes and broken connection counters, which means network shares will stop crashing or rejecting legitimate users after hitting artificial limits. FUSE mounts and the F2FS filesystem get tighter bounds checking to prevent page cache overflows and use-after-free bugs during concurrent unmounts or heavy backup jobs. AMDGPU drivers swap their legacy ID allocator for an XArray structure that handles interrupt contexts without deadlocking, while crypto subsystems finally fix async callback chains that were silently skipping hash verification. It is a straightforward stable update that quietly patches dangerous network sharing vulnerabilities and keeps the underlying system from tripping over itself during routine file operations.

Ubuntu 7069 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Ubuntu issued a series of security notices to patch critical flaws across numerous widely used software packages. These vulnerabilities impact essential tools like nginx, Vim, strongSwan, and NTFS-3G by allowing attackers to crash services or execute arbitrary code through malformed files and network requests. Some of the issues even let local users escalate privileges or trick remote systems into leaking sensitive information over the network. Administrators can fix everything by running a standard system update and rebooting their machines to apply the patched versions across all supported Ubuntu releases.

[USN-8192-2] NTFS-3G vulnerabilities
[USN-8211-1] Pillow vulnerability
[USN-8207-1] ClamAV vulnerability
[USN-8195-2] PackageKit vulnerability
[USN-8210-1] nginx vulnerabilities
[USN-8208-1] HAProxy vulnerability
[USN-8196-2] strongSwan vulnerabilities
[USN-8209-1] Little CMS vulnerability
[USN-8199-1] OpenStack Glance vulnerabilities
[USN-8212-1] authd vulnerability
[USN-8213-1] Vim vulnerabilities

SUSE 5633 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

SUSE rolled out a batch of security advisories that impact various Linux distributions and widely used open source software. Kernel live patches for SUSE Linux Enterprise address critical race conditions in ALSA alongside privilege escalation flaws within AppArmor. Firefox Extended Support Release gets a major upgrade to version 140.10.0, which closes 25 separate vulnerabilities tied to memory corruption and boundary checking failures. System administrators should also apply important fixes for freerdp that resolve multiple heap overflows, while moderate updates quietly patch security gaps in freeciv, systemd components, Emacs, and the ngtcp2 library.

SUSE-SU-2026:1622-1: important: Security update for the Linux Kernel (Live Patch 27 for SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP5)
SUSE-SU-2026:1621-1: important: Security update for the Linux Kernel (Live Patch 30 for SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP5)
openSUSE-SU-2026:0155-1: moderate: Security update for freeciv
openSUSE-SU-2026:20621-1: important: Security update for MozillaFirefox
openSUSE-SU-2026:10624-1: moderate: libsystemd0-259.5-1.3 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10619-1: moderate: emacs-30.2-8.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10621-1: moderate: libngtcp2-16-1.22.1-1.1 on GA media
SUSE-SU-2026:1630-1: important: Security update for the Linux Kernel (Live Patch 26 for SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP5)
SUSE-SU-2026:1632-1: important: Security update for freerdp
SUSE-SU-2026:1634-1: important: Security update for freerdp

Slackware 1253 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Slackware has released updated mpg123 packages to address a critical security flaw in versions 15.0 and current. The vulnerability stems from a regression introduced in release 1.32.0 that mishandles file offsets on 32-bit architectures, leading to memory corruption and unexpected crashes. This patch corrects the issue across the main player as well as companion utilities like out123 and mpg123-id3dump. Administrators can retrieve the fixed files from official FTP servers and apply them quickly using standard upgrade commands.

mpg123 (SSA:2026-117-01)

Rocky Linux 898 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Red Hat 9400 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Red Hat has released a series of security advisories covering numerous packages across its enterprise Linux platforms. These patches address vulnerabilities in essential software like the kernel, Python versions, Firefox, and sudo utilities. While most updates carry an important severity rating, a few kernel releases are marked as moderate. System administrators should install these fixes quickly to keep their environments secure and stable.

RHSA-2026:10756: Moderate: kernel-rt security update
RHSA-2026:10754: Important: RHUI 4.11.4 security update - python-pyOpenSSL
RHSA-2026:10745: Important: python3.12 security update
RHSA-2026:10741: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:10739: Important: tigervnc security update
RHSA-2026:10735: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:10734: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:10709: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:10712: Important: git-lfs security update
RHSA-2026:10707: Important: gdk-pixbuf2 security update
RHSA-2026:10710: Important: pcs security update
RHSA-2026:10701: Important: yggdrasil-worker-package-manager security update
RHSA-2026:10949: Important: python3.9 security update
RHSA-2026:10951: Important: freerdp security update
RHSA-2026:10929: Important: rhc-worker-playbook security update
RHSA-2026:10774: Important: python3.11 security update
RHSA-2026:10766: Important: firefox security update
RHSA-2026:10758: Important: sudo security update
RHSA-2026:10757: Important: firefox security update
RHSA-2026:11313: Moderate: kernel security update
RHSA-2026:11077: Important: python3 security update
RHSA-2026:11062: Important: python3.11 security update
RHSA-2026:10996: Important: kernel security update
RHSA-2026:10950: Important: python3.12 security update

Oracle Linux 6474 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Oracle has released a series of critical security advisories for Oracle Linux versions 8, 9, and 10. These updates primarily target essential development tools like OpenJDK 17 and 25, alongside core utilities such as systemd, Grafana, Go, and Buildah. Each advisory addresses multiple common vulnerability exposures while patching specific bugs that affect system stability and container management workflows. Administrators can download the corrected packages for both x86_64 and aarch64 architectures directly from Oracle's Unbreakable Linux Network repository.

ELSA-2026-9686 Important: Oracle Linux 8 java-17-openjdk security update
ELBA-2026-9743 Oracle Linux 8 systemd bug fix and enhancement update
ELSA-2026-9686 Important: Oracle Linux 9 java-17-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-9693 Important: Oracle Linux 9 java-25-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10223 Important: Oracle Linux 10 grafana security update
ELSA-2026-10226 Important: Oracle Linux 9 grafana security update
ELSA-2026-9693 Important: Oracle Linux 10 java-25-openjdk security update
ELSA-2026-10219 Important: Oracle Linux 9 golang security update
ELSA-2026-10135 Important: Oracle Linux 9 buildah security update
ELSA-2026-10217 Important: Oracle Linux 10 golang security update

Fedora Linux 9333 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora has released a batch of critical security patches across versions 42, 43, and 44 to address multiple high-risk vulnerabilities in widely used system software. These updates target essential packages like Python, OpenSSH, OpenSSL, Firefox, and PackageKit by fixing flaws that could allow remote code execution or privilege escalation. Administrators should apply these fixes immediately since the vulnerabilities span scripting attacks, memory corruption issues, and dangerous race conditions that compromise system integrity. You can install the patches using the standard dnf upgrade command along with each advisory identifier to keep your Fedora systems secure.

Fedora 44 Update: gum-0.17.0-3.fc44
Fedora 42 Update: PackageKit-1.3.4-3.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: firefox-150.0-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: nss-3.122.1-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: python3.14-3.14.4-2.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: mingw-python3-3.11.15-4.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: xrdp-0.10.6-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: libcoap-4.3.5b-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: gum-0.16.1-2.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: flatpak-1.16.6-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: python3-docs-3.13.13-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: cockpit-357-2.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: python3.13-3.13.13-1.fc42
Fedora 43 Update: chromium-147.0.7727.116-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: vim-9.2.390-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: openvpn-2.6.20-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: PackageKit-1.3.4-3.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: openssl-3.5.4-3.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: ngtcp2-1.22.1-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: openssh-10.0p1-9.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: mingw-python3-3.11.15-4.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: xrdp-0.10.6-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: python3.11-3.11.15-4.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: libcoap-4.3.5b-1.fc43

Debian 10883 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Debian released multiple security advisories to patch critical vulnerabilities in mbedtls, libde265, and openjdk-21. The mbedtls update resolves a timing discrepancy that could expose cryptographic secrets alongside a flawed random number fallback mechanism. Libde265 receives essential memory safety corrections after developers found stack and heap overflow bugs capable of triggering severe system crashes or unauthorized execution. OpenJDK 21 also gets fixed against numerous authentication flaws and denial of service risks, prompting administrators to upgrade all affected systems right away.

[DLA 4551-1] mbedtls security update
ELA-1698-1 libde265 security update
[DLA 4550-1] libde265 security update
[DSA 6231-1] openjdk-21 security update

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