Ubuntu 24.10 released
Version 24.10 of the Ubuntu distribution is out. This release includes GNOME 47, Linux 6.11, security enhancements for managing Personal Package Archives (PPAs), experimental security controls for Snap packages, and more.
Version 24.10 of the Ubuntu distribution is out. This release includes GNOME 47, Linux 6.11, security enhancements for managing Personal Package Archives (PPAs), experimental security controls for Snap packages, and more.
Bindgen is a widely used tool that automatically generates Rust bindings from C headers. The Rust-for-Linux project uses it to create some of the bindings between Rust code and the rest of the kernel. John Baublitz presented at Kangrejos about the improvements that he has made to the tool in order to make the generated bindings easier to use, including improved support for macros, bitfields, and enums.
The Julia project has released version 1.11.0. A separate blog post covers some of the highlights. The release includes a number of helpful features.
In previous Julia versions, there was no "programmatic way" of knowing if an unexported name was considered part of the public API or not. Instead, the guideline was basically that if it was not in the manual then it was not public which was a bit underwhelming. To remedy that, there is now a public keyword in Julia that can be used to indicate that an unexported name is part of the public API.In the early days of open source, it was a struggle to get companies to accept the concept and trust its development model. Now, companies have few qualms about using it, but do tend to take open source and those who maintain it for granted. The struggle now is to find ways to compensate producers of the software, sustain the open‑source commons, and avoid burning out maintainers. The Open Source Pledge project is an effort to persuade companies to pay maintainers by making it a social norm. On October 8, the project is launching a marketing campaign to raise awareness and try to get a larger conversation started around paying maintainers.
Alice Ryhl has been working to enable tracepoints — which are widely used throughout the kernel — to be seamlessly placed in Rust code as well. She spoke about her approach at Kangrejos. Her patch set enables efficient use of static tracepoints, but supporting dynamic tracepoints will take some additional effort.
OpenBSD 7.6 has been released. Notable new features include work to improve suspend/resume on modern hardware, support for the arm64 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite laptops, as well as many improvements in hardware support and driver bug fixes.
With this release all files that existed in the first commit in the OpenBSD source repository have been updated, modified or replaced at some point in time, reaching OpenBSD of Theseus.See the changelog for all changes between OpenBSD 7.5 and 7.6.
The recent WordPress controversy is not the first time there's been tension between the WordPress community, the interests of Automattic as a business, and Matt Mullenweg's leadership as WordPress's benevolent dictator for life (BDFL). In particular, Mullenweg's focus on pushing WordPress to use a new "editing experience" called Gutenberg caused significant friction—and led to the ClassicPress fork. Users who want to preserve the "classic" WordPress experience without straying too far from the WordPress fold may want to look into ClassicPress.
Version 3.13 of the Python programming language has been released. The "What's New In Python 3.13" page has a summary of all the new features and changes. Highlights of the release include a basic JIT compiler, experimental support for free-threading, and much more. See the changelog for even more details.
Version 4.20 of the RPM Package Manager (RPM) has been released. Major changes in this release include a new plugin to prevent filesystem and network access by scriptlets, the BuildSystem directive for declaring the build system to be used by packaged software, and more. LWN covered the development of RPM 4.20 in September.
Anyway, this isn't one of the small rc2's. But looking at historical trends, being a bigger rc2 isn't _that_ unusual, and nothing in here looks all that odd. Yes, the diffstat may look a bit unusual, in that we had a global header renaming (asm/unaligned.h -> linux/unaligned.h) and we had a couple of reverts that stand out as spikes in the stats, but everything else looks nice and small.