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Welcome to the monthly update for openSUSE Tumbleweed for July 2024. Last month was busy with events like the Community Summit in Berlin and the openSUSE Conference. Both events were productive and well-received. Despite the busy schedule and follow on discussion from the conference about the Rebranding of the Project, a number of snapshots continued to roll out to users this month.

Stay tuned and tumble on!

Should readers desire more frequent information about snapshot updates, they are encouraged to subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list.

New Features and Enhancements

  • Linux Kernel 6.9.9: This kernel introduces several important fixes and enhancements across various subsystems. Key updates include the introduction of devm_mutex_init() for mutex initialization in multiple components, addressing issues in the Hisilicon debugfs uninit process, and resolving shared IRQ handling in DRM Lima drivers. Fixes in the PowerPC architecture avoid nmi_enter/nmi_exit in real mode interrupts, while networking improvements prevent unnecessary BUG() calls in net/dql. Enhancements in WiFi drivers such as RTW89 include improved handling for 6 GHz channels. Updates in DRM/AMD drivers address multiple issues, from uninitialized variable warnings to ensuring proper timestamp initialization and memory management. The RISC-V architecture receives a fix for initial sample period values, and several BPF selftests see adjustments for better error detection. These updates collectively enhance system stability, performance, and security.
  • KDE Plasma 6.1.3: Discover now auto-handles Flatpak rebases from runtimes and properly uninstalls EOL refs without replacements. In Kglobalacceld, invalid keycodes are explicitly processed. Kpipewire introduces proper cleanup on deactivate and fixes thread handling for PipeWireSourceStream. KScreen now uses ContextualHelpButton from Kirigami, and Kscreenlocker adds a property to track past prompts. KWin sees numerous improvements: relaxed nightlight constraints, simplified Wayland popup handling, better input method windows, and enhanced screencast plugins. Plasma Mobile enhancements improve home screen interactions, translation issues, and swipe detection. Plasma Networkmanager and Plasma Workspace benefit from shared QQmlEngine and various bug fixes, including avatar image decoding and pointer warping on Wayland.
  • Frameworks 6.4.0: Attica updates its gitignore to include VS Code directories. Baloo reverts a QCoreApplication change and ports QML modules. Breeze Icons introduces a ColorScheme-Accent and fixes data-warning icons. KArchive now rejects tar files with negative sizes and fixes crashes with malformed files. KAuth and KBookmarks add VS Code directories to gitignore. KCalendarCore adds missing QtCore dependencies and QML bindings for calendar models. KIO improves systemd process handling and deprecates unused features. Kirigami enhances navigation and dialog components. KTextEditor adds a tool for testing JavaScript scripts and ensures even indent sizes, fixing multiple bugs.
  • KDE Gear 24.05.2: Akonadi-calendar adds missing change notifications. Dolphin updates Meta-Object Compiler generation. Filelight enables appx building and ensures hicolor icon presence while Itinerary fixes calendar permissions, corrupted notes, and the package introduces new extractors. Kdenlive addresses timeline, aspect ratio, and compilation issues. Okular fixes a crash with certain PDF actions.
  • Supermin 5.3.4: This update introduces several key enhancements, including support for OCaml 5 and kylinsecos. It improves package management by detecting dnf5 and omitting missing options. The update also refines OCaml compilation by using -output-complete-exe instead of -custom that fixes kernel filtering for the aarch64 architecture, and enables kernel uncompression on RISC-V. The update removes previously applied patches now included in the new tarball, helping to streamline the codebase and improve maintainability.
  • Checkpolicy 3.7: The latest update brings support for Classless Inter-Domain Routing notation in nodecon statements, enhancing SELinux policy definition capabilities. Error messages are now more descriptive, and error handling has been improved. Key bug fixes include handling unprintable tokens, avoiding garbage value assignments, freeing temporary bounds types and performing contiguous checks in host byte order.

Key Package Updates

  • NetworkManager 1.48.4: This update introduces support for matching Open vSwitch (OVS) system interfaces by MAC address, enhancing network interface management. Additionally, NetworkManager now considers the contents of /etc/hosts when determining the system hostname from reverse DNS lookups of configured interface addresses, improving hostname resolution accuracy. Subpackages updated include NetworkManager-bluetooth, NetworkManager-lang, NetworkManager-tui, NetworkManager-wwan, libnm0, and typelib-1_0-NM-1_0. These enhancements contribute to more robust and precise network configuration handling in Linux environments.
  • libguestfs 1.53.5: This update includes significant enhancements and fixes. The --chown parameter is now correctly split on the ':' character, and a new checksum command is supported. Detection for Circle Linux and support for the LoongArch architecture have been added, including file architecture translation fixes. The update allows nbd+unix:// URIs and reimplements GPT partition functions using sfdisk. DHCP configuration improvements and a new virt-customize --inject-blnsvr operation enhance usability. Deprecated features include the removal of gluster, sheepdog, and tftp drive support. New APIs such as findfs_partuuid and findfs_partlabel improve functionality, while inspection tools now resolve PARTUUID and PARTLABEL in /etc/fstab. These updates enhance compatibility, performance, and functionality across various environments.
  • glib2 2.80.4: The latest update backports key patches: mapping EADDRNOTAVAIL to G_IO_ERROR_CONNECTION_REFUSED, handling files larger than 4GB in g_file_load_contents(), and correcting GIR install locations and build race conditions. Additionally, improvements in gthreadedresolver ensure returned records are properly reference-counted in lookup_records().
  • ruby3.3 3.3.4: This release addresses a regression where dependencies were missing in the gemspec for some bundled gems such as net-pop, net-ftp, net-imap, and prime. Other fixes include preventing Warning.warn calls for disabled warnings, correcting memory allocation sizes in String.new(:capacity) and resolving string corruption issues.
  • libgcrypt 1.11.0: The latest update introduces several new interfaces and performance enhancements. New features include an API for Key Encapsulation Mechanism (KEM), support for algorithms like Streamlined NTRU Prime sntrup761, Kyber, and Classic McEliece, and various Key Derivation Functions (KDFs) including HKDF and X963KDF. Performance improvements feature optimized implementations for SM3, SM4, and other cryptographic operations on ARMv8/AArch64, PowerPC, and AVX2/AVX512 architectures. Other changes include various enhancements for constant time operations and deprecates the GCRYCTL_ENABLE_M_GUARD control code.

Bug Fixes

  • orc 0.4.39:

    • CVE-2024-40897 was solved with versions before 0.4.39, which had a buffer overflow vulnerability in orcparse.c.
  • java-21-openjdk 21.0.4.0:

  • ovmf 202402 had three months of CVE patches in its quarterly update.

  • Mozilla Firefox 128.0: This release fixes 16 CVEs. The most severe was CVE-2024-6604; this was a memory safety bug in Firefox 128, Firefox ESR 115.13, Thunderbird 128 and Thunderbird 115.13. These bugs showed evidence of memory corruption that potentially allowed arbitrary code execution.

  • ghostscript 10.03.1)

    • CVE-2024-33869 allowed bypassing restrictions via crafted PostScript documents.
    • CVE-2023-52722
    • CVE-2024-33870 allows access to arbitrary files via crafted PostScript documents.
    • CVE-2024-33871 allowed arbitrary code execution via crafted PostScript documents using custom Driver libraries in contrib/opvp/gdevopvp.c.
    • CVE-2024-29510 allowed memory corruption and SAFER sandbox bypass via format string injection in a uniprint device.
  • xwayland 24.1.1 3:

    • CVE-2024-31080 had a vulnerability that could allow attackers to trigger the X server to read and transmit heap memory values, leading to a crash.
    • CVE-2024-31081 could cause memory leakage and segmentation faults, leading to a crash.
    • CVE-2024-31083 allowed arbitrary code execution by authenticated attackers through specially crafted requests.
  • libreoffice 24.2.5.2:

    • CVE-2024-5261 allows fetching remote resources without proper security checks.
  • GTK3 3.24.43:

    • CVE-2024-6655 allowed a library injection into a GTK application from the current working directory under certain conditions.
  • netpbm 11.7.0:

    • CVE-2024-38526: doc, which provides API documentation for Python projects, had a vulnerability where pdoc --math linked to malicious JavaScript files from polyfill.io.

Conclusion

The month of July 2024 was marked by significant updates, security fixes and enhancements. The Linux Kernel 6.9.9 update introduced several key fixes and improvements across various subsystems, enhancing overall stability and performance. KDE Plasma 6.1.3 brought numerous UI improvements and better handling of Flatpak rebases. The updates to Frameworks 6.4.0 and KDE Gear 24.05.2 provided additional enhancements and bug fixes, improving user experience and system reliability. Critical security vulnerabilities were addressed in various packages, including Firefox, ghostscript, and xwayland, ensuring Tumbleweed remains secure, efficient, and feature-rich for all users. Additionally, the Aeon team announced the release of Aeon Desktop to Release Candidate 3 status that came from the release of a Tumbleweed snapshot last week.

For those Tumbleweed users who want to contribute or want to engage with detailed technological discussions, subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list . The openSUSE team encourages users to continue participating through bug reports, feature suggestions and discussions.

Contributing to openSUSE Tumbleweed

Your contributions and feedback make openSUSE Tumbleweed better with every update. Whether reporting bugs, suggesting features, or participating in community discussions, your involvement is highly valued.

More Information about openSUSE:

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An experimental "Pre-RC3" image for the Aeon Desktop has been published and testers are encouraged to try out the final prototype before it becomes the official Release Candidate 3 (RC3). The new image can be downloaded from the openSUSE development repository.

This prototype, which has been submitted to openSUSE Factory, introduces some significant changes and improvements. Notably, the dd backend in the tik installer has been replaced with a new systemd-repart backend. This change allows for the installation of Aeon with Full Disk Encryption that enhances the security features of the operating system.

Existing users of Aeon RC2 and earlier versions will need to perform a reinstall to take advantage of the new features destined for RC3. Due to the fundamental changes in partition layout necessary for the new encryption features, an in-place upgrade from RC2 is not feasible without risking data integrity, according to a post on the new Aeon Desktop subreddit. Users can utilize Aeon's reinstall feature, which facilitates the backup and restoration of user data as long as a sufficiently large USB stick is used.

Users installing the prototype image may encounter some packages from the OBS devel project. These can be removed by running transactional-update --interactive dup and selecting solutions that replace devel:microos packages with official ones.

Testers are encouraged to provide feedback and report any issues encountered during the testing phase on the Aeon Desktop bug report page.

Next Steps

If the prototype is accepted into Factory and becomes RC3, the development of Aeon will be in its final stages before an official release. RC3 will serve as the basis for writing openQA tests for Aeon, which are crucial for ensuring the desktop's stability and functionality.

There is a possibility of an RC4, which aims to streamline the installer process by embedding the full Aeon install within the installer image, potentially reducing the download size by 50 percent. If this approach is not feasible in the short term, it may be revisited post-release.

Full Disk Encryption is set up in one of two modes: Default or Fallback. Get more info about that in the Aeon Desktop Introduces Comprehensive Full Disk Encryption article.

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Full Disk Encryption is planned to be introduced in the forthcoming release candidate of the Aeon Desktop to enhance data security for its users.
The feature is expected to be included in the upcoming Release Candidate 3 (RC3).

Full Disk Encryption is designed to protect data in cases of device loss, theft or unauthorized booting into an alternative operating system.
Depending on the hardware configuration of a system, Aeon's encryption will be set up in one of two modes: Default or Fallback.

Default Mode

The Default Mode is the preferred method of encryption provided the system has the required hardware. This mode utilizes the Trusted Platform Module(TPM) 2.0 chipset with PolicyAuthorizeNV support (TPM 2.0 version 1.38 or newer). In this mode, Aeon Desktop measures several aspects of the system's integrity. These including:

  • UEFI Firmware
  • Secure Boot state (enabled or disabled)
  • Partition Table
  • Boot loader and drivers
  • Kernel and initrd (including kernel command line parameters)

These measurements are stored in the system's TPM. During startup, the current state is compared with the stored measurements. If these match, the system boots normally. If discrepancies are found, users are prompted to enter a Recovery Key provided during installation. This safeguard ensures that unauthorized changes or tampering attempts are flagged.

Fallback Mode

The Fallback Mode is employed when the necessary hardware for Default Mode is not detected. This mode requires users to enter a passphrase each time the system starts. While it does not check system integrity as comprehensively as Default Mode, Secure Boot is strongly recommended to ensure some level of security, confirming that the bootloader and kernel have not been tampered with.

Contrary to initial concerns, Default Mode is not less secure than Fallback Mode despite not requiring a passphrase at startup. The strong integrity checks in Default Mode protect against attacks that could bypass normal authentication methods. For example, it can detect changes to the kernel command line that could otherwise allow unauthorized access. Furthermore, it safeguards against modifications to initrd thereby preventing potential passphrase capture in Fallback Mode.

Secure Boot, while optional in Default Mode due to the comprehensive integrity checks, is critical in Fallback Mode to maintain system security. Disabling Secure Boot in Fallback Mode increases vulnerability to tampering and attacks aimed at capturing the passphrase.

Aeon's implementation of Full Disk Encryption provides robust security options tailored to the capabilities of users' hardware. By offering both Default and Fallback modes, Aeon ensures that all users can benefit from enhanced data protection.

The inclusion of this feature in RC3 marks a significant step forward in safeguarding user data against potential threats.
Aeon users are encouraged to read and bookmark the Aeon Encryption Guide.

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Welcome to the monthly update for openSUSE Tumbleweed for June 2024. This month was busy with events like the Community Summit in Berlin and the openSUSE Conference, but a number of snapshots continued to roll out to users. Developers, system administrators and users receive updates designed to enhance your experience and ensure high levels of security and performance.

Should readers desire a more frequent amount of information about snapshot updates, readers are encouraged to subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list.

Let’s go!

New Features and Enhancements

  • Linux Kernel 6.9.7: This kernel introduces several important fixes and enhancements across various subsystems. Key updates include addressing undefined references in netfilter when CONFIG_SYSCTL is disabled, correcting TCP Fast Open handling, and resolving a conflicting quirk in Advanced Linux Sound Architecture for Realtek devices. Improvements in file system writeback operations, multi-threaded path handling and memory management for Hisilicon crypto drivers enhance stability. Networking updates include fixes for race conditions in netpoll, enhancements for specific SFP modules, and improvements in WiFi drivers such as RTW89, Ath9k, Ath12k, and MT76. Additional platform-specific updates address issues in ACPI, ARM64 configurations, HID device handling, and Bluetooth driver fixes.
  • PipeWire 1.2.0 and WirePlumber 0.5.4: PipeWire 1.2.0 introduces asynchronous processing, node.sync-group for synchronized scheduling, and improved config parsing error reporting. It also adds mandatory metadata support for buffer parameters, multiple data-loops with CPU affinity, and dynamic log level adjustments. Key fixes include RTP-SAP module enhancements, ROC 0.3 support, and improved Bluetooth BAP broadcast code parsing. WirePlumber 0.5.4 refines the role-based linking policy, allowing role-based sinks alongside standard audio operations and enabling regular filters to act as best targets. It addresses startup crashes due to empty config files, improves Bluetooth profile auto-switching, and fixes issues with DSP filters and infinite loop scenarios in autoswitching scripts. Together, these updates enhance the flexibility, reliability, and overall performance of audio management in Linux environments. Both also received updates in snapshot 20240627
  • Mesa and Mesa-drivers 24.1.2: Both packages underwent a specfile cleanup, involving the relocation of Rust crate sources into subprojects folders and updates to baselibs.conf. Due to the maintenance burden associated with Rust crates as system dependencies, these crates are now downloaded as vendored dependencies, as detailed in the README-suse-maintenance.md. The update adds support for building libvulkan_nouveau, including necessary Rust crates such as paste-1.0.14, proc-macro2-1.0.70, quote-1.0.33, syn-2.0.39, and unicode-ident-1.0.12. However, building libvulkan_nouveau on Leap is not possible due to the requirement for rust-cbindgen >= 0.25. For more details, refer to the release notes at https://docs.mesa3d.org/relnotes/24.1.2.
  • KDE Plasma 6.1.1: Discover improves UI elements and Packagekit support, while Dr Konqi corrects the Sentry dbus interface usage. Plasma Addons addresses reference issues in Effects/cube, and krdp ensures version compatibility and resolves session controller bugs. Kscreenlocker improves greeter functionality, and KWin introduces multiple fixes for shaders, tiling, and input panels. Libkscreen and libplasma update protocol versions and fix plugin loading issues. Plasma Desktop enhances task icon sizing, panel opacity and file dragging across screens. Plasma Audio Volume Control removes unnecessary symlinks, and Plasma Systemmonitor correctly positions loading overlays. Powerdevil improves battery protection UI and limits backlighthelper calls.
  • Python-setuptools 70.0: Key features in this new major version include emitting warnings for ignored [tools.setuptools] entries in pyproject.toml, improved error messaging for pkg_resources.EntryPoint.require and handling None location distributions more gracefully. The update also refreshes unpinned vendored dependencies, supports PEP 625 by standardizing package name and version in filenames and ensures encoding consistency for .pth files. Obsolete Python < 3.8 code has been removed, and pkg_resources now uses stdlib importlib.machinery. Bug fixes address race conditions in the install command, improve handling of nested namespaces with package_dir and correct various pkg_resources method behaviors. The patch for reproducibility has also been refreshed.
  • Xen 4.18.2_06: This version resolves intermittent system hangs when Power Control Mode is set to Minimum Power. Patches also improve CPU mask handling and interrupt movement in various scenarios. Upstream bug fixes include improvements in scheduler resource data management and include fixes for building with GNU Compiler Collection 14.

Key Package Updates

  • NetworkManager 1.48.2: This package updates support for matching OVS system interfaces by MAC address and fixes port reactivation and VPN secrets handling for 2-factor authentication. It saves connection timestamps during shutdown for proper autoactivation after restart. Key changes in 1.48.0 deprecate autotools building, add support for changing OpenSSL ciphers for 802.1X authentication, and set unmanaged device reasons in the StateReason property visible in nmcli. Additionally, it replaces the mac-address-blacklist property with mac-address-denylist, improves WiFi 6 GHz band detection and optimizes performance to avoid high CPU usage during route updates. Previous version 1.46 adds brought dynamic SSID-based stable IDs, randomized MAC addresses and several enhancements for handling IPv6, D-Bus and cloud setup.
  • ibus-table 1.17.6: This update drops Python2 support, transitioning all scripts to Python3 using pyupgrade. It now allows the use of keys with Unicode keysyms in keybindings, enhancing customization and flexibility. Additionally, the frames_per_buffer=chunk_size option is now utilized in self._paudio.open() for improved audio handling. The update also includes translation enhancements from Weblate, with Czech translations reaching 36.6 percent, Japanese at 45.3 percent, and Chinese (Simplified) at 92.0 percent.
  • btrfsprogs 6.9: The mkfs utility now halts if the mount status cannot be determined when using the --force option and corrects the minimum size calculation for zoned devices. The check command removes the --clear-ino-cache option, shifting its functionality to the rescue command group, and adds detection and repair for incorrect file extent item ram_bytes values. The qgroup commands now sync the filesystem before searching for stale entries, handle uncleaned subvolumes and squota enabled scenarios, and display the cleaning status of subvolumes. The receive command fixes stream parsing for strict alignment hosts, and tune change-csum and dump-tree commands include updates for handling dev-replace status items. The convert command improves extent iteration for preallocated/unwritten extents. The build process now ensures compatibility with e2fsprogs 1.47.1 and improves header file dependency tracking. Documentation was also updated.
  • GNU’s Emacs 29.4: An emergency bugfix took place in this release. In this update, arbitrary shell commands are no longer executed when enabling Org mode, significantly enhancing security by preventing the execution of potentially malicious commands.

Bug Fixes

  • Python-dnspython 2.6.1:

    • CVE-2023-29483 - Eventlet before 0.35.2 in dnspython allows remote "TuDoor" DNS attack interference.
  • php8 8.3.8:

    • CVE-2012-1823 involved a vulnerability where attackers could inject arguments into PHP-CGI, leading to potential security issues. The new vulnerability, CVE-2024-4577, was discovered to bypass this original fix, allowing the same or similar types of argument injection attacks. The update ensures that this bypass is no longer possible, reinforcing the security measures originally put in place for CVE-2012-1823.
    • Similarly, the bypass of CVE-2024-1874 was made with the fix to CVE-2024-5585.
  • kernel-firmware-nvidia-gspx-G06 (NVIDIA GPU driver)

    • CVE-2024-0090 was a vulnerability where a user can cause an out-of-bounds write.
    • CVE-2024-0091 was a vulnerability where a user can cause an untrusted pointer dereference. A successful exploit of this vulnerability might lead to denial of service.
    • CVE-2024-0092 was an improper check or improper handling of exception conditions might lead to denial of service.
  • XZ 5.6.2:

    • CVE-2024-3094 Through a series of complex obfuscations, the liblzma build process extracts a prebuilt object file from a disguised test file existing in the source code, which is then used to modify specific functions in the liblzma code. This results in a modified liblzma library that can be used by any software linked against this library, intercepting and modifying the data interaction with this library. More details in snapshot 20240605
  • cJSON v1.7.17:

    • CVE-2024-31755 - A segmentation violation, which can trigger through the second parameter.

Conclusion

The month of June 2024 saw a range of significant updates, security fixes and enhancements. The Linux Kernel 6.9.7 update improved stability and performance. Mesa and Mesa-drivers 24.1.2 introduced Rust crate dependencies and improved Vulkan support. KDE Plasma 6.1.1 brought UI improvements and a major version of Python-setuptools 70.0 arrived for rolling release users. A few critical security vulnerabilities were taken care of and fixes related to the XZ backdoor continued, so that Tumbleweed remains secure, efficient and feature-rich for all users.

For those Tumbleweed users who want to contribute or want to engage with detailed technological discussions, subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list . The openSUSE team encourages users to continue participating through bug reports, feature suggestions and discussions.

Contributing to openSUSE Tumbleweed

Your contributions and feedback make openSUSE Tumbleweed better with every update. Whether reporting bugs, suggesting features, or participating in community discussions, your involvement is highly valued.

More Information about openSUSE:

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Fediverse

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A new major version of Leap Micro is now available! Leap Micro 6.0 images can be found at get.opensuse.org.

Leap Micro 6.0 uses a brand-new codebase, comes with plenty of new appliances and, for the first time, enters images for public cloud.

About Leap Micro

Leap Micro 6.0 is a rebranded SUSE Linux Enterprise Micro 6.0 which is an ultra-reliable container and Virtual Machine host by SUSE. Leap Micro is released twice a year and has support over two releases.

Leap Micro 5.4 is now EOL

With the release of Leap Micro 6.0, Leap Micro 5.4 reaches End Of Life; users will no longer receive maintenance updates and are advised to upgrade.

More conservative users can stay on Leap Micro 5.5, which will receive updates until the release of Leap Micro 6.1.

Understanding Image variants

All of Leap and SLE Micro generally come in two variants either Base or Default.

Both Base and Default have a container stack, but only the Default variant has the Virtual Machine stack.

If you do not plan to use VMs and you care for space, then the Base might be a variant just for you. 

All of our images offered at get-o-o are the Default ones (VMs+containers) as we expect they're suitable for most users.

All appliances including Base variants (without virtualization stack) can be downloaded directly from https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/leap-micro/6.0/appliances/

Explaining individual appliances

A general recommendation for everyone use is the self-install image. It's a bootable image with a quick wizard that writes the preconfigured image to your drive and grows the root partition. This process from boot takes about 5 minutes.

The preconfigured image is a raw bootable image you can manually write/dd to the disk or SD card. Images can be configured via Ignition/Combustion or will default to the jeos-firsboot wizard.

We have a Real-time image with kernel-rt, qcow image for KVM, VMWare image, and a brand new raw image with Full Disk Encryption.

Users who want to try our FDE image within a VM will need to make sure that they're using emulated tpm-2 chip and UEFI. This can be achieved easily with virt-manager.

SLE Micro 6.0 dropped the traditional installer in favor of self-install media, therefore Leap Micro 6.0 doesn't have it either.

The new Packages image is not a bootable media. This is just an image with an offline repository in case you need it.

Leap Micro 6.0 comes for the first time also with Public Cloud Images.

Images will soon be available with all major public cloud providers. 

Upgrading from 5.X

A recommendation is to make a clean install since this is a brand-new major version.

For those who'd like to try migration, please follow the upgrade guide.

Release Notes

Users can refer to SLE Micro 6.0 Release notes.

Leap Micro 6.0 uses openSUSE-repos for repository management. It is highly recommended to pay attention to this detail, especially for those who migrate. Here is an article explaining how openSUSE repos work.

Leap Micro 6.0 has no longer a dedicated SLE update repo. This has been merged into the main repository.

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Leap 15.6 install media were refreshed to address an issue with old secure boot signing key for ppc64le and s390x.

Refreshed images from Leap 15.6 Build 710.3 are already available for download at get.opensuse.org. So now you can enjoy installation with secure boot on more exotic architectures.

Happy Hacking!

 

openSUSE Leap Micro 6.0 Beta is now available! We expect that it will very quickly transition to RC and GA as the infra readiness advances. Leap Micro 6.0 Beta images can be found at get.opensuse.org or directly at download.opensuse.org.

About Leap Micro

Leap Micro 6.0 is a rebranded SUSE Linux Enterprise Micro 6.0 which is an ultrareliable container and VM host by SUSE. This is the first publicly released product based on the fresh code base "SUSE Linux Framework One" (previously known as ALP).

Leap Micro 6.X is available for x86_64 and aarch64, released every 6 months, and supported until the next-next release is out. That means that Leap Micro 6.0 will become EOL once Leap Micro 6.2 gets released.

All pieces related to Rancher and Elemental are purposely excluded from Leap Micro 6.X as SLE Micro for Rancher is free for use without any subscription within Rancher deployments.

No more traditional installer

Leap Micro 6.X is deployed via self-install image which writes a preconfigured image to the disk and enlarges root partition. Users can use combustion, ignition or default to the jeos-firstboot wizard to do the initial setup of the system.

Do not get mistaken by the availability of openSUSE-Leap-Micro-6.0-*.iso is not installable. We refer to the image as a Packages image, which is basically an offline repository on a DVD.

New FDE, VMWare, and Cloud images

Aside from the self-install image Micro 6.0 comes with qcow, Full Disk Encryption, and RealTime images. All images can be found at download.opensuse.org

For the first time Leap Micro 6.X has also cloud-init therefore shortly after the release we will also have cloud images available on GCP, Azure, and AWS.

Changes to the product building

Leap Micro 6.X is using the new product composer instead of the old product builder. This allowed us to consume update-info from the newly designed maintenance workflow of SLE Micro 6.0 and was preferred by the openSUSE maintenance team.

Changes to the repositories and maintenance workflow

Leap Micro 5.X users receive all updates released for relevant SLE Micro version via a repository named repo-sle-update. This particular repository no longer exists in Leap Micro 6.X.

Instead, the repo-main repository will contain all released updates for the relevant version of SUSE Linux Micro to date.

Please note that the repository path slightly changed too, we'll ensure that migration via transactional-update shell followed by zypper dup --releaser 6.0 works via compatibility symlinks on download server.

New way of managing repository definitions

openSUSE-repos is not new to our users, however, for the first time, openSUSE Leap Micro 6.0 deployments come with openSUSE-repos preinstalled. openSUSE repos uses a local RIS service that easily lets us maintain repository definitions with a package update.

Users migrating from 5.5/5.4 releases are advised to install zypper in openSUSE-repos to ensure they have up-to-date repository paths.

Documentation

Please refer to SLE Micro 6.0 documentation including Release notes.

Reporting Issues

Please refer to the Leap Micro section in our Submitting bug reports page.

Next steps

Missing maintenance setup was a long-term blocker for the transition out from Alpha, otherwise, the distribution itself is stable and feature-full. Now that we have it, we need to polish some remaining infrastructure issues and users can expect a release within the next few days. Ideally before oSC2024 next week.

[–] Archaeopteryx@kbin.run 5 points 5 months ago

I am using Lutris for Windows games (sometimes Windows applications, too) almost exclusively on my rig. It works perfectly fine.

 

NUREMBERG, Germany – The release of Leap 15.6 is official and paves the way for professionals and organizations to transition to SUSE's enterprise distribution with extended support or prepare for the next major release, which will be Leap 16.

Demands for robust, secure and stable operating systems in the digital infrastructure sector are more critical than ever. The combination of the community-driven Leap 15.6 and SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 Service Pack 6, which integrates new features and enhancements, offers an optimal solution for managing critical infrastructure. Notably, SUSE's general support and [extended support]](https://www.suse.com/products/long-term-service-pack-support/) versions; these Product Support Lifecycles last well beyond Leap 15's lifespan, ensuring longer and reliable service for users.

SLE 15 SP 6 is a feature release, so users can expect several more features in the Leap 15.6 release.

This alignment ensures businesses and professionals using Leap for operational needs can enjoy a clear, supported transition to an enterprise environment, which is crucial in a move for systems that require long-term stability and enhanced security. As organizations strategize their upgrade paths, adopting an enterprise-grade solution like SUSE becomes a strategic decision, especially for those managing extensive networks and critical data across various sectors.

Since being released on May 25, 2018, Leap has added several additions like container technologies, immutable systems, virtualization, embedded development, along with other high-tech advances. A rise in usage from each minor release shows that entrepreneurs, hobbyists, professionals and developers are consistently choosing Leap as a preferred Linux distribution.

Leap 15.6 is projected to receive maintenance and security updates until the end of 2025 to ensure sufficient overlap with the next release. This will provide users with plenty of time to upgrade to the release's successor, which is Leap 16, or switch to SUSE's extended service support version. Users interested in commercial support can use a migration tool to move to SUSE's commercial support version.

The inclusion of the Cockpit[1] package in openSUSE Leap 15.6 represents a significant enhancement in system and container management capabilities for users. This integration into Leap 15.6 improves usability and access as well as providing a link between advanced system administration and user-friendly operations from the web browser. The addition underscores openSUSE's commitment to providing powerful tools that cater to both professionals and hobbyists. Leap does not come with a SELinux policy, so SELinux capablities for Cockpit are not functioning.

Container technologies receive a boost with Podman 4.8, which includes tailored support for Nextcloud through quadlets, alongside the latest releases of Distrobox, Docker, python-podman, Skopeo, containerd, libcontainers-common, ensuring a robust container management system. Virtualization technologies are also enhanced, featuring updates to Xen 4.18, KVM 8.2.2, libvirt 10.0, and virt-manager 4.1.

The Leap 15.6 release incorporates several key software upgrades enhancing performance and security. It integrates Linux Kernel 6.4, which provides backports for some of latest hardware drivers, which offer performance enhancements. OpenSSL 3.1 becomes the new default and provides robust security features and updated cryptographic algorithms. Database management systems receive significant updates with MariaDB 10.11.6 and PostgreSQL 16. Redis 7.2 offers advanced data handling capabilities and the software stack is rounded out with PHP 8.2 and Node.js 20; both received updates for better performance and security in web development. Leap will also have OpenJDK 21 providing improvements for enhanced performance and security in Java-based applications.

Updates in telecommunications software are seen with DPDK 22.11 and Open vSwitch versions 3.1 and OVN 23.03.

The KDE environment advances with the introduction of KDE Plasma 5.27.11, which is the latest Long Term Support version, Qt 5.15.12+kde151, and KDE Frameworks 5.115.0, as well as Qt6 version 6.6.3, facilitating smooth application operations with updated Python bindings for PyQt5 and PyQt6 aligning with Python 3.11.

Many unmaintatined Python packages were removed as part of a transition to Python 3.11; more details can be found in the release notes.

GNOME 45 brings enhancements to the desktop environment, adding features that elevate the user experience. Audio technologies see major upgrades with the release of PulseAudio 17.0 and PipeWire 1.0.4, which improve hardware compatibility and Bluetooth functionality, including device battery level indicators.

These updates collectively enhance the system’s stability and user experience and make Leap 15.6 a compelling choice for professionals, companies and organizations.

Leap can be downloaded at get.opensuse.org.

End of Life

Leap 15.5 will have its End of Life (EOL) six months from today’s release. Users should update to Leap 15.6 within six months of today to continue to receive security and maintenance updates.

Download Leap 15.6

To download the ISO image, visit https://get.opensuse.org/leap/

If you have a question about the release or found a bug, we would love to hear from you at:

https://t.me/openSUSE

https://chat.opensuse.org

https://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-support/

https://discordapp.com/invite/openSUSE

https://www.facebook.com/groups/opensuseproject

Get involved

The openSUSE Project is a worldwide community that promotes the use of Linux everywhere. It creates two of the world’s best Linux distributions, the Tumbleweed rolling-release, and Leap, the hybrid enterprise-community distribution. openSUSE is continuously working together in an open, transparent and friendly manner as part of the worldwide Free and Open Source Software community. The project is controlled by its community and relies on the contributions of individuals, working as testers, writers, translators, usability experts, artists and ambassadors or developers. The project embraces a wide variety of technology, people with different levels of expertise, speaking different languages and having different cultural backgrounds. Learn more about it on opensuse.org

1 [Root login is disabled by default. Please read details in the Try Cockpit in Leap Release Candidate article.

***** Two bugs related to Chrome with Wayland on GNOME 45 may see a fix coming in an update. *****

Retrospective

Provide your feedback to our release team by visiting survey.opensuse.org/ and taking our retrospective survey.

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33
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by Archaeopteryx@kbin.run to c/linux@lemmy.ml
 

Members of openSUSE Project are excited about the launch of Leap 15.6 on June 12 and encourages people to host a Release Party.

If you don’t know how to do this, there is a list of steps below on how to have a successful release party.

If you’re interested in hosting your own Release Party, there’s a handy checklist to help you plan a successful event:

  • Find a Date: A weekend date is usually best, but flexibility is key. Find a common date that works for most people.
  • Find a Place: A café, bar, or Linux group meetup location works great. Whether you opt for a coffee and cake party or a beer and pizza gathering, the key is to have fun.
  • Cake: While not essential, a cake adds to the celebration. You can also bake openSUSE cookies.
  • Pictures: Capture the moment with photos or videos and share them on social media. Tag openSUSE on X, Facebook, Mastodon, BlueSky or more.

There is already a plan to have people to meet virtually in the openSUSE Bar for the launch June 12. The virtual release party will feature members of the release team and community members. Join sometime on June 12 as participants from various countries are encouraged to join and interact with the openSUSE community.

Some will celebration the event in Nuremberg. Certainly people at the openSUSE Conference will highlight the release during the BBQ/Release Party.

These launch parties provide a chance for the community to connect with the people behind the project and to show an appreciation for contributors who make the release of Leap 15.6 possible. It's an excellent opportunity for the community to gather, celebrate and discuss the new release after months of development.

Schedule your release party today on the wiki and have a lot of fun!

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[–] Archaeopteryx@kbin.run 0 points 5 months ago

SUSE & openSUSE also have a great documentation about the snapper snapshot tool which is also available in many distributions:

Snapper Documentation

[–] Archaeopteryx@kbin.run 0 points 5 months ago

I also would vote for uBlock Origins. This is by far the best solution on the market. It blocks more than just ads and trackers. uBlock blocks also malware sites, popups, miners and other annoyances. Or you can also use it as an URL shortener tool to get rid of the tracking parameters in the URLs.

Something I've also been looking at more closely for a few days now is Arkenfox to hardening my Firefox more effective. Does anyone here has some experiences with Arkenfox?

 

What is openSUSE.Asia Summit?

The openSUSE Project is excited to announce that openSUSE.Asia Summit 2024 will be held in Tokyo, Japan. The openSUSE.Asia Summit is an annual conference for users and contributors of openSUSE and FLOSS enthusiasts. The former summits received major participation from Indonesia, China, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, and India.

Since the first openSUSE.Asia Summit was held in Beijing in 2014, the summits have been great opportunities for the online community to gather in person, know each other, and share knowledge and experiences about openSUSE including applications running on it. However, COVID-19 made it difficult for 3 years. One of our goals of this year’s summit is to provide a place for communication. Please note that we will not accept talks by video call this year.

The summit dates

The summit will be held on Nov. 2 and 3. An excursion for speakers is expected on Nov. 4, which will be announced later.

You might be interested in Open Source Summit Japan and Open Compliance Summit, held by the Linux Foundation near the venue just before our summit.

Cross-Distro Track

We are going to co-host the Cross-Distro Track by the collaboration with Cross Distro Developers Camp (XDDC). XDDC is a wider developer community of FLOSS OS distribution including openSUSE, Debian and Ubuntu and works together to resolve common issues especially related to Japanese. This year, we are considering inviting speakers and participants from other distribution communities, which will undoubtedly contribute to making the event even more exciting. Furthermore, it will be a great chance to let them know how openSUSE and its community are.

Venue

Azabudai Hills

The openSUSE.Asia Summit 2024 is going to be held in SHIFT Inc., located in Azabudai Hills, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan. SHIFT Inc. is a company that supports to create sellable products and services and to grow the business of its customers. It offers integrated IT solutions and consulting services, including development, testing, UI/UX, and security, with its outstanding knowledge in software quality assurance.

Azabudai Hills is a large-scale urban redevelopment project completed in November 2023. This area, which combines offices, residential units, retail outlets, and cultural facilities, is also a newly prominent tourist attraction. It is, of course, easy to access from Tokyo/Haneda airport and anywhere in the capital area by public transportation.

Tokyo and Japan

Tokyo food & scenery

Tokyo is the capital of Japan. Its infrastructure and global connectivity will help attendees travel to the summit. There are direct flights from major cities in Asia Pacific as well as Europe and North America to either Tokyo/Haneda or Tokyo/Narita.

Tokyo is also a popular place for sightseeing with its unique culture, food, etc. Especially, characters from video games, anime, and comics, which are now common globally, attract tourists to Japan. In Tokyo, you can easily find character shops and get items related to works you love.

The number of tourists from abroad has recovered last year to the same level as before COVID-19. Due to the currency exchange rate, it will be a great chance to enjoy your trip to Japan while saving your money.

However, if there is any possibility of attending the summit, you should book your hotel right away with a cancelable plan. Some of our recommended hotels start accepting reservations from 5 months ago, which is June 1. Because Nov. 4 is a public holiday in Japan, rooms in budget hotels become sold out soon, or you will need to pay for your hotel at an inappropriately expensive rate, which might not be covered by the Travel Support Program.

Please also check the following web sites for tourism information in Tokyo and Japan:

Call for speakers

We will start to call for speakers in June. Please read another post for the call for speakers on news.opensuse.org, published in a couple of days.

Wrapping Up

The openSUSE.Asia Summit is a great opportunity for the openSUSE community to meet together. The attendees will be able to enjoy their stay in Tokyo during the summit.

We are looking forward to seeing you this November in Tokyo.

Have a lot of fun!

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Welcome to the monthly update for openSUSE Tumbleweed for May 2024. This month has seen a significant number of updates, enhancements, and crucial security fixes. Whether you are a developer, a system administrator, or a casual user, these updates are designed to enhance your experience and ensure the highest level of security and performance.

Should readers desire a more frequent amount of information about snapshot updates, readers are encouraged to subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list.

Let’s go!

New Features and Enhancements

  • Linux Kernel 6.9.1: The month of May had a couple updates for the Kernel, but so far remains at version 6.9.1, which addresses various issues and enhancing overall stability. The mt76 driver for wifi saw improvements with the addition of missing chanctx operations for the mt7915 wifi card, enhancing functionality. A critical fix was made to the keys subsystem to prevent overwriting key expiration during instantiation, improving security. Support for system suspend/hibernation was enhanced for the Modem Host Interface subsystem with the addition of the mhi_power_down_keep_dev() Application Programming Interfaces, which is beneficial for maintaining device states during power management operations.
  • LLVM 18.1.6: Subpackages that were updated were clang-tools, clang18, libLLVM18, libclang-cpp18, libclang13, llvm18-gold. Fixed issues with generating incorrect thunks for functions with aligned parameters or incorrect return value passing when StructRet was used. -Xclang -target-feature -Xclang +unaligned-scalar-mem for enabling unaligned scalar memory accesses on CPUs without unaligned vector access support were introduced. Build failures when compiling AVX512 code with -march=native on machines without AVX512 were addressed. Crashes in the AArch64 backend related to fcmp instruction operands being true or false at the IR level were fixed and there was a fix to compiler crashes.
  • KDE Frameworks 5.116.0: Breeze Icons received new icons for audio/ogg and audio/x-vorbis+ogg file types, as well as the audio/vnd.wave MIME type, enhancing support for audio file formats. Extra CMake Modules had notable updates including the dropping of attempts to set IMPORTED on targets with installed configurations in ecm_add_qch. KFileMetaData saw a fix with the handling of attribute namespacing and improved metadata accuracy and processing. KService addressed a warning related to the "mimeType x-scheme-handler/file not found" issue.
  • udisks2 2.10.1: This update features updated Ukrainian and German translations, improvements to testing for LVM2 RAID by wiping used devices, settling down before checking properties and rescanning vdevs after tests. Offline and online filesystem grow tests were added, and documentation for the Filesystem.Size property was clarified. A fix was implemented for Python class invocation in nvme tests, and a --no-partition-scan option was added for the loop-setup command in udisksctl. A --no-partition-scan option for the loop-setup command in udisksctl was added.
  • firewalld 2.1.2: The update to 2.1.2 includes several fixes: the policy now allows forwarding ports with the to-addr for egress-zone=HOST, the range check for large rule limits in rich rules has been corrected, and skip detection in the fw-in-container environment has been fixed during testing.
  • snapper 0.11.0: The update introduces asynchronous cleanup of stale btrfs qgroups and reverts some parts to fix the build in the Open Build Service. The cleanup service is now set to run every hour and qgroups are disabled if they do not exist to avoid failure when creating snapshots. Support for quarterly snapshots has been added, and a table-style selection is now based on codeset.
  • GTK3 3.24.42: Printing is improved by avoiding access to freed printers. Wayland fixes include correct monitor sizes, a crash related to tablet removal, inferred resizable edges for tiled windows, and ensuring commits occur soon after acknowledging a configure.
    GTK4 4.14.4: A crash issue when there is no child was resolved and efficiency improvements were made in loading symbolic SVGs and handling color-free symbolics. Accessibility updates include making the gtk-demo sidebar search more accessible and stopping the emission of focus events. GDK introduced support for XDG_ACTIVATION_TOKEN and made defensive improvements for dmabuf. These improvements include handling unknown formats more carefully and using a narrower range for YUV formats.
  • Mozilla Firefox 126.0. The browser brought had a major update and fixed 16 Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures. There was arbitrary JavaScript execution in PDF.js fixed with CVE-2024-4367. A potential permissions request bypass via clickjacking was fixed for CVE-2024-4764. There were memory safety bug fixes addressing CVE-2024-4778 and CVE-2024-4777; the latter helps with those for Firefox ESR 115.11 and Thunderbird 115.11.
    sssd 2.9.5: The update introduces a new configuration option called failover_primary_timeout. This option allows users to configure how often SSSD tries to reconnect to a primary server after successfully connecting to a backup server. Previously, this interval was hardcoded to 31 seconds, which remains the default value.
  • openldap2 2.6.7: The liblber library fixes a missing newline on long messages and libldap addresses exit handling issues with OpenSSL3, TLS usage with multiple LDAP URIs OpenSSL cipher suite handling and handling of Diffie-Hellman parameter files with OpenSSL 3.0. The slapd service now honors the disclose option in matchedDN handling, improves regex testing in ACLs, and fixes sync replication with glued databases.
  • iproute2 6.9: The update introduces several new features and improvements: The m_mirred module now allows mirroring to block and the tc command adds NLM_F_ECHO support for actions and filters. The ip command has been enhanced with coupled_control support for bonding and a new monitor command for IOAM6.
  • xwayland 24.1.0: The feature release addresses several regressions introduced in previous release candidate versions. The eglstreams support has been dropped.
  • AppStream 1.0.3: Key features include enhanced validator checks to ensure description lists aren't translated, improved translation checks for descriptions and the ability to propagate selected custom entries to catalog output via the CLI compose command. Many other features were added.

Key Package Updates

  • tpm2-0-tss 4.1.0: This updated provided a major security fix for CVE-2024-29040. Various bug fixes were implemented, including correcting the length check on FAPI auth callbacks, fixing the deviation from the CEL specification and resolving json syntax errors in FAPI profiles that were previously ignored by json-c. The update also adds support for new features and enables the usage of external keys for Fapi_Encrypt.
  • postgresql16 16.3: A fix was made for CVE-2024-4317, which could allow for an unprivileged database user to read most common values and other statistics from CREATE STATISTICS commands of other users.
  • Python 3.x versions had a fix for CVE-2023-6597 A vulnerability was discovered in the CPython. It affected versions 3.12.1, 3.11.7, 3.10.13, 3.9.18, 3.8.18, and earlier. This class would incorrectly follow symlinks during cleanup when there were permission errors. As a result, users with the ability to run privileged programs could potentially change the permissions of files pointed to by symlinks under certain conditions.

Bug Fixes

  • glib2 2.80.2:

    • CVE-2024-34397 - An issue in GNOME GLib allows spoofed D-Bus signals, affecting client behavior
  • qt6-base:

    • CVE-2024-33861 - QStringConverter's invalid pointer callback can modify the stack, risking vulnerabilities in applications using QStringDecoder.
  • libxml2 2.12.7

    • CVE-2024-34459 - Buffer over-read in xmllint --htmlout can cause vulnerabilities in libxml2 before 2.12.7.
  • libarchive 3.7.4:

  • krb5 added some patches to fix memory leaks related to:

  • ovmf

    • CVE-2022-36763 - EDK2 vulnerability in Tcg2MeasureGptTable() allows heap buffer overflow via local network
  • python-Jinja2 3.1.4:

    • CVE-2024-34064 - Jinja's xmlattr filter vulnerability allows non-attribute characters in keys, risking XSS attacks.
  • tpm2-0-tss 4.1.0:

Conclusion

The month of May 2024 had a steady flow of crucial security fixes, important updates, and notable enhancements across various packages for openSUSE Tumbleweed. The updates to the Linux Kernel, LLVM, KDE Frameworks and numerous other components ensure that Tumbleweed systems remain feature-rich and keep rolling. Developers and users alike benefit from the improvements, enhancements and new features.

For those Tumbleweed users who want to contribute or want to engage with detailed technological discussions, subscribe to the openSUSE Factory mailing list . The openSUSE team encourages users to continue participating through bug reports, feature suggestions and discussions.

Contributing to openSUSE Tumbleweed

Your contributions and feedback make openSUSE Tumbleweed better with every update. Whether reporting bugs, suggesting features, or participating in community discussions, your involvement is highly valued.

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