Linux 6.18 Kbuild Brings An Optimization For gen_init_cpio On Btrfs Or XFS
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.18-Kbuild
https://redd.it/1nwdtxi
@r_linux
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.18-Kbuild
https://redd.it/1nwdtxi
@r_linux
Phoronix
Linux 6.18 Kbuild Brings An Optimization For gen_init_cpio On Btrfs Or XFS
The Kbuild changes have been merged for the in-development Linux 6.18 kernel.
Security update (4 hours ago): Incident related to Red Hat Consulting GitLab instance
Source: https://access.redhat.com/articles/7132207
Intro: "We are writing to provide an update regarding a security incident related to a specific GitLab environment used by our Red Hat Consulting team. Red Hat takes the security and integrity of our systems and the data entrusted to us extremely seriously, and we are addressing this issue with the highest priority".
News found by: u/anvil30november on r/Fedora
https://redd.it/1nwk3uy
@r_linux
Source: https://access.redhat.com/articles/7132207
Intro: "We are writing to provide an update regarding a security incident related to a specific GitLab environment used by our Red Hat Consulting team. Red Hat takes the security and integrity of our systems and the data entrusted to us extremely seriously, and we are addressing this issue with the highest priority".
News found by: u/anvil30november on r/Fedora
https://redd.it/1nwk3uy
@r_linux
Red Hat Customer Portal
Security update: Incident related to Red Hat Consulting GitLab
We are writing to provide an update regarding a security incident related to a specific GitLab environment used by our Red Hat Consulting team. Red Hat takes the security and integrity of our systems
Linus Torvalds Vents Over "Completely Crazy Rust Format Checking"
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linus-Torvalds-Rust-Formatting
https://redd.it/1nworgq
@r_linux
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linus-Torvalds-Rust-Formatting
https://redd.it/1nworgq
@r_linux
Phoronix
Linus Torvalds Vents Over "Completely Crazy Rust Format Checking"
After Linus Torvalds yesterday shot down RISC-V big endian prospects for the Linux kernel, today he has used his authority to wage a war on 'crazy' Rust code formatting as well as to critique poor text formatting.
v2.0.0 - Stable Release of Immich
https://github.com/immich-app/immich/discussions/22546
https://redd.it/1nwzacy
@r_linux
https://github.com/immich-app/immich/discussions/22546
https://redd.it/1nwzacy
@r_linux
GitHub
v2.0.0 - Stable Release of Immich · immich-app immich · Discussion #22546
v2.0.0 - Stable Release of Immich Watch the video Welcome Hello everyone, After: ~1,337 days, 271 releases, 78,000 stars on GitHub, 1,558 contributors, 31,500 members on Discord, 36,000 members on ...
Why are the economical benefits of Linux not talked about more?
Simply put, free.
It is astonishing to a lad like myself that one can have incredibly old "outdated" hardware, that refuses to run newer operating systems (e.g. Windows 10, 11, etc.) but works like a charm on a Linux distro.
Furthermore, Linux provides LTS that lasts for many years, which means you can continue to use your hardware for many more years to come.
I am stating this as a lad whom was contemplating throwing out my 10 year old laptop, because it doesn't support Windows 11 but find it magical that I do not need to purchase new hardware for $1K but rather can continue to use my existing hardware for many more years, thanks to Linux.
No one talks about the peace of mind you get on Linux with essentially no viruses existing so no need for anti-virus software, security concerns, etc. which could cost you lots of money in the long-run.
LibreOffice sure beats that crummy Microsoft Office recurring subnoscription too.
I feel like many huge financial burdens have been lifted off my shoulders after switching to Linux. Thank you for freeing up lots of money for me, so that I can continue to put food on the table and not on software and subnoscriptions that were created with an artificial expiration date that large corporations have set, when they need to pad up their P&L statements for shareholders.
https://redd.it/1nx19b5
@r_linux
Simply put, free.
It is astonishing to a lad like myself that one can have incredibly old "outdated" hardware, that refuses to run newer operating systems (e.g. Windows 10, 11, etc.) but works like a charm on a Linux distro.
Furthermore, Linux provides LTS that lasts for many years, which means you can continue to use your hardware for many more years to come.
I am stating this as a lad whom was contemplating throwing out my 10 year old laptop, because it doesn't support Windows 11 but find it magical that I do not need to purchase new hardware for $1K but rather can continue to use my existing hardware for many more years, thanks to Linux.
No one talks about the peace of mind you get on Linux with essentially no viruses existing so no need for anti-virus software, security concerns, etc. which could cost you lots of money in the long-run.
LibreOffice sure beats that crummy Microsoft Office recurring subnoscription too.
I feel like many huge financial burdens have been lifted off my shoulders after switching to Linux. Thank you for freeing up lots of money for me, so that I can continue to put food on the table and not on software and subnoscriptions that were created with an artificial expiration date that large corporations have set, when they need to pad up their P&L statements for shareholders.
https://redd.it/1nx19b5
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
Linux 6.18 will be a Big Improvement for Servers Encountering DDoS Attacks
Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.18-DDoS-Improvement
Intro: "A set of patches merged via the networking pull request for the Linux 6.18 will help servers better cope with distributed denial of service "DDoS" attacks. Thanks to a Google engineer there are some significant optimizations found in the Linux 6.18 kernel code for more efficiently handling of UDP receive performance under stress, such as in DDoS scenarios".
https://redd.it/1nx7zw6
@r_linux
Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.18-DDoS-Improvement
Intro: "A set of patches merged via the networking pull request for the Linux 6.18 will help servers better cope with distributed denial of service "DDoS" attacks. Thanks to a Google engineer there are some significant optimizations found in the Linux 6.18 kernel code for more efficiently handling of UDP receive performance under stress, such as in DDoS scenarios".
https://redd.it/1nx7zw6
@r_linux
Phoronix
Linux 6.18 Will Be A Big Improvement For Servers Encountering DDoS Attacks
A set of patches merged via the networking pull request for the Linux 6.18 will help servers better cope with distributed denial of service 'DDoS' attacks
Why is it not standard for desktop files to have uninstall entry?
It would have been easier for DEs like gnome to implement a way to uninstall their applications within the shell. Even better if a separate
https://redd.it/1nxlbw0
@r_linux
It would have been easier for DEs like gnome to implement a way to uninstall their applications within the shell. Even better if a separate
remove and purge entries. Any form of packaging, deb, rpm, flatpak, snap etc could benefit to this as they can just put their uninstall commands on those entries.https://redd.it/1nxlbw0
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
How We're Redesigning Audacity For The Future
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYM3TWf_G38
https://redd.it/1nxp9t2
@r_linux
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYM3TWf_G38
https://redd.it/1nxp9t2
@r_linux
YouTube
How We're Redesigning Audacity For The Future
This video digs into the research and design that went into gradually transforming Audacity 3 - a free and open source audio editor and production app - and how we've built on that work to develop Audacity 4.
SUPPORT
Help me become a full-time creator so…
SUPPORT
Help me become a full-time creator so…
This Week in Plasma: 6.5 beta 2
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/04/this-week-in-plasma-6.5-beta-2/
https://redd.it/1nxt18o
@r_linux
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/04/this-week-in-plasma-6.5-beta-2/
https://redd.it/1nxt18o
@r_linux
KDE Blogs
This Week in Plasma: 6.5 beta 2
Welcome to a new issue of This Week in Plasma!
This week we released the second beta of Plasma 6.5, and there are a lot of fixes in it! This week also sees some great bug fixes, as well as a number of UI improvements related to language and time.
This week we released the second beta of Plasma 6.5, and there are a lot of fixes in it! This week also sees some great bug fixes, as well as a number of UI improvements related to language and time.
Enhancing your internal notebook speakers without using an Equalizer (Easy Effects)
https://wwmm.github.io/easyeffects/guide_1.html
https://redd.it/1nxv8uz
@r_linux
https://wwmm.github.io/easyeffects/guide_1.html
https://redd.it/1nxv8uz
@r_linux
How can someone have Git commits from 1998 if Git was created in 2005?
https://preview.redd.it/ut70xp3jj4tf1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=bdd7d0938b0a0fd7cb2186e90557ffb139b35d2b
I noticed that some GitHub repositories show a commit history starting from the late 1990s — even though Git was released in 2005 and GitHub launched in 2007.
How is that possible? Were those projects using a different version control system before Git and then imported the history, or can commit dates be manually faked somehow?
Curious to know how this works under the hood.
https://redd.it/1nxz0lr
@r_linux
https://preview.redd.it/ut70xp3jj4tf1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=bdd7d0938b0a0fd7cb2186e90557ffb139b35d2b
I noticed that some GitHub repositories show a commit history starting from the late 1990s — even though Git was released in 2005 and GitHub launched in 2007.
How is that possible? Were those projects using a different version control system before Git and then imported the history, or can commit dates be manually faked somehow?
Curious to know how this works under the hood.
https://redd.it/1nxz0lr
@r_linux
What proprietary software do you use, and what open source alternatives have you tried using?
I recently watched this video: https://youtu.be/kiQif7dYBxY regarding some good quality closed source apps.
Do you have any that you can't live without? If you've used any open source alternatives to that software, what make you stick with the original?
https://redd.it/1nxyk5q
@r_linux
I recently watched this video: https://youtu.be/kiQif7dYBxY regarding some good quality closed source apps.
Do you have any that you can't live without? If you've used any open source alternatives to that software, what make you stick with the original?
https://redd.it/1nxyk5q
@r_linux
YouTube
My favorite proprietary, closed source, and paid software.
If you're reading a YouTube video denoscription in your free time, you missed a funny easter egg in the history of the channel.
0:00 The actual video (watch it)
9:04 Sponsorship
Channel Forum: https://github.com/SylvanFranklin/.config/issues
https://sy…
0:00 The actual video (watch it)
9:04 Sponsorship
Channel Forum: https://github.com/SylvanFranklin/.config/issues
https://sy…
Many Debian/Ubuntu Packages for Intel Accelerators & Other Intel Software Have Been Orphaned
Source: Many Debian/Ubuntu Packages For Intel Accelerators & Other Intel Software Have Been Orphaned - Phoronix
Intro: "In addition to some Intel Linux kernel drivers being "orphaned" following the corporate restructuring at Intel between developers being laid off and others deciding to pursue opportunities elsewhere, these changes have also led to a number of Intel-related software packages within Debian being orphaned. In turn these Intel packages are also relied on by Ubuntu and other downstream Debian Linux distributions.
Around one dozen Intel packages within the Debian archive were recently orphaned, a.k.a. now being unmaintained following developer departures from Intel with no one currently taking up the new responsibility, with also needing to be a Debian Developer or Debian Maintainer to contribute".
https://redd.it/1nxyxab
@r_linux
Source: Many Debian/Ubuntu Packages For Intel Accelerators & Other Intel Software Have Been Orphaned - Phoronix
Intro: "In addition to some Intel Linux kernel drivers being "orphaned" following the corporate restructuring at Intel between developers being laid off and others deciding to pursue opportunities elsewhere, these changes have also led to a number of Intel-related software packages within Debian being orphaned. In turn these Intel packages are also relied on by Ubuntu and other downstream Debian Linux distributions.
Around one dozen Intel packages within the Debian archive were recently orphaned, a.k.a. now being unmaintained following developer departures from Intel with no one currently taking up the new responsibility, with also needing to be a Debian Developer or Debian Maintainer to contribute".
https://redd.it/1nxyxab
@r_linux
Phoronix
Many Debian/Ubuntu Packages For Intel Accelerators & Other Intel Software Have Been Orphaned
In addition to some Intel Linux kernel drivers being 'orphaned' following the corporate restructuring at Intel between developers being laid off and others deciding to pursue opportunities elsewhere, these changes have also led to a number of Intel-related…
NFS at 40: Remembering the Sun Microsystems Network File System
https://nfs40.online/
https://redd.it/1nybe89
@r_linux
https://nfs40.online/
https://redd.it/1nybe89
@r_linux