Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 8 August 2017

Ubuntu Foundations Development Summary: August 8, 2017


This newsletter is to provide a status update from the Ubuntu Foundations Team.  There will also be highlights provided for any interesting subjects the team may be working on.

If you would like to reach the Foundations team, you can find us at the #ubuntu-devel channel on freenode.

Highlights

The State of the Archive

  • The ongoing libevent transition is at 88% of completion
  • The GCC 7 transition has begun in artful-proposed; GCC 7 will be the default in 17.10, please help ensure your packages in the archive are up to date and ready to build with this new toolchain.
  • The transition to Perl 5.26 is in progress in artful-proposed, with some delays due to issues with the autopkgtest infrastructure and a sync of a reupload from Debian.  This is expected to reach artful early next week.
  • The python3 transition continues, with python3.5 being dropped from the list of supported versions in artful-proposed.  Packages uploaded today will build without python3.5 support, and python3.5 will be dropped from artful before release.

Upcoming Ubuntu Dates

Weekly Meeting

IRC Log: http://ubottu.com/

Related posts


Canonical
16 March 2026

Canonical announces it will distribute NVIDIA DOCA-OFED in Ubuntu

AI Article

Today Canonical, the publishers of Ubuntu, announced that it will integrate and distribute the NVIDIA DOCA-OFED networking driver with Ubuntu. ...


Canonical
16 March 2026

Meet Canonical at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA and NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS

Ubuntu Article

Previewing at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS, NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 architecture support in Ubuntu 26.04, Canonical’s official Ubuntu image for NVIDIA Jetson Thor, upcoming support for NVIDIA DGX Station and NVIDIA DOCA-OFED, and NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 support. NVIDIA GTC 2026 is here, bringing together the techno ...


Luci Stanescu
12 March 2026

AppArmor vulnerability fixes available

Ubuntu Article

Qualys discovered several vulnerabilities in the AppArmor code of the Linux kernel. These are being referred to as CrackArmor, while CVE IDs have not been assigned yet. All of the vulnerabilities require unprivileged local user access. The impact of these vulnerabilities ranges from denial of service to kernel memory information leak, rem ...