We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 8.10. The release is available for the x86_64 and aarch64 architectures.
Please review the release notes at https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-8-10-ga-release/ - These notes contain important information including known bugs and details about changes in this version.
Notable changes:
* Since Rocky Linux 8.9, Azure images are be published under the new publisher name: resf, moving away from the earlier, less intuitive name.
* In addition to the Azure Marketplace, Rocky Linux is available for free on the Azure Community Gallery, providing incredibly easy access to run Rocky on Microsoft Azure.
* Git rebased to 2.43.0
* Python 3.12 now available
* Postgresql 16 now available
* The podman build farm command for creating multi-architecture container images is available as a Technology Preview
* The container-tools:4.0 module is now deprecated - Please use the "rhel8" stream
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads: https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, and MATE flavors are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced, tested, and documented this release, as well as the sponsors and partners that contribute resources that enable us to do so. We would also like to change the following individuals in particular for this release.
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Alexia
* Brian Clemens
* Bryan (@codedude)
* Chris Stackpole
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Michael Kinder
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Trevor Cooper
* @grayeul
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance, and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its ecosystem. The best place to start for new users is at
https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org
Thank you, we hope to enjoy the release!
--
Louis Abel, RHCE RHCSIDM
Infrastructure, Release Engineering, IDM
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 9.4.
The release is currently available for the x86_64, aarch64, ppc64le, and
s390x architectures.
Please review the release notes at
https://docs.rockylinux.org/release_notes/9_4/ - These notes contain
important information including known bugs and details about changes in
this version.
Notable changes:
* Since Rocky Linux 9.3, Azure images are be published under the new
publisher name: resf, moving away from the earlier, less intuitive name.
* In addition to the Azure Marketplace, Rocky Linux is available for
free on the Azure Community Gallery, providing incredibly easy access to
run Rocky on Microsoft Azure.
Special Interest Group notes:
* AWS images should now be able to boot in IPv6-only subnets, closing a
longstanding bug that the Cloud SIG has worked with upstream to resolve
* Most images are now built with KIWI and our empanadas toolkit, with
the exception of a few variants that are still using the old
imagefactory method. If you have any trouble, please get in touch. More
information is available in the full release notes.
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads:
https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, and MATE flavors:
https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced,
tested, and documented this release, as well as the sponsors and
partners that contribute resources that enable us to do so. We would
also like to change the following individuals in particular for this
release.
* Adam Augustine
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Alexia Steinberg
* Anthony Navarro
* Bob Robison
* Boris Reisig
* Brian Clemens
* Bryan (@codedude)
* Chris Stackpole
* Frank Schwichtenberg
* Krista Burdine
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Maxine Hayes
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Pablo Greco
* Pratham Patel
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Trevor Cooper
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help,
guidance, and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its
ecosystem. The best place to start for new users is at
https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org
Thank you, we hope you enjoy the release!
--
Brian Clemens
Vice President
Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 8.9. This release is currently available for the x86-64 and aarch64 architectures.
Please review the release notes at https://docs.rockylinux.org/release_notes/8_9 - These notes contain important information including known bugs and more comprehensive details about changes in this version.
Notable / Breaking Changes:
* java-21-openjdk was introduced providing a new version of Java
* Node.js 20 is now available as a new module stream
* gcc-toolset-13 was introduced as a new compiler toolset
* Azure images for Rocky Linux 8.9 will be published under a new publisher name: "resf", instead of the previous long, unreadable name. These images are not published yet, but should be available by the end of the week and will be accompanied by another news post.
* The optional guest-agents group, previously available within both the Minimal Install and Custom Operating System base environments in anaconda, is no-longer available for selection as additional software for those environments. Consult release notes for more details.
* The KDE live image for Rocky Linux 8.9 had problems during the testing phase. For this, we will be providing the older 8.8 images until we can build and provide a working image.
* AWS AMI images now set the boot-mode parameter to "uefi-preferred” per https://bugs.rockylinux.org/view.php?id=4390
Testing:
Rocky Linux releases are put through thorough testing to ensure correctness and stability. Testing consists of hundreds of manual and automated checks covering all manner of environments and configurations. Rocky Linux 8.9 was subjected to a week of testing before receiving the team's approval. Testing logs, discussion, and the release checklist can be viewed at https://chat.rockylinux.org/rocky-linux/channels/rocky-release-v89. We encourage users interested in the process to join the team on Mattermost.
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads: https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, MATE, and Cinnamon flavors: https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Upgrades and Conversions:
Current users of Rocky Linux 8 can upgrade to 8.9 from the terminal via dnf update, or from the desktop with GNOME Software, KDE Discover, etc. Users of other Enterprise Linux 8 distributions can upgrade and convert to Rocky Linux 8.9 via the conversion script at https://rockylinux.org/migrate2rocky.sh.
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers and leaders for producing, testing, and documented this release. As well at the sponsors and partners who provide the resources to build, test, and produce Rocky.
We would like to thank the following individuals in particular for their contributions to this release:
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Adam Augustine
* Boris Reisig
* Brian Clemens
* Bryan (@codedude)
* Chris Stackpole
* Krista Burdine
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Omer Sen
* Pratham Patel
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Trevor Cooper
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance, and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its ecosystem. The best place to start for new users is at https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org <https://chat.rockylinux.org/>
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org <https://forums.rockylinux.org/>
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org <https://lists.resf.org/>
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org <https://bugs.rockylinux.org/>
Thank you, we hope to enjoy the release!
Sincerely,
Release Engineering @ The Rocky Linux Project
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 9.3 which is available for the x86_64, aarch64,
ppc64le, and s390x architectures.
Please review the release announcement at https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-9-3-ga-release/ - These notes contain
important information including known bugs and details about changes in this version.
Notable/Breaking changes:
* The 9.3 release brings back cloud and container images for ppc64le that were not released with 9.2 due to issues with
QEMU. These images may be divergent from the other architecture's images in some small ways, but we will work to
reduce this delta in future releases of the images.
* Azure images for Rocky Linux 9.3 will be published under a new publisher name: `resf`, instead of the previous long,
unreadable name. These images are not published yet, but should be available by the end of the week.
* The optional guest-agents group, previously available within both the Minimal Install and Custom Operating System base
environments in anaconda, is no-longer available for selection as additional software for those environments. Consult
release notes for more details.
* The KDE live image for Rocky Linux 9.3 had problems during the testing phase. For this, we will be providing the older
9.2 images until we can build and provide a working image.
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads: https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, MATE, and Cinnamon flavors for x86_64 and aarch64 are listed here:
https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced, tested, and documented this release, as well as
the sponsors and partners that contribute resources that enable us to do so. We would also like to change the following
individuals in particular for this release.
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Adam Augustine
* Boris Reisig
* Brian Clemens
* Bryan (@codedude)
* Chris Stackpole
* Krista Burdine
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Omer Sen
* Pratham Patel
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Trevor Cooper
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance, and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise
Linux and its ecosystem. The best place to start for new users is at https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org
Thank you, we hope to enjoy the release!
Sincerely,
Release Engineering @ The Rocky Linux Project
Hi all,
After additional testing and thorough investigation into the architecture-specific bug we discovered, the Rocky Linux
team is pleased to announce the availability of Rocky 9.2 for the PowerPC (LE) or ppc64le architecture. Before upgrading
your ppc64le machine to Rocky 9.2, review the section below on upgrading.
Our investigation has revealed that the environments under which our tests were performed were running a
“pre-production” revision to the Power 9 CPU architecture, leading to segmentation faults we are able to reproduce both
in emulated and physical environments with affected processor revisions (steppings). For a more detailed explanation,
please read our news post here: https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-9-2-power-le-update/
If you have any questions or concerns, please reach out via email, Mattermost, or the bug tracker.
Best,
Neil Hanlon
Infrastructure Lead, RESF
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 9.2.
The release is currently available for the x86_64 and aarch64 architectures.
Please review the release notes at
https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-9-2-ga-release/ - These notes
contain important information including known bugs and details about
changes in this version.
Notable changes:
* An aarch64 kernel with a 64kb page size is now available via the package
kernel-64k
* nfsrahead, a tool to configure the readahead for NFS mounts, was added
* Intel Arc GPU support has been added
* The infamous Flatpak bug that breaks all fonts in applications using the
default font (Cantarell) has been fixed!
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads: https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, MATE, and Cinnamon flavors for x86_64
and aarch64 are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced,
tested, and documented this release, as well as the sponsors and partners
that contribute resources that enable us to do so. We would also like to
change the following individuals in particular for this release.
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Boris Reisig
* Brian Clemens
* Chris Stackpole
* David H
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Marie Loise Nolden
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Pratham Patel
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Todd Zullinger
* Trevor Cooper
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance,
and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its ecosystem. The best
place to start for new users is at
https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org
Thank you, we hope to enjoy the release!
--
Louis Abel, RHCE RHCSIDM
Infrastructure, Release Engineering, IDM
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 8.8. The
release is currently available for the x86_64 and aarch64 architectures.
Please review the release notes at
https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-8-8-ga-release/ - These notes
contain important information including known bugs and details about
changes in this version.
Notable changes:
* Intel Arc GPU support has been added.
* Git has been updated to 2.39.1, enabling support of commit signing with
SSH keys
* FIPS mode settings in the kernel have been adjusted to conform to the
Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-3.
* Podman’s Quadlet <https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/quadlet-podman> feature
is now available.
Downloads:
* Minimal, DVD, boot and torrent downloads: https://rockylinux.org/download
* Live images in GNOME, KDE, XFCE, and MATE flavors are listed here:
https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
* Cloud images are listed here: https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Special thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced,
tested, and documented this release, as well as the sponsors and partners
that contribute resources that enable us to do so. We would also like to
change the following individuals in particular for this release.
* Al Bowles
* Alan Marshall
* Brian Clemens
* Chris Stackpole
* David H
* Ezequiel Bruni
* Louis Abel
* Lukas Magauer
* Mustafa Gezen
* Neil Hanlon
* Sherif Nagy
* Skip Grube
* Steven Spencer
* Taylor Goodwill
* Trevor Cooper
Getting Help / Engaging with the community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance,
and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its ecosystem. The best
place to start for new users is at
https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org
Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org
Mail list: https://lists.resf.org
Libera IRC: #rockylinux
Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org
Thank you, we hope to enjoy the release!
--
Louis Abel, RHCE RHCSIDM
Infrastructure, Release Engineering, IDM
On April 17, 2023, we had planned maintenance that was aimed to be transparent in nature. In our current work of
standing up new infrastructure, we needed to migrate Rocky Linux 8 to 9 for our FreeIPA domain (that runs our DNS and
auth for our services internal and external).
The plan was to essentially:
* Remove one node
* Add new node, configure as needed via ansible
* Repeat the above until all nodes are migrated
As FreeIPA handles the internal DNS and responds to internal requests from our external services where necessary, this
should be fairly routine. Most internal services won’t notice IPA servers coming and going as the SRV records will have
changed and things will move on as normal.
This is mostly transparent, following the proper documentation for FreeIPA migrations between major releases of
Enterprise Linux. However, among this work, our internal firewall and unbound DNS caching were not made aware of the new
IPA systems as we added and removed nodes, and thus the problems began to start and eventually cascade externally. The
remaining 8 node that was still available was the only server responding to requests from our haproxy and unbound.
Though this was the case, this essentially caused the following issues:
* The CDN would fallback to our appropriate parameters to ensure mirror manager would still respond with at least one
mirror (dl.rockylinux.org)
* The CDN would detect our services to be back up briefly
* Some users will have success, while some would time out.
* Anyone hitting mirrors.rockylinux.org would eventually timeout
* The CDN would detect it down again and try to fallback
* The above would loop endlessly
This also unfortunately prevented us from being able to login to our VPN by normal means. The appropriate infrastructure
contacts were notified to assist in getting in and fixing the internal resolver to bring all services back online. After
all services were back online, we were able to migrate the final 8 node to 9, without further impact to our
infrastructure and our users.
Corrections have been made to the infrastructure configuration to provide better fault tolerance in the case of DNS
outages like this.
If you have any questions, please reach out.
Best,
Neil Hanlon
Infrastructure Team Lead, Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation
We are pleased to announce the general availability of Rocky Linux 9.1. This release is currently available for the x86-64, aarch64, ppc64le, and s390x architectures.
Please review the release notes at https://docs.rockylinux.org/release_notes/9_1 - These notes contain important information including known bugs and more comprehensive details about changes in this version.
Notable Changes:
- Keylime, a remote boot attestation and runtime integrity management solution using Trusted Platform Modules (TPMs) is now available.
- New module stream versions include node.js 18, php:8.1, maven:3.8, and ruby:3.1.
- New compiler toolset versions include GCC 12, LLVM 14.0.6, Rust 1.62, and Go 1.18.
- Container images are now available for all x86-64, aarch64, ppc64le, and s390x.
- Vagrant images are now available for x86-64 and aarch64
- Official Rocky Linux images are now available on Oracle Cloud Platform.
- LVM variants of the generic, EC2, and Azure images are now available.
Downloads:
- Minimal, DVD, Boot, and torrent downloads are listed at https://rockylinux.org/download
- Live images in GNOME, GNOME Lite, KDE, XFCE, and MATE flavors are listed at https://rockylinux.org/alternative-images
- Cloud images are listed at https://rockylinux.org/cloud-images
Upgrades and Conversions:
Current users of Rocky Linux 9 can upgrade to 9.1 via `dnf update` or via PackageKit and its interfaces (GNOME Software, etc). Users of other Enterprise Linux 9 distributions can upgrade and convert to Rocky Linux 9.1 via the migrate2rocky script available at https://github.com/rocky-linux/rocky-tools/blob/main/migrate2rocky/migrate2…
Special Thanks:
We are grateful to the many Rocky Linux project volunteers who produced, tested, and documented this release, as well as the sponsors and partners that contribute the resources that enable us to do so.
We would like to thank the following individuals in particular for their contributions to this release:
- Al Bowles
- Alan Marshall
- Brian Clemens
- Chris Stackpole
- David Roth
- Ezequiel Bruni
- Ian Walker
- Louis Abel
- Lukas Magauer
- Mustafa Gezen
- Neil Hanlon
- Rich Alloway
- Sherif Nagy
- Skip Grube
- Steven Spencer
- Taylor Goodwill
- Trevor Cooper
We are thankful for the upstream development work in Fedora Linux, the curation efforts in CentOS Stream, and the countless developers and projects from which these distributions are built.
Getting Help / Engaging with the Community:
The Rocky Linux ecosystem is sustained by community-driven help, guidance, and love of RPM distributions, Enterprise Linux and its ecosystem. The best place to start for new users is at https://docs.rockylinux.org.
You can communicate with us and other community members on various mediums:
- Mattermost: https://chat.rockylinux.org <https://chat.rockylinux.org/>
- Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/rockylinux
- Forums: https://forums.rockylinux.org <https://forums.rockylinux.org/>
- Mail list: https://lists.resf.org <https://lists.resf.org/>
- IRC: ircs://irc.libera.chat:6697/#rockylinux
- Bug Tracker: https://bugs.rockylinux.org <https://bugs.rockylinux.org/>
Thank you, and enjoy the release!
We would like to apologize for the lack of announcements in the past two
weeks. Currently these announcements are manual and there are ongoing plans
to make these more automated with less human interaction.
With the release of the RHEL 8.6 beta, we will be looking into what is
changing and what and how we will need to do our builds for the next few
weeks before its potential GA in late April or May. During this, we have
also been working on bootstrapping the RHEL 9 beta packages to eventually
be imported, rebuilt, and tested in our new build system.
The following packages have been updated since March 15, 2022:
expat-2.2.5-4.el8_5.3
tzdata-2022a-1.el8
httpd-2.4.37-43.module+el8.5.0+747+83fae388.3
openssl-1.1.1k-6.el8_5
The following modules have been updated:
httpd
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-25236
CVE-2022-25235
CVE-2022-25315
CVE-2022-23852
CVE-2021-45960
CVE-2021-46143
CVE-2022-22827
CVE-2022-22826
CVE-2022-22825
CVE-2022-22824
CVE-2022-22823
CVE-2022-22822
CVE-2022-0778
CVE-2022-22720
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
--
Louis Abel, RHCE RHCSIDM
Infrastructure, Release Engineering, IDM
New container images have been released to the Docker Hub Container Registry at
https://hub.docker.com/_/rockylinux and are available for amd64 and arm64 architectures.
The following packages have been updated in the `latest` (docker.io/rockylinux:latest) and Major Version
(docker.io/rockylinux:8) tags on hub.docker.com:
binutils-2.30-108.el8_5.1 -> binutils-2.30-108.el8
cryptsetup-libs-2.3.3-4.el8_5.1 -> cryptsetup-libs-2.3.3-4.el8
cyrus-sasl-lib-2.1.27-5.el8 -> cyrus-sasl-lib-2.1.27-6.el8_5
libarchive-3.3.3-1.el8_5 -> libarchive-3.3.3-1.el8
libgcc-8.5.0-3.el8 -> libgcc-8.5.0-4.el8_5
libstdc++-8.5.0-3.el8 -> libstdc++-8.5.0-4.el8_5
openssl-libs-1.1.1k-4.el8 -> openssl-libs-1.1.1k-5.el8_5
python3-rpm-4.14.3-19.el8_5.2 -> python3-rpm-4.14.3-19.el8
rocky-gpg-keys-8.5-1.el8 -> rocky-gpg-keys-8.5-3.el8
rocky-release-8.5-1.el8 -> rocky-release-8.5-3.el8
rocky-repos-8.5-1.el8 -> rocky-repos-8.5-3.el8
rpm-4.14.3-19.el8_5.2 -> rpm-4.14.3-19.el8
rpm-build-libs-4.14.3-19.el8_5.2 -> rpm-build-libs-4.14.3-19.el8
rpm-libs-4.14.3-19.el8_5.2 -> rpm-libs-4.14.3-19.el8
systemd-239-51.el8_5.3 -> systemd-239-51.el8
systemd-libs-239-51.el8_5.3 -> systemd-libs-239-51.el8
systemd-pam-239-51.el8_5.3 -> systemd-pam-239-51.el8
vim-minimal-8.0.1763-16.el8_5.4 -> vim-minimal-8.0.1763-16.el8
In line with the Container Image documentation and policy, only the latest and Major version tags are updated
during a release cycle. The Minor-version-tagged image (docker.io/rockylinux:8.5) will remain pointing to the
first container version of the Minor version.
The following packages have been updated since March 14, 2022:
389-ds-base: 389-ds-base-1.4.3.23-12.module+el8.5.0+722+e2a0b219 ->
389-ds-base-1.4.3.23-14.module+el8.5.0+745+c5be6847
cloud-init: cloud-init-21.1-7.el8_5.3 -> cloud-init-21.1-7.el8_5.4
fence-agents: fence-agents-4.2.1-75.el8 -> fence-agents-4.2.1-75.el8_5.2
firewalld: firewalld-0.9.3-7.el8 -> firewalld-0.9.3-7.el8_5.1
gdm: gdm-1:40.0-15.el8 -> gdm-1:40.0-15.el8_5.1
glibc: glibc-2.28-164.el8 -> glibc-2.28-164.el8_5.3
httpd: httpd-2.4.37-43.module+el8.5.0+727+743c5577.1 ->
httpd-2.4.37-43.module+el8.5.0+746+b6ce3176.2
java-11-openjdk: java-11-openjdk-1:11.0.14.0.9-2.el8_5 ->
java-11-openjdk-1:11.0.14.1.1-2.el8_5
libarchive: libarchive-3.3.3-1.el8_5 -> libarchive-3.3.3-3.el8_5
libxml2: libxml2-2.9.7-11.el8 -> libxml2-2.9.7-12.el8_5
linux-firmware: linux-firmware-20210702-103.gitd79c2677.el8 ->
linux-firmware-20210702-104.gitd79c2677.el8_5
lvm2: lvm2-8:2.03.12-10.el8 -> lvm2-8:2.03.12-11.el8_5
nmstate: nmstate-1.1.0-5.el8_5 -> nmstate-1.1.0-6.el8_5
pcs: pcs-0.10.10-4.el8.rocky.0 -> pcs-0.10.10-4.el8_5.1.rocky.0
plymouth: plymouth-0.9.4-10.20200615git1e36e30.el8 ->
plymouth-0.9.4-10.20200615git1e36e30.el8_5.1
qemu-kvm: qemu-kvm-15:4.2.0-59.module+el8.5.0+726+ce09ee88.1 ->
qemu-kvm-15:4.2.0-59.module+el8.5.0+744+67293bef.2
redhat-support-lib-python: redhat-support-lib-python-0.11.3-1.el8 ->
redhat-support-lib-python-0.13.0-0.el8_5
redhat-support-tool: redhat-support-tool-0.11.3-2.el8 ->
redhat-support-tool-0.13.0-0.el8_5
samba: samba-4.14.5-9.el8_5 -> samba-4.14.5-10.el8_5
subscription-manager: subscription-manager-1.28.21-3.el8 ->
subscription-manager-1.28.21-5.el8_5
systemd: systemd-239-51.el8_5.3 -> systemd-239-51.el8_5.5
vim: vim-2:8.0.1763-16.el8_5.4 -> vim-2:8.0.1763-16.el8_5.12
The following modules have been updated:
389-ds
httpd
virt
virt-devel
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since March 10, 2022:
thunderbird: thunderbird-91.6.0-1.el8_5 -> thunderbird-91.7.0-2.el8_5
thunderbird: thunderbird-91.6.0-1.el8_5.plus -> thunderbird-91.7.0-2.el8_5.plus
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-25315
CVE-2022-25235
CVE-2022-25236
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 24, 2022:
dotnet3.1: dotnet3.1-3.1.416-3.el8_5 -> dotnet3.1-3.1.417-1.el8_5
dotnet5.0: dotnet5.0-5.0.211-1.el8_5 -> dotnet5.0-5.0.212-1.el8_5
dotnet6.0: dotnet6.0-6.0.102-1.el8_5 -> dotnet6.0-6.0.103-4.el8_5
firefox: firefox-91.6.0-1.el8_5 -> firefox-91.7.0-3.el8_5
kernel: kernel-4.18.0-348.12.2.el8_5 -> kernel-4.18.0-348.20.1.el8_5
kernel-rt: kernel-rt-4.18.0-348.12.2.rt7.143.el8_5 ->
kernel-rt-4.18.0-348.20.1.rt7.150.el8_5
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-0435
CVE-2022-0847
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 22, 2022:
cyrus-sasl: cyrus-sasl-2.1.27-5.el8 -> cyrus-sasl-2.1.27-6.el8_5
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-24407
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 16, 2022:
python-pillow: python-pillow-5.1.1-16.el8 ->
python-pillow-5.1.1-18.el8_5
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-22815
CVE-2022-22816
CVE-2022-22817
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following modules have been updated since February 15, 2022:
ruby-2.5-8050020220216182135.b4937e53
ruby-2.6-8050020220216165459.b4937e53
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 14, 2022:
thunderbird: thunderbird-91.5.0-1.el8_5 -> thunderbird-91.6.0-1.el8_5
thunderbird: thunderbird-91.5.0-1.el8.plus ->
thunderbird-91.6.0-1.el8_5.plus
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 09, 2022:
dotnet3.1: dotnet3.1-3.1.120-2.el8_5 -> dotnet3.1-3.1.416-3.el8_5
firefox: firefox-91.5.0-1.el8_5 -> firefox-91.6.0-1.el8_5
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 09, 2022:
dotnet5.0: dotnet5.0-5.0.210-1.el8_5 -> dotnet5.0-5.0.211-1.el8_5
dotnet6.0: dotnet6.0-6.0.101-2.el8_5 -> dotnet6.0-6.0.102-1.el8_5
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following packages have been updated since February 04, 2022:
aide: aide-0.16-14.el8 -> aide-0.16-14.el8_5.1
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2021-45417
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.
The following modules/packages have been updated since February 02, 2022:
varnish: varnish-6.0.8-1.module+el8.5.0+677+2a78a869 ->
varnish-6.0.8-1.module+el8.5.0+736+fec10e21.1
Associated CVE's:
CVE-2022-23959
=======
Updates
=======
Updates released since upstream are posted across our current
architectures. We strongly recommend that all users apply *all* updates,
including the content released today on your existing Rocky Linux
machines. This can be done by running `dnf update`.
All Rocky Linux components are built from the sources hosted at
git.rockylinux.org. In addition, SRPMs are being published alongside the
repositories in a corresponding "source" directory. You can find these
on any of our mirrors. These source packages match every binary RPM we
release.
Please give mirrors at least 24/48 hours to fully sync. If you find that
you cannot update any of the packages listed in this message, you may
try another mirror or wait till they have fully synced.