Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

An error occurred while submitting your form. Please try again or file a bug report. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 15 June 2017

Kernel Team Summary- June 15, 2017


Introduction

This blog is to provide a status update from the Ubuntu Kernel Team. There will also be highlights provided for any interesting subjects the team may be working on. If you would like to reach the kernel team, you can find us at the #ubuntu-kernel channel on FreeNode. Alternatively, you can mail the Ubuntu Kernel Team mailing list at: [email protected]

Highlights

  • Unstable updated to 4.12-rc5
  • Virtualbox and zfs enabled in unstable/4.12
  • artful/4.11 updated to 4.11.4
  • Stress-ng 0.08.04 uploaded
  • Add new softlockup stressor, use with caution(!)
  • This is going to the be the first of a bunch of RT stressors

The following kernels were promoted to -proposed for testing:

  • Zesty 4.10.0-23.25
  • Yakkety 4.8.0-55.58
  • Xenial 4.4.0-80.101
  • Trusty 3.13.0-120.167

 

The following kernels were promoted to -proposed for testing:

  • trusty/linux-lts-xenial 4.4.0-80.101~14.04.1
  • xenial/linux-hwe-edge 4.10.0-23.25~16.04.1
  • xenial/linux-hwe 4.8.0-55.58~16.04.1
  • xenial/linux-raspi2 4.4.0-1058.65
  • xenial/linux-snapdragon 4.4.0-1060.64
  • xenial/linux-aws 4.4.0-1019.28
  • xenial/linux-gke 4.4.0-1015.15
  • xenial/linux-joule 4.4.0-1002.7
  • yakkety/linux-raspi2 4.8.0-1039.42
  • zesty/linux-raspi2 4.10.0-1007.9

 

The following kernel snaps were uploaded to the store:

  • pc-kernel 4.4.0-79.100
  • pi2-kernel 4.4.0-1057.64
  • dragonboard-kernel 4.4.0-1059.63

 

Devel Kernel Announcements

The 4.11 kernel in artful-proposed has been updated to 4.11.4. It is also available for testing in the following PPA: https://launchpad.net/~canonical-kernel-team/+archive/ubuntu/proposed

We intend to target a 4.13 kernel for the Ubuntu 17.10 release. The Ubuntu 17.10 Kernel Freeze is Thurs Oct 5, 2017.

Stable Kernel Announcements

Current cycle: 02-Jun through 24-Jun

  • 02-Jun Last day for kernel commits for this cycle
  • 05-Jun – 10-Jun Kernel prep week
  • 11-Jun – 23-Jun Bug verification & Regression testing
  • 26-Jun Release to -updates.

Kernel Versions

  • precise 3.2.0-126.169
  • trusty 3.13.0-119.166
  • vivid 3.19.0-84.92
  • xenial 4.4.0-78.99
  • yakkety 4.8.0-53.56
  • linux-lts-trusty 3.13.0-117.164~precise1
  • linux-lts-vivid 3.19.0-80.88~14.04.1
  • linux-lts-xenial 4.4.0-78.99~14.04.1

Next cycle: 23-Jun through 15-Jul

23-Jun Last day for kernel commits for this cycle 26-Jun – 01-Jul Kernel prep week. 02-Jul – 14-Jul Bug verification & Regression testing.. 17-Jul Release to -updates.

Status: CVE’s

The current CVE status can be reviewed at the following: http://people.canonical.com/~kernel/cve/pkg/ALL-linux.html

Related posts


Canonical
26 August 2025

Broadcom and Canonical Expand Partnership to Optimize VMware Cloud Foundation for Modern Container and AI Workloads

Canonical announcements Article

Collaboration combines the leading Cloud OS with the industry’s first unified private cloud platform to accelerate cloud native innovation [LAS VEGAS] August 26, 2025—Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) and Canonical today announced an expanded collaboration to help customers ship modern container-based and AI applications faster and more secure ...


Nicholas Morris
26 August 2025

Generating allow-lists with DNS monitoring on LXD

DevOps Article

Allow-listing web traffic – blocking all web traffic that has not been pre-approved – is a common practice in highly sensitive environments. It is also a challenge for developers and system administrators working in those environments. In this blog, we’ll cover an easy way to mitigate this challenge by using LXD to generate allow-lists.  ...


Edoardo Barbieri
25 August 2025

Real-time OS examples: use cases across industries  

IoT Article

In sectors where precision and predictability are non-negotiable, timing is everything. Whether coordinating robotic arms on a factory floor, maintaining ultra-reliable latency in telecom networks, or ensuring an automotive braking system responds instantly, the success of these systems depends on meeting strict timing deadlines.  This is ...