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www.linaro.org
| | sergioprado.blog
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| | Have you ever wondered how the Linux kernel is tested?
| | www.kroah.com
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| | Note This post is based on a whitepaper I wrote at the beginning of 2016 to be used to help many different companies understand the Linux kernel release model and encourage them to start taking the LTS stable updates more often. I then used it as a basis of a presentation I gave at the Linux Recipes conference in September 2017 which can be seen here. With the recent craziness of Meltdown and Spectre , I've seen lots of things written about how Linux is released and how we handle handles security patches that are totally incorrect, so I figured it is time to dust off the text, update it in a few places, and publish this here for everyone to benefit from.
| | www.linuxjournal.com
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| | [AI summary] Linux 5.4 has officially reached end-of-life, ending upstream security updates and bug fixes, prompting users to upgrade to newer kernel versions for system security and stability.
| | blog.separateconcerns.com
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| Linux does not expose options such as SO_REUSEADDR and SO_REUSEPORT to userland. The knetstat module does.