Kernel Linux 7.1 tambahkan aturan untuk bug keamanan dan laporan AI

Kernel Linux 7.1 kini menyertakan dokumentasi baru yang mendefinisikan bug keamanan dengan lebih jelas. Dokumentasi ini juga menetapkan panduan untuk menangani laporan yang dihasilkan menggunakan perangkat kecerdasan buatan.

Para pengembang memperbarui dokumentasi kernel menyusul peningkatan kiriman terkait keamanan. Perubahan ini menjawab volume laporan bug yang kian bertambah serta peningkatan jumlah laporan yang dibuat dengan bantuan AI.

Artikel Terkait

Illustration depicting Linux 7.0 kernel enhancements to AppArmor, AMDGPU, Ceph, and eCryptfs, featuring Tux at a coding workstation.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Linux 7.0 kernel merges several enhancements

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

The Linux 7.0 kernel development has incorporated updates to AppArmor, AMDGPU, Ceph, and eCryptfs. These changes include security and hardware support improvements. The merges signal ongoing progress toward the kernel's release.

The Linux kernel project has officially documented its policy on AI-assisted code contributions with the release of Linux 7.0. The guidelines require human accountability, disclosure of AI tool use, and a new 'Assisted-by' tag for patches involving AI. Sasha Levin formalized the consensus reached at the 2025 Maintainers Summit.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Linus Torvalds has announced the latest Linux release candidate while calling attention to a growing issue with AI-generated bug reports. The flood of such reports has rendered the kernel security mailing list nearly impossible to manage.

The Linux kernel project has begun using Sashiko, an AI-powered system, to automatically review patches. This agentic, LLM-driven tool is identifying bugs that human reviewers overlooked. The initiative aims to enhance code quality and maintainability.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

The Linux kernel 7.1 includes updates to the AMDGPU driver, introducing support for AMD DCN 4.2 IP and GFX 12.1. These enhancements also cover GCN 1.1 APU DC. The developments were reported by Phoronix.

Linux kernel maintainers have extended long-term support (LTS) for several key releases through 2026-2028, partially reversing a 2023 decision to limit support to two years amid contributor burnout. Stable maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman updated the schedule following feedback from users, vendors, and fellow maintainer Sasha Levin, providing more time for security fixes in servers, Android devices, and appliances.

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak