Security Team Weekly Summary: September 21, 2017
Canonical
on 21 September 2017

The Security Team weekly reports are intended to be very short summaries of the Security Team’s weekly activities.
If you would like to reach the Security Team, you can find us at the #ubuntu-hardened channel on FreeNode. Alternatively, you can mail the Ubuntu Hardened mailing list at: [email protected]
During the last week, the Ubuntu Security team:
- Triaged 489 public security vulnerability reports, retaining the 152 that applied to Ubuntu.
- Published 6 Ubuntu Security Notices which fixed 122 security issues (CVEs) across 5 supported packages.
Bug Triage
Mainline Inclusion Requests
-
completed nghttp2 (LP: #1687454)
-
MIR backlog: https://bugs.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-security/+assignedbugs?field.searchtext=%5BMIR%5D
Development
- validate license and deprecate aliases in the review tools
- reviews
- broadcom-asic-control updates PR 3898
- bootstrap.c of snap-confine calling snap-update-ns PR 3621
- s390x and i386 socket snap-seccomp test failures fix (PR 3900)
- network interface update PR 3898
- ‘mount host system fonts in desktop interface’ PR 3889
- ‘enable partial apparmor support’ PR 3814
- ‘run secondary-arch tests via gcc-multilib’ PR 3901
- apparmor profile changes for snap-confine calling snap-update-ns PR 3621
- implement/submit PR 3919 for miscellaneous policy updates xxix
- implement/submit PR 3921 for miscellaneous policy updates xxix for 2.28
-
policy update for org.freedesktop.DBus ListNames() PR 3928
-
regression and manual testing of LSM stacking with AppArmor and SELinux
- fscrypt 0.2.1 packaged
- upload apparmor 2.11.0-2ubuntu17 for systemd stub resolver
- send up patch to upstream apparmor to drop /var/run alternation in favor of /run
What the Security Team is Reading This Week
Weekly Meeting
More Info
Talk to us today
Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?
Newsletter signup
Related posts
Canonical welcomes NVIDIA’s donation of the GPU DRA driver to CNCF
At KubeCon Europe in Amsterdam, NVIDIA announced that it will donate the GPU Dynamic Resource Allocation (DRA) Driver to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation...
Hot code burns: the supply chain case for letting your containers cool before you ship
Zero CVEs doesn’t mean secure. It means unexamined. New code has zero CVEs because no one has studied it yet, and if you’re rebuilding nightly from upstream,...
Canonical joins the Rust Foundation as a Gold Member
Canonical’s Gold-level investment in the Rust Foundation supports the long-term health of the Rust programming language and highlights its growing role in...