Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 2 November 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: ubuntu-hardened@lists.ubuntu.com

During the last week, the Ubuntu Security team:

  • Triaged 268 public security vulnerability reports, retaining the 40 that applied to Ubuntu.
  • Published 16 Ubuntu Security Notices which fixed 66 security issues (CVEs) across 16 supported packages.

Ubuntu Security Notices

Bug Triage

Mainline Inclusion Requests

Development

  • Participated in online Enabling AppArmor by default in Debian Sprint

  • Refreshed fscrypt package for bionic, tested in a bionic VM, and uploaded it to bionic (pending approval)
  • performed reviews in support of layouts: PR 4008PR 3965. Lots of technical discussion regarding use of overlayfs

  • performed review of xdg-settings support: PR 4073

  • discuss autostart desktop files design options
  • performed review of USB interface number: PR 4040

  • performed review of several libvirt patches from server team
  • performed review of making @unrestricted truly unrestricted: PR 4054

  • Investigated, prepared, tested, and submitted snap-confine apparmor fix PR 4098 and policy-updates-xxxi PR 4097

  • Investigated, prepared preliminary ssh-keys, ssh-public-keys, gpg-keys and gpp-public-keys interfaces: PR 4100

  • Continue various snappy-debug improvements based on sprint feedback (we should be able to now always suggest using it instead of looking at raw log files):
    • only show AVC or audit violations, not both
    • cache rules files for big performance improvement
    • preliminary DBus recommendations (need to convert to logprof, but now we display DBus violations and suggest a few things)
    • add suggestions for signals and ptrace
    • add suggestions for mpris and dbus slots
    • suggest snapcraft preload plugin
    • split out classic and core policy and choose based on which device snappy-debug is running on
    • various small bug fixes
  • Set up https://gitlab.com/apparmor

  • Contributed seccomp documentation for Linux 4.14 changes to the man-pages project: mailing list

  • Contributed libseccomp-golang bindings for libseccomp’s new API level feature: PR 29

What the Security Team is Reading This Week

Weekly Meeting

More Info

Related posts


ilvipero
6 May 2026

Three weeks to go: A sneak peek of the Ubuntu Summit 26.04 experience

Ubuntu Article

The countdown to the Ubuntu Summit is officially on! We are just three weeks away from Ubuntu Summit 26.04, and the orange energy levels in our community channels are peaking. We’ve been reviewing the talk submissions, and have been blown away by the passion and creativity of our circle of friends. Once again, the schedule ...


Samir Kamerkar
22 April 2026

From Jammy to Resolute: how Ubuntu’s toolchains have evolved

Ubuntu Article

We cover new toolchain versions, devpacks and workflows that improve the developer experience. The evolution of Ubuntu’s toolchains story goes beyond just providing up-to-date GCC, LLVM, and Python. It is also about opinionated openJDK variants, task-focused devpacks, FIPS compliant toolchains, and snaps, like the new .NET snap and Snapcr ...


Canonical
20 April 2026

Canonical expands Ubuntu support to next-generation MediaTek Genio 520 and 720 platforms

edge computing Article

Canonical is pleased to announce the early access launch of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS for MediaTek’s Genio IoT platforms. Building on the companies’ strategic partnership, this release introduces optimized Ubuntu images for the brand-new Genio 520 and 720, while continuing to provide robust support for the Genio 350, 510, 700, and 1200.  The colla ...