UWN Issue 941 April 19-25 2026.

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 941 for the week of April 19 - 25, 2026.


In this Issue

  • Security Notice: Canonical Livepatch Client Snap Vulnerability
  • Canonical releases Ubuntu 26.04 LTS Resolute Raccoon
  • Ubuntu Stats
  • Hot in Support
  • Other Meeting Reports
  • Upcoming Meetings and Events
  • Upcoming Meetings and Events
  • Ubuntu Circles! (LoCo) News
  • Charla sobre Linux y Ubuntu en la Escuela del Viento ( RGL)
  • FLISoL Venezuela venezuela ¿Dónde participar este año?
  • [Registration] UbuCon Korea X MiniDebConf Korea 2026
  • Ubuntu Offline Meeting in Tokyo – June 2026
  • Ubuntu Circles! (LoCo) Events
  • What makes a craft
  • SPEC: Closely Coupled Kernel Userspace Releases
  • Ghostty comes to Ubuntu
  • Upcoming autopkgtest migration announcement
  • An update on rust-coreutils
  • LXD 6.8 has been released
  • A new chapter for Launchpad: A new Ubuntu series page
  • Hello old new “Projects” directory!
  • From Jammy to Resolute: how Ubuntu’s toolchains have evolved
  • What Say You
  • Canonical News
  • In the Press
  • In the Blogosphere
  • Featured Audio and Video
  • Updates and Security for Ubuntu 22.04, 24.04, 25.10, and 26.04
  • And much more!

General Community News

Security Notice: Canonical Livepatch Client Snap Vulnerability

Prinson Fernandes alerts us to an “improper access control vulnerability” in the canonical-livepatch snap (CVE-2026-6369). We’re given a link to the CVE record, told who is affected, and what is required to remedy the situation.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/security-notice-canonical-livepatch-client-snap-vulnerability/80662

Canonical releases Ubuntu 26.04 LTS Resolute Raccoon

This Canonical blog tells us Ubuntu 26.04 LTS has been released, and is the 11th LTS release of Ubuntu. We’re given some details, quotes from staff at Canonical, and links to learn more or to download the new Ubuntu system. We’re given some screenshots, and told of many features we can take advantage of in Ubuntu Desktop and Ubuntu Server, and more. The Canonical blog is followed by numerous other Ubuntu [community] announcements.

https://canonical.com/blog/canonical-releases-ubuntu-26-04-lts-resolute-raccoon

Interested in the flavors? Release announcements as follows:

This release is widely covered, the following is a collection of articles selected by our editors:


Ubuntu Stats

Bug Stats

  • Open: 135357 (-916)
  • Critical: 302 (0)
  • Unconfirmed: 71566 (-632)

As always, the Bug Squad needs more help. If you want to get started, please see: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad

Translations

  • Swedish: 100.00% (0/1374)
  • Albanian: 98.87% (3977/0)
  • Ukrainian: 89.37% (37339/1687)
  • German: 87.17% (45060/244)
  • French: 85.78% (49944/6491)

Hot in Support

Ubuntu Community Discourse Trending Top 5 Threads

Find more support at: https://discourse.ubuntu.com/c/support-and-help/306

Ask Ubuntu Top 5 Questions

Ask (and answer!) questions at: https://askubuntu.com/


Other Meeting Reports


Upcoming Meetings and Events


Upcoming Meetings and Events


Ubuntu Circles! (LoCo) News

Charla sobre Linux y Ubuntu en la Escuela del Viento ( RGL)

Naudy Villarroel Urquiola writes about a talk he gave at Escuela del Viento in Rio Gallegos to students. The talk was about “How Linux and Ubuntu adapt to our lives”; he gives us details of the upcoming 11th UbuConLA 2026 later this year. Naudy thanks Professor Flavio Espeche Nieva, and the students. This post is in Spanish.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/charla-sobre-linux-y-ubuntu-en-la-escuela-del-viento-rgl/80698

FLISoL Venezuela venezuela ¿Dónde participar este año?

Naudy Villarroel Urquiola tells us about Latin American Festival of Free Software Installation (FLISoL) which will soon be having its 22nd meeting (first in 2005). We’re given details via provided flyers. The post and flyers are in Spanish.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/flisol-venezuela-donde-participar-este-ano/80762

[Registration] UbuCon Korea X MiniDebConf Korea 2026

The Ubuntu Korea Community, in preparation for the fourth UbuCon Korea, makes the call for registration. Developers, engineers, creators, researchers, entrepreneurs, and everyone who loves Ubuntu and Debian are invited to participate. Links to the Official Website and for Participant Registration are provided. This post is in Korean.

https://moim.live/events/fb8215a3-038e-4cd1-bf43-e10e6efc4821

Ubuntu Offline Meeting in Tokyo – June 2026

Mitsuya Shibata, on behalf of the Ubuntu Japanese Team, announces “An offline meeting celebrating the release of Ubuntu 26.04 LTS.” The event will be held at Roppongi Hills Gate Tower, Tokyo on June 20th. “The event will include several seminar sessions and a presentation of the Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release notes.” Registration is required and links are provided for detailed information. This post is in Japanese.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/ubuntu-offline-meeting-in-tokyo-june-2026/80962


Ubuntu Circles! (LoCo) Events

The following LoCo team events are currently scheduled in the next two weeks:

Looking beyond the next two weeks? Visit the respective Circles!/LoCo Team calendar to browse upcoming events.

Please also see:


The Hub

What makes a craft

Daniel W. Steinbrook sheds “some light on the philosophy across the growing list of Canonical packaging tools, including Snapcraft, Charmcraft, and Rockcraft”. Daniel informs us that knowing this will give a “better experience for package maintainers”, and may benefit anyone needing to debug their own ‘builds’. We’re told the craft principles, the standardized and modular approach, and more.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/what-makes-a-craft/80691

SPEC: Closely Coupled Kernel Userspace Releases

John Chittum has published a SPEC titled ‘Closely Coupled Kernel Userspace Releases’ which gives us the abstract, rationale, specification, testing, and more. This is a technical post, with examples to help us understand it, with the post also serving as a discussion point for people to comment on.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/spec-closely-coupled-kernel-userspace-releases/80724

Ghostty comes to Ubuntu

Pushkar Kulkarni writes about Ghostty, telling us what it is, that it’s maintained by Mitchell Hashimoto, and it’s available in the Ubuntu 26.04 universe repository. We’re given details on what is currently a ‘preview’, with the default terminal being ptyxis. Mention is made on OpenGL requirements, GPU acceleration, and libghostty. Feedback is welcome on this preview release.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/ghostty-comes-to-ubuntu/80740

Upcoming autopkgtest migration announcement

Ural Tunaboyu reminds us of the new autopkgtest instance which should mean more reliable testbeds. We’re told with Ubuntu 26.04 LTS now released Ubuntu 26.10 (Stonking Stingray) should be “fairly seamless” for autopkgtest users. We’re told of what is being done in the coming weeks, and details we should know if we’re users of autopkgtest. Dates and more will be provided via replies on this thread.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/upcoming-autopkgtest-migration-announcement/80747

An update on rust-coreutils

Ravi Kant Sharma provides a follow up to two prior posts by different authors on Ubuntu using rust-coreutils. We’re told what has happened after the prior announcement in the spirit of transparency. We’re told of the creation of an internal team who started a review and noted some ‘serious concerns’ leading to the commission of an independent external security audit. We’re told of this audit, performed by Zellic, and told the “vast majority of issues have been addressed and resolved” by upstream developers. The current status of Ubuntu 26.04 LTS is covered in regards to rust-coreutil’s packages, given a conclusion where Sylvestre Ledru and the uutils community are thanked, along with Zellic, and many others in the open source community. A list of CVE disclosures is provided, and we are told the migration was a success.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/an-update-on-rust-coreutils/80773

LXD 6.8 has been released

Thomas Parrott on behalf of the LXD team announces the release of LXD 6.8. We’re given a list of the new features and highlights, a tour showing the LXD UI update, a link to the download page. Binaries are available for Linux, MacOS and Windows.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/lxd-6-8-has-been-released/80650

A new chapter for Launchpad: A new Ubuntu series page

Enzo Deng reminds us of the history of Launchpad, and tells us of a started journey in modernizing its user experience. We’re given a page and invited to explore the ‘refreshed’ experience for ourselves. We’re told what has been done thus far is only the beginning too, with more to come. If we have feedback we’re provided links to ask questions or report bugs.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/a-new-chapter-for-launchpad-a-new-ubuntu-series-page/80926


The Planet

Hello old new “Projects” directory!

Matthias Klumpp (Ximion) tells us that if we’ve installed a recent Desktop Linux we may have noticed a new folder titled “Projects”. This blog tells us why it’s there, and reminds us of it’s history (existed since 2007 with 11 year old feature request). We’re also told how we can control the behavior on our own system, should we decide we don’t like it and want it gone for example, or wish to add other things too. Mention is also made of some other features we’ll find in xdg-user-dirs 0.20 release.

https://blog.tenstral.net/2026/04/hello-projects-directory.html

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

In this blog, Samir Kamerkar covers some of the tools found in Ubuntu’s toolchains that “collapse half a day of setup into a single command or two”. This blog discusses the many changes in toolchains since Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, Ubuntu 24.04 LTS through to the current Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. This is a long and somewhat detailed post covering LTS releases only, with links for those wanting more on specific tools. The focus is somewhat on the latest Ubuntu 26.04 and how it’s a great platform for developers. The blog ends with a preview of the future too.

https://ubuntu.com//blog/from-jammy-to-resolute-how-ubuntus-toolchains-have-evolved


What Say You

Here we elicit your adventures, your trials and how you triumphed; your desktop, why it is your preference; have you made a bug report, tell the experience; coding or other development works worth the comment; tips - tricks and other neat things you have discovered … many other subjects too…

Meet the Members: Heather Ellsworth

“I am currently the senior developer relations engineer at Mozilla Thunderbird and I’ve been a long time Linux user, starting with Ubuntu 7.04. I remember being in grad school using that early version of Ubuntu and daydreaming of what it might be like to work on Ubuntu and then I got that very opportunity when I was on the Ubuntu desktop team at Canonical for 4 years, before moving onto Thunderbird. I continue to love open source and advocate for its adoption anytime I can.” -Heather Ellsworth

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/meet-the-members-heather-ellsworth/80689


Canonical News


In the Press

Built for a hostile internet: Canonical VP of Engineering on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS

Steven Vaughan-Nichols was at a media briefing ahead of Ubuntu 26.04 LTS’ release and tells us about it. We’re told Jon Seager of Canonical framed the release with the word “resilience” and why. We’re told of the focus on security, through better toolchains. We’re given some specifics of what we’ll find in the release with mention of many package versions, which includes ghostty, CUDA and AMD ROCm in the Ubuntu archive, TPM-backed full disk encryption and more. AI tools are mentioned with us being told we’re not locked into a specific AI platform, but can decide for ourselves which we’ll use.

https://www.zdnet.com/article/built-for-a-hostile-internet-canonical-vp-of-engineering-on-ubuntu-26-04-lts/

Ubuntu Resolute Raccoon spits out Xorg, but still lets you run X11 apps

Liam Proven writes about the Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release. We’re given quick outlines of what we’ll find in the release, starting with Ubuntu Desktop, with coverage of some of the flavors and Ubuntu Server. This is a rather detailed overview of the release, including coverage of rust-based tooling and more. We’re told the Ubuntu Core 26 released is scheduled for May 7, of the update on the ISO sizes, recommended hardware specifications, and more.

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/24/ubuntu_resolute_raccoon/


In the Blogosphere

Valve Developer Further Improves Old AMD GPUs: HD 7870 XT Finally Working On Linux

https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-Harvested-GPUs-Linux

Michael Larabel reminds us of prior work done by Timur Kristóf of Valve’s Linux graphics driver team, before telling us of his later work on “AMDGPU improvements for Kaveri and other GCN 1.1 era APUs”. Michael gives us additional links: other posts, some of bug reports now fixed that were years old.

LXQt 2.4 Desktop Environment Released with More Wayland Improvements

Marcus Nestor tells us LXQt 2.4 has been released, and gives us some of what we’ll find when we use it. We’re told Wayland support has improved, with settings now for Wayland or X11 sessions, as well as separate monitor blanking timeouts for when using battery or AC. Along with other improvements we’ll find in the release, we’re given a link to the release announcement.

https://9to5linux.com/lxqt-2-4-desktop-environment-officially-released-with-more-wayland-improvements

Ubuntu 26.10 “Stonking Stingray” Is Slated for Release on October 15th, 2026

Marcus Nestor gives us some details of the Ubuntu 26.10 release. We’re told its codename (stonking stingray), its release and other dates too.

https://9to5linux.com/ubuntu-26-10-stonking-stingray-is-slated-for-release-on-october-15th-2026

Ubuntu Server 26.04 LTS Will Now Automatically Install HWE/OEM Kernel Packages

Michael Larabel reminds us that Ubuntu Desktop LTS releases have included HWE and OEM kernels for some time, and with Ubuntu 26.04 LTS those options now exist for Server installs. We’re told the “auto-install behavior can be changed” if we don’t want newer kernels. Mention is also made of user creation being an earlier step in the install process, improved TPM-backed Full Disk Encryption, and more.

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Ubuntu-Server-26.04-HWE-OEM


Featured Audio and Video

Portugal Podcast: Episode 378 - Cravejados de Guaxinins

“Neste episódio, para além de insultarmos um grande número de indivíduos e comunidades, trouxemos teorias das conspiração, especulámos sobre a origem do nome Stonking Stingray, detalhámos o escândalo dos emails dos munícipios e revimos todos os eventos que aí vêm: lançamento do 26.04 no dia 23 de Abril, Digital Rights Drinks, eventos do Centro Linux, festival de tecnologia popular em Setúbal e todas novidades do Ubuntu 26.10, Firefox 150 e até portáteis fofinhos (e certificados) da Framework. Imensas coisas bouas, mas assim mêmo mêmo bouas, bouas, daquelas mêmo bouas, ’tás a ber?”

https://podcastubuntuportugal.org/e378/


Updates and Security for Ubuntu 22.04, 24.04, 25.10, and 26.04

Security Updates

Ubuntu 22.04 Updates

End of Standard Support: April 2027

Ubuntu 24.04 Updates

End of standard support: April 2029

Ubuntu 25.10 Updates

End of Life: July 2026

Ubuntu 26.04 Updates

End of Standard Support: April 2031


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