My thoughts on Slackware, life and everything

Day: July 18, 2024

Java updates for 2024Q3

It’s time again for the (security and stability) updates to various Java versions. Oracle releases their JDK code updates in a quarterly cycle defined by “the Tuesday closest to the 17th day of January, April, July and October” and OpenJDK follows suit.

I uploaded new packages for OpenJDK versions 11 and 17 to my Slackware repository. Once there’s a new release for IcedTea, I will also build new OpenJDK 8 packages.

All of these Java packages are nowadays targeting Slackware 15.0 and newer. So, get one of these if you have a need for it (and do not install more than one of them):

  • OpenJDK 11.0.24_8 (aka the 11.0.24 General Availability release) comes as an openjdk11 package.
  • OpenJDK 17.0.12_7 (aka the 17.0.12 General Availability release) comes as an openjdk17 package.

Have fun!

Eric

Update 29-July:
I have also uploaded the new OpenJDK 8u422_b05 packages for Slackware 15.0 and newer. Install either the JDK or the JRE package (the Java Runtime Environment is included in the Java Development Kit).
I built these using the IcedTea 3.32.0 framework.

July update for Chromium 126

The latest release of the Chromium source code (version 126.0.6478.182 was made available on July 16th) addresses several vulnerabilities as usual, some of which are rated as ‘High’ but none ‘Critical’ and also no new 0-days are reported.

You can fetch my Slackware 15.0 and -current packages both for chromium and (hopefully soon, because its source has not been released yet) also chromium-ungoogled . You may prefer one of the mirror servers (like my own US server and in a short while, the UK mirror) in case my primary slackware.nl server is not responding or too slow.

I am slowly transitioning back from being a caregiver for my mother (which absorbed me completely for 10 months) to a life where I have time and energy in the evenings to hack on Slackware again. You will soon find the next installment in the Slackware Cloud Server series here on the blog – an article dedicated to building a Docker stack as cloud storage backend for the open source Ente Auth 2-factor authentication app.

Cheers, Eric

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