IPFire 2.27 Core Update 173 is out to introduce support for 4G and 5G modems that use the QMI interface. . IPFire project’s Peter Müller announced today the release and general availability of IPFire 2.27 Core Update 173 as the first update to this open-source hardened Linux firewall distribution for routers and firewalls in 2023. Powered by the long-term supported Linux 6.1 LTS kernel series, IPFire 2.27 Core Update 173 is here to introduce support for the QMI (Qualcomm MSM Interface) a proprietary interface and the ability to interact with 4G and 5G modems that use the QMI interface. The new Linux 6.1 LTS kernel brings improved hardware support and security improvements for IPFire users, such as Landlock support, protection against direct memory access via malicious PCI devices on AArch64 (ARM64) systems, protection against cold boot attacks by allowing the firmware to wipe all memory when rebooting, and much more. The link for this article located at 9 to 5 Linux is no longer available. . OPNsense 23.1 introduces improved firewall features and dynamic routing capabilities, powered by FreeBSD 14.0.. IPFire Firewall, Linux Kernel 6.1, Network Security, Open Source Firewall. . Brittany Day
Other goodies in the v2.6 kernel include integrated IPSec support, with the inclusion of the Kame Project; enhanced support for network file systems, including support for mounting Novell NetWare shares; initial NFSv4 (Network File System Version 4) support; and performance and compatibility enhancements with SMB (Server Message Block) shares, including support for CIFS (Common Internet File System). . . .. Other goodies in the v2.6 kernel include integrated IPSec support, with the inclusion of the Kame Project; enhanced support for network file systems, including support for mounting Novell NetWare shares; initial NFSv4 (Network File System Version 4) support; and performance and compatibility enhancements with SMB (Server Message Block) shares, including support for CIFS (Common Internet File System). The v2.6 kernel also sports a brand new security architecture that departs somewhat from the standard Unix root user concept; its modular security mechanism provides a greater level of granularity to privileged user management. Also introduced in the v2.6 kernel is a new approach to devices. The v2.4 kernel's devfs-based device handler has a companion in the v2.6 kernel. The newcomer is udev and is an implementation of devfs, but in userspace. Using udev, the system is able to follow devices as they move around on connected busses, with the device identifier remaining static. . The Linux v2.6 kernel brought essential upgrades, enhancing security with advanced access control and user management while supporting NFSv4 for improved networking.. Linux Kernel 2.6, Security Improvements, Network Enhancements, IPSec Support. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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