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Linux Kernel 5.13 Released
Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, has made the latest kernel available, after what was one of the smoothest development processes in recent memory. Torvalds wrote in his weekly "State of the Kernel" post: "So we had quite the calm week since rc7, and I see no reason to delay 5.13." Torvalds continued to say, "if the last week was small and calm, 5.13 overall is actually fairly large. In fact, it's one of the bigger 5.x releases, with over 16k commits (over 17k if you count merges), from over 2k developers."
What can you expect in the 5.13 kernel? Some of the features that saw the most commits include Apple M1 support, early support for wireless wide area networks (WWANs), Microsoft's Azure Network Adapter, the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) spec for laptops, early work for ARM64 Hyper-V guests, RISC-V enhancements, support for Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Tablet Thin Keyboard, support added for Apple's Magic Mouse 2, new drivers for Amazon's Luna game controller, support for AMD's Navi GPU, and new virtIO drivers for audio devices and Bluetooth controllers.
Although the 5.13 kernel is now available for downloading(https://git.kernel.org/torvalds/t/linux-5.13.tar.gz ), you won't find it hitting the repositories for your distributions of choice for some time. For example, Ubuntu most likely won't see the 5.13 kernel appear until the 21.10 daily builds are released.
Linux Foundation Launches New GitOps Training
In conjunction with the Cloud Native Computing Foundation and the Continuous Delivery Foundation, the Linux Foundation is now offering two new classes, focused on GitOps. These two self-paced, online training courses are designed to teach all of the skills necessary for admins to start implementing GitOps into their company's workflow. The two classes offered are as follows:
- Introduction to GitOps (LFS169, https://training.linuxfoundation.org/training/introduction-to-gitops-lfs169 ) is a free introductory class that provides the foundation for admins to grasp the GitOps principles, tools, and best practices for the implementation of cloud-native applications running on a Kubernetes cluster. This course teaches how to set up and automate continuous delivery pipelines to a Kubernetes cluster, to increase productivity, reliability, and efficiency.
- GitOps: Continuous Delivery on Kubernetes with Flux (LFS269, https://training.linuxfoundation.org/training/gitops-continuous-delivery-on-kubernetes-with-flux-lfs269/) is a course directed at software developers who are interested in learning how to deploy cloud-native applications with GitHub-based workflows. This course will provide a deeper dive into the GitOps practices and offers in-depth training on how to implement those best practices using Flux CD. You can enroll in this course for $299. You should be familiar with Kubernetes pods, ReplicaSets, deployments, services, namespaces, kubectl, and YAML specs at a minimum.
Canonical and Google Team Up for Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud
Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud is a new platform that not only offers a 10-year maintenance commitment, but live kernel patching; officially certified components to enable operating environments under compliance regimes such as FedRAMP, HIPAA, PCI, GDPR, and ISO; certified FIPS 140-2 components; security dashboard for Security Command Center and Managed Apps; and all standard optimizations found in the regular Ubuntu releases.
According to Jung Yang, VP and GM Compute at Google Cloud, "The availability of Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud will offer our enterprise customers the additional security and compliance services needed for their mission-critical workloads."
To make this even more appealing, Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud will only be 3-4.5 percent of your average computing costs, so the more resources you consume, the smaller percentage will go to Ubuntu Pro. So not only does Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud offer a much longer range of support, it'll help you save money on deployments at scale.
Images for Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud can now be purchased directly from Google Cloud by selecting Ubuntu Pro as the operating system (from the Google Cloud Console). For more information on Ubuntu Pro on Google Cloud check out the official documentation (https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/images/os-details#ubuntu_pro) and read the Google announcement (https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/compute/ubuntu-pro-available-on-google-cloud) about the new offering.
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