Linux Kernel 7.0.10 released

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Linux Kernel 7.0.10 has been released, addressing critical memory accounting bugs that could lead to system panics and network issues. The update includes significant improvements to the networking stack, graphics drivers for Intel and AMD, and filesystem accounting, all aimed at enhancing stability for users running virtual machines or high-performance setups. Key fixes prevent memory leaks, buffer allocation failures, and false storage full errors, ensuring smoother multitasking and reducing the risk of unexpected reboots. Users are encouraged to install this update to benefit from these stability enhancements and avoid known issues in custom Linux environments



Linux Kernel 7.0.10 released

Linux Kernel 7.0.10 finally patches the memory accounting bugs that quietly chew through VRAM and network buffers until your system decides to panic mid-render or drop a high-speed connection. The networking stack gets cleaned up so RDS and ksmbd stop leaking file handles and spilling uninitialized stack data into user space, which usually means fewer surprise reboots after running containers all day. Graphics drivers for Intel and AMD now handle buffer allocation failures without freezing your desktop, while Btrfs and Ceph get corrected byte tracking that stops false storage full errors from locking up your drives. Skip the bloatware updates and grab this release if you actually run virtual machines or juggle multiple GPUs, since it targets the exact race conditions that make custom Linux setups feel unstable.

Linux Kernel 7.0.10 released @ Linux Compatible