Fedora Linux has recently rolled out security updates for several packages, including salt, mingw-python-requests, and mingw-djvulibre, as part of its ongoing commitment to enhance system security. The updates are as follows:
1. Salt Update: The salt package has been updated to version 3007.5-2.fc41. Salt is a distributed remote execution system designed to manage commands and data across multiple servers efficiently. This update addresses regressions that occurred during a previous bug fix related to CVE-2025-22238. Users can install this update using the command `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-b712778148'`.
2. MinGW-Python-Requests Update: The mingw-python-requests package has been updated to version 2.32.4-1.fc41. This library facilitates HTTP requests in Python applications running on Windows. The update addresses a security vulnerability (CVE-2024-47081) that could allow for credential leaks via malicious URLs. The installation command for this update is `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-47916db6c7'`.
3. MinGW-Djvulibre Update: The mingw-djvulibre package has been updated to version 3.5.29-1.fc41. This library is used for handling DjVu file formats in Windows environments. The update fixes a vulnerability (CVE-2025-53367) related to an out-of-bounds write. Users can apply this update with the command `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-0f35c5dbbb'`.
All these updates are signed with the Fedora Project GPG key to ensure their integrity. For further information, users can refer to the Fedora Project's GPG key documentation and the DNF update program's user guide.
As Fedora continues to evolve, users are encouraged to regularly check for updates not only to enhance security but also to benefit from the latest features and improvements across the system. Keeping software up to date is essential for maintaining a secure and efficient computing environment
1. Salt Update: The salt package has been updated to version 3007.5-2.fc41. Salt is a distributed remote execution system designed to manage commands and data across multiple servers efficiently. This update addresses regressions that occurred during a previous bug fix related to CVE-2025-22238. Users can install this update using the command `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-b712778148'`.
2. MinGW-Python-Requests Update: The mingw-python-requests package has been updated to version 2.32.4-1.fc41. This library facilitates HTTP requests in Python applications running on Windows. The update addresses a security vulnerability (CVE-2024-47081) that could allow for credential leaks via malicious URLs. The installation command for this update is `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-47916db6c7'`.
3. MinGW-Djvulibre Update: The mingw-djvulibre package has been updated to version 3.5.29-1.fc41. This library is used for handling DjVu file formats in Windows environments. The update fixes a vulnerability (CVE-2025-53367) related to an out-of-bounds write. Users can apply this update with the command `su -c 'dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-0f35c5dbbb'`.
All these updates are signed with the Fedora Project GPG key to ensure their integrity. For further information, users can refer to the Fedora Project's GPG key documentation and the DNF update program's user guide.
As Fedora continues to evolve, users are encouraged to regularly check for updates not only to enhance security but also to benefit from the latest features and improvements across the system. Keeping software up to date is essential for maintaining a secure and efficient computing environment
Salt, MinGW-Python-Requests, MinGW-Djvulibre updates for Fedora
Fedora Linux has been updated with security enhancements, which include salt, mingw-python-requests, and mingw-djvulibre:
Fedora 41 Update: salt-3007.5-2.fc41
Fedora 41 Update: mingw-python-requests-2.32.4-1.fc41
Fedora 41 Update: mingw-djvulibre-3.5.29-1.fc41Salt, MinGW-Python-Requests, MinGW-Djvulibre updates for Fedora @ Linux Compatible