Packages changed: libX11 (1.8.2 -> 1.8.1) pam pam-full-src perl-Bootloader (0.939 -> 0.940) systemd === Details === ==== libX11 ==== Version update (1.8.2 -> 1.8.1) Subpackages: libX11-6 libX11-data libX11-xcb1 - Update to version 1.8.1 This release fixes the --enable-thread-safety-constructor option to the configure script to work as intended. In the previous release, the changes for this option may not have been enabled when the option was not specified or when the --enable option was specified. While we have enabled it by default, believing that doing so will reduce the number of bugs users encounter running libX11 clients, in some cases it may expose bugs in which clients had previously gotten away with calling libX11 functions while a libX11 lock is already held, and thus now deadlock, as discussed in https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/lib/libx11/-/issues/157 - let's hope this version doesn't suffer yet from the regressions reported in boo#1205778, boo#1205818 (reported against 1.8.2); we need libX11 thread safe for totem (GNOME 43) :-( - going back to version 1.7.5 for now to get rid of regressions, which were introduced by trying to get thread-safe in libX11 itself - re-introduced U_fix-a-memory-leak-in-XRegisterIMInstantiateCallback.patch which was not yet in 1.7.5 - supersedes the following patches * U_0001-Add-XFreeThreads-function.patch * U_0002-Don-t-use-pragma-inside-a-function-it-breaks-compili.patch * U_0003-Fix-797755-Allow-X-IfEvent-to-reenter-libX11.patch * U_0004-Indentation-fixes-around-recent-dpy-in_ifevent-chang.patch * U_0005-ChkIfEv.c-fix-wrong-handling-of-dpy-in_ifevent.patch ==== pam ==== Subpackages: pam_unix - Move pam_env config files below /usr/etc ==== pam-full-src ==== - Move pam_env config files below /usr/etc ==== perl-Bootloader ==== Version update (0.939 -> 0.940) - merge gh#openSUSE/perl-bootloader#140 - add basic support for systemd-boot - 0.940 ==== systemd ==== Subpackages: libsystemd0 libudev1 systemd-doc udev - Don't ship symlink /usr/lib/environment.d/99-environment.conf anymore. /etc/environment is owned and parsed (among other config files) by pam_env(8), which is included by 'systemd-user' PAM service anyway.