On Tue, 29 Mar 2022 at 00:10, Peter J. Holzer <hjp-pyt...@hjp.at> wrote: > They are are about a year apart, so they will usually contain different > versions of most packages right from the start. So the Ubuntu and Debian > security teams probably can't benefit much from each other.
Well, this is what my updater on Lubuntu says to me today: Changes for tcpdump versions: Installed version: 4.9.3-0ubuntu0.18.04.1 Available version: 4.9.3-0ubuntu0.18.04.2 Version 4.9.3-0ubuntu0.18.04.2: * SECURITY UPDATE: buffer overflow in read_infile - debian/patches/CVE-2018-16301.patch: Add check of file size before allocating and reading content in tcpdump.c and netdissect-stdinc.h. - CVE-2018-16301 * SECURITY UPDATE: resource exhaustion with big packets - debian/patches/CVE-2020-8037.patch: Add a limit to the amount of space that can be allocated when reading the packet. - CVE-2020-8037 I use an LTS version. So it seems that Ubuntu benefits from Debian security patches. Not sure about the contrary. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list