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  • Debian 13.2 now available with new security updates rolled into updated ISO


    Karlston

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    • 426 views
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    With Windows 10’s mainline updates ending last month, some readers may have jumped over to Debian 13 “Trixie” to power older computers that don’t support Windows 11. If this were you, you might be interested to hear that Debian 13.2 has been released this weekend. The main purpose of this new update is to bundle corrections for security issues, saving you time on new installations.

     

    As alluded to, this update is not really a new version of Debian 13, it just updates some of the included packages so that if you install it on your system, you don’t need to spend so long installing updates as they’re already installed. If you have Debian 13 already, you can just install the latest updates and reboot. New images are already available.

     

    This update includes numerous miscellaneous bugfixes and security-related corrections. Among the misc bugfixes the 7zip package has been updated from upstream with security fixes; curl has received fixes for a buffer over-read, cache poisoning, and path traversal issues; systemd received an upstream stable release update, fixing DNS-over-TLS handling in systemd-resolved and improving service stability; finally, qemu got a new upstream stable release, fixing a denial of service issue.

     

    Packages that received security updates with advisories published separately by the Security Team include: chromium, linux, linux-signed-amd64, linux-signed-arm64, firefox-esr, openssl, thunderbird, and imagemagick. The rust-profiling-procmacros package was removed because it is unused.

     

    Debian 13 “Trixie” is the latest stable version of Debian. It was released in August 2025 and will be supported until August 2028. It’s the last major Debian version we will see until 2027 when Debian 14 “Forky” is expected to ship. Debian has a reputation for being rock solid and very stable, but this can also mean users are stuck using older software. Ubuntu is based on Debian Unstable so it has access to newer packages and is usually a slightly better choice than Debian for most people.

     

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    Hope you enjoyed this news post. Feedback welcome.

    Posted Sunday 16 November 2025 at 6:03 pm AEST (my time).

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