Besides the early fallout of switching to Rust Coreutils on Ubuntu 25.10 causing some breakage, a more pressing issue has been discovered: Ubuntu 25.10’s unattended upgrades functionality for automatic security updates is currently broken due to a Rust Coreutils bug.
Earlier this month it was reported that the date -r command can report the wrong date on Ubuntu 25.10 due to a Rust Coreutils difference compared to GNU Coreutils. It was noted that this could cause issues for backup scripts and other software relying on the “date -r” output and behavior being the same as GNU Coreutils
- That’s why its in 25.10 before LTS release. To test “early” in real world environments and find these issues. But from the Rust UUtils project side, I wonder how they did not catch this, if its producing different output. - I wonder how they did not catch this - Because the date command fails most of its unit tests and they decided to ship it anyway. I would also argue they don’t have anywhere near enough tests in the first place. - At least from test coverage point of view, I think they aim to have the same tests to pass as the original tools. Not all pass right now, so incompatibility is expected at some point, somewhere. 
 
 
- date -r reports current date instead of date specified by reference file - Seems like it was not simply a “difference compared to GNU coreutils” — it was just giving completely the wrong date. 
- Flatpak support broken, shovelware pile Snap Store pushed down users’ throats, and now this. - Anyone who thinks that Ubuntu is the best choice for new Linux users is fundamentally wrong. - I try not to put much stock in black-and-white opinions because I think the answer is rarely that simple. - I try not to put much stock in black-and-white opinions because I think the answer is rarely that simple. 
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Either Ubuntu 25.10 launched with broken Flatpak support or not. 
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Either Snap Store allows random crap or not. 
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Either Ubuntu 25.10 launched with broken automatic security updates or not. 
 - Sometimes facts are actually black-and-white and not shades of grey opinions. Also, brushing away simple truths by insisting they are extremely complex facets of a thing the common person does not need to get involved is a common disinformation tactic, used by the likes of climate change deniers etc. since decades. 
 
 
- Software has bugs more news at 11 





