Welcome to this week’s TECH VEDA Kernel & Embedded Linux Digest — 5 developments worth your attention, spanning embedded RISC-V hardware, new kernel features, the Yocto build system, and the latest security news.
Zhihe A210 RISC-V SoM debuts
Sipeed’s Zhihe A210 is an octa-core RISC-V SoC built around C920 cores and compliant with the latest RVA23 profile. It pairs a 12 TOPS INT8 NPU with LPDDR5/5X memory and ships on a SODIMM-style system-on-module with a carrier board, backed by a Linux SDK offering both Buildroot and Debian images — a strong signal that production-grade RISC-V edge AI hardware is here.
Source: CNX Software
Linux 7.2 storage gains dm-inlinecrypt
The Linux 7.2 merge window brings a busy storage cycle. Device Mapper gains dm-inlinecrypt for inline block-device encryption, IO_uring picks up zero-copy receive notifications and reliability fixes, and NVMe adds per-controller timeout attributes and P2PDMA for multipath devices — meaningful gains for embedded and edge storage workloads.
Source: Phoronix
Yocto 5.0.8 Scarthgap LTS lands
The Yocto Project shipped 5.0.8, another point release on the long-term-support Scarthgap branch. It rolls up security fixes and recipe updates across poky, oe-core and bitbake, including CVE backports for the linux-yocto 6.6 kernel — exactly the kind of maintenance release product teams should track to keep BSPs current.
Source: Yocto Project
Linux 7.2 deprecates AF_ALG crypto API
Kernel developers are deprecating AF_ALG, the user-space interface to the kernel crypto engine, in Linux 7.2, citing its “massive attack surface.” Offloading paths are being dropped first. Embedded projects that route crypto through AF_ALG should plan to migrate to in-kernel or library-based alternatives.
Source: Phoronix
Fragnesia flaw roots Linux via XFRM
Tracked as CVE-2026-46300 and dubbed “Fragnesia,” this flaw lives in the kernel’s XFRM ESP-in-TCP subsystem and lets an unprivileged local user overwrite sensitive system files to escalate to root. If your fleet enables IPsec ESP-in-TCP, prioritise patching to a fixed kernel.
Source: SecurityWeek
The bottom line
The convergence of RISC-V silicon, Yocto-based BSPs, and a fast-moving mainline kernel keeps Embedded Linux at the centre of edge AI and IoT. TECH VEDA distils the ecosystem so you can stay current without combing through a dozen mailing lists and changelogs. See you in the next issue.


