I'm pleased to announce the release of nbdkit 1.46.  nbdkit is a
Network Block Device server.  You can read more about Network Block
Device and nbdkit here:

  https://libguestfs.org/nbdkit.1.html

The new version is available here:

  https://download.libguestfs.org/nbdkit/1.46-stable/

The release notes are attached below or you can read them online here:

  https://libguestfs.org/nbdkit-release-notes-1.46.1.html

Rich.


----------------------------------------------------------------------


       These are the release notes for nbdkit stable release 1.46.  This
       describes the major changes since 1.44.

       nbdkit 1.46.0 was released on 20 December 2025.

   Security
       On certain types of storage, notably where a disk image is on an NFS
       mount, nbdkit would truncate zero requests to 64M.  As nbdcopy(1)
       defaults to 128M block size, this could leave parts of a disk unzeroed,
       exposing older content.  This was fixed in 1.44.1 and the fix was
       backported all the way back to the 1.38 branch.  For more details see
       
https://gitlab.com/nbdkit/nbdkit/-/commit/20b23fc9838faeddfd42664a7f497a9b29dc5921
       (thanks Alex Kalenyuk).

       See nbdkit-security(1) for past security issues.

   Plugins
       New nbdkit-vram-plugin(1) which allows Video RAM to be turned into an
       NBD disk, using OpenCL.

       nbdkit-vddk-plugin(1) "export" parameter (added in 1.44) now allows
       exports from subdirectories on the ESXi server (thanks Ming Xie).

       nbdkit-data-plugin(1) now supports "base64:..." in format strings.

       nbdkit-sh-plugin(3) and nbdkit-extentlist-filter(1) both now allow blank
       lines and comments in the list of extents (Eric Blake).

       nbdkit-ssh-plugin(1) can now handle remote block devices properly
       (thanks trainzkid).  Also we display information about the remote SSH
       server in debug output.

       nbdkit-random-plugin(1) has a new "fast=true" mode which trades
       increased performance for less randomness.

       nbdkit-pattern-plugin(1) has new "stride" and "upper" parameters.
       Stride is used for creating patterns that align to filesystem or device
       block boundaries.  Upper is used to modify the upper bits of each
       pattern, so that a different pattern appears on each run.  This plugin
       also now supports checking writes.

       nbdkit-file-plugin(1) prints more useful debugging (when the -v option
       is used).  On Windows this plugin now displays complete error messages
       instead of just error codes.  The existing "cache=none" parameter has
       been renamed "reduce-memory-pressure=true" to reflect what it actually
       does (but the old parameter can still be used).

   Filters
       nbdkit-cacheextents-filter was deprecated before and has been removed in
       this release of nbdkit.  If you used this filter before, the advice is
       simply to remove it from the filter chain as it usually wasn't
       effective.

       New nbdkit-count-filter(1) which produces a simple summary of the number
       of bytes read, written, etc.

       New nbdkit-indexed-gzip-filter(1) which can be used to random access
       gzip files efficiently (Shasheen Ediriweera).

       New nbdkit-map-filter(1) which can remap disk blocks arbitrarily.

       nbdkit-delay-filter(1) has a new "delay-trigger=FILE" option that lets
       you enable the filter based on the existence of a file.

   Language bindings
       Python binding for nbdkit_parse_bool(3).

       Fix crasher when unloading OCaml plugins (Guillaume Munch-Maccagnoni).
       Also we document that "nbdkit -s" does not work for OCaml plugins, you
       must use systemd socket activation instead.

   Server
       New nbdkit --name parameter which allows you to name nbdkit instances.
       This is useful when you have multiple copies of nbdkit running,
       especially if they are all writing debug or error messages into a single
       log file, so you can tell which instance produced a particular message
       (thanks Ming Xie).

       You can now read nbdkit command line parameters from an external file
       using @PATH syntax.

       nbdkit --long-options and --short-options are used to implement bash
       completion.  Previously they were hidden, implementation-specific
       options.  However they are useful enough to support and document.

       During the negotiation phase we now allow the client to send more than
       one "OPT_LIST" request (Eric Blake).

       Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) is now fully supported (thanks Dan
       Berrange).

       New command line option --tls-priority allows you to temporarily
       override the system TLS priority string.

   API
       New nbdkit_debug_hexdump(3) function which can be used to print a buffer
       in canonical hexdump format, for debugging.

   Bug fixes
       nbdkit-file-plugin(1) trimming and zeroing paths were fixed so they
       should work on a wider range of backing storage.

       Empty string is now rejected as either a plugin or filter name.  This
       caused us to try to dlopen("") which actually opens the current
       executable (apparently a glibc extension).  It would fail with a very
       confusing error.

       Fix nbdkit_parse_delay(3) on i386 without SSE.  The previous code used
       the wrong floating point rounding mode.

       The way that nbdkit-linuxdisk-plugin(1) parsed the output of du(1) using
       getline(3) was not POSIX compliant, and a change to glibc broke it.
       This was fixed in nbdkit, but also caused POSIX to reconsider the
       wording of the getline standard (thanks Eric Blake).

       Fix our use of mke2fs(8) when creating a test disk for
       nbdkit-ext2-filter(1).  This greatly reduces the amount of disk space
       used for nbdkit builds (Mykola Ivanets).

       Fix crashing bugs in nbdkit-checkwrite-filter(1) (Eric Blake).

       Fix order of inclusion of Python header file because of changes in
       recent Python 3.14.

       nbdkit-readonly-filter(1) now advertises the correct readonly status
       down to plugins (Eric Blake).

       Review Coverity warnings.

   Documentation
       Document how to attach NBD devices to QEMU VMs, either when using qemu
       directly, or with libvirt (thanks Vadim Rozenfeld, Peter Krempa).

       TODO and SECURITY files in the git repository now use markdown.

   Tests
       Tests no longer fail if qemu-img(1) is not available at build time.

   Build
       Installed package names are printed by "./configure".

   Internals
       New ONCE() macro which runs code only once.  This is used for some
       informational debug messages where we want the message to be printed
       once, the first time the situation is encountered.

       Several extensions to the internal vector type, including "vector_uniq",
       "vector_append_array", "vector_insert_array", "vector_remove_range".

       Fix the memory allocation behaviour of the internal vector library,
       which should reduce memory usage in some situations (Eric Blake).

       New tests functions "requires_tls", "requires_tls_certificates",
       "requires_tls_psk".

       Use "__attribute__((nonnull))" in more places, and add
       "__attribute__((malloc))" annotation on certain functions.

SEE ALSO
       nbdkit(1).

AUTHORS
       Authors of nbdkit 1.46:

       Eric Blake
       Michael Ablassmeier
       Mykola Ivanets
       Richard W.M. Jones
       Shasheen Ediriweera



-- 
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com
virt-p2v converts physical machines to virtual machines.  Boot with a
live CD or over the network (PXE) and turn machines into KVM guests.
http://libguestfs.org/virt-v2v
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