The Rust Coreutils project, which aims to provide a full, modern Rust implementation of the GNU Core Utilities — the essential command-line tools found on every Linux and Unix-like operating system — has announced the release of version 0.4.

Notably, the project’s growing maturity has already led to real-world adoption in some Linux distros, such as Ubuntu 25.10 “Questing Quokka” and AerynOS, both of which now utilize Rust Coreutils for select system utilities.

Version 0.4 brings this release a step closer to achieving full GNU Coreutils compatibility. According to devs, the latest test results show 544 passing tests, up from 532 in the previous 0.3 release — an increase that raises total compatibility to 85.8%, while failures dropped from 68 to 56.

      • qweertz (they/she)@programming.dev
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        1 hour ago

        Last I checked Ubuntu was not an unstable mess of a rolling release, but a distro people rely on for stability.

        Their normal non-LTS versions are still considered production ready and acting that rash has only solidified my negative opinion of them more…

        • trevor (he/they)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 hour ago

          If you’re expecting stability for any Ubuntu release, that went out the window when Canonical started forcing Snaps.

          But non-LTS Ubuntu releases have always been a testing ground for less-than-stable changes. uutils is just one of them, and the only way to make them stable is to see how they’re being used in the wild.