Linux Kernel 4.2 was released yesterday, at noon. Linus Torvalds wrote on [lkml.org][1]:
> So judging by how little happened this week, it wouldn’t have been a mistake to release 4.2 last week after all, but hey, there’s certainly a few fixes here, and it’s not like delaying 4.2 for a week should have caused any problems either.
>
> So here it is, and the merge window for 4.3 is now open. I already have a few pending early pull requests, but as usual I’ll start processing them tomorrow and give the release some time to actually sit.
>
> The shortlog from rc8 is tiny, and appended. The patch is pretty tiny too…
### What’s New in Kernel 4.2: ###
- rewrites of Intel Assembly x86 code
- support for new ARM boards and SoCs
- F2FS per-file encryption
- The AMDGPU kernel DRM driver
- VCE1 video encode support for the Radeon DRM driver
- Initial support for Intel Broxton Atom SoCs
- Support for ARCv2 and HS38 CPU cores.
- added queue spinlocks support
- many other improvements and updated drivers.
### How to Install Kernel 4.2 in Ubuntu: ###
The binary packages of this kernel release are available for download at link below:
- [Download Kernel 4.2 (.DEB)][1]
First check out your OS type, 32-bit (i386) or 64-bit (amd64), then download and install the packages below in turn: