Parrot OS 7.2 Released: Copy Fail Patch, 15 Updated Tools, and a New HTB Image
Parrot OS 7.2 Released: Copy Fail Patch, 15 Updated Tools, and a New HTB Image
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Parrot OS 7.2 Released: Copy Fail Patch, 15 Updated Tools, and a New HTB Image
The Parrot Project ships its second update to the 7.x series, prioritising a critical kernel privilege-escalation fix and a sweeping refresh of the penetration-testing toolchain.
The Parrot Project released Parrot OS 7.2 on May 9, 2026, delivering the second update to its 7.x series. While the release gathers months of rolling updates, its primary focus falls on infrastructure improvements, Docker container refinements, and a broad security-tool refresh. Crucially, it ships Linux kernel 6.19.13—carrying a patch for a high-impact local privilege-escalation flaw that matters deeply to the distribution’s core audience of penetration testers and security researchers.
🔐 Critical Kernel Security Fix
The most urgent reason to update is the kernel. Parrot OS 7.2 adopts Linux 6.19.13, which resolves a recently disclosed privilege-escalation vulnerability affecting the kernel’s cryptographic subsystem.
Disclosed on April 29, 2026, this flaw resides in the algif_aead kernel module. An unprivileged local user can exploit it to write controlled bytes into the page cache of any readable file on the system, potentially gaining root privileges. The fix in Linux 6.19.13 closes this attack surface entirely.
The fix is particularly timely for Parrot’s users, who frequently work in environments where privilege escalation is both the target of their assessments and a genuine risk to their own machines. Running an unpatched kernel while actively testing for privilege-escalation vulnerabilities on client infrastructure is an uncomfortable position—this release resolves that.
🛠 15 Updated Security Tools
Parrot OS 7.2 delivers version bumps across the full penetration-testing toolchain. Exact version numbers confirmed in official release notes are listed below.
🖥 Desktop and System Improvements
Parrot OS 7.0 introduced KDE Plasma as the default desktop environment, replacing MATE. Parrot 7.2 continues with KDE Plasma, though the official release notes do not specify the precise component version numbers (Plasma, Frameworks, Qt) shipping in this release. MATE and LXQt spins remain available alongside the Enlightenment spin that debuted in Parrot 7.1.
On the system side, the Parrot Menu is progressing through its migration to a new Go-based codebase, with additional desktop entries added in this release. The parrot-themes and parrot-tools packages have also been refreshed. A notable quality-of-life addition: parrot-core now includes a built-in Flatpak package check that automatically manages Flatpak updates without requiring manual intervention.
The virtual machine codebase has been refactored for improved modularity and readability. The Parrot website and documentation are also undergoing a design overhaul, with several sections already revised for clarity.
📦 Debian 13.4 “Trixie” Synchronisation
As a Debian-derivative, Parrot OS 7.2 synchronises with Debian 13.4 “Trixie” upstream, ensuring all core packages incorporate the latest security patches and stability fixes from the broader Debian ecosystem. Parrot’s security-focused package set remains aligned with this Debian base.
📋 Available Editions
Ships with the full suite of pre-installed penetration testing and cybersecurity tools. Aimed at security professionals, researchers, and red teamers who need a ready-to-go offensive environment.
Designed for everyday use, privacy, and development. Provides a clean system without the full security toolset by default; individual tools can be installed as needed.
Parrot OS 7.2 adds image generation support for the Hack The Box Edition in both ISO and virtual machine formats, enabling quick deployment in HTB lab and CTF environments without manual configuration.
Beyond these desktop editions, the project also offers pre-packaged Docker images, VM images, a WSL image, a Raspberry Pi image, and a RISC-V edition.
