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SUSE Linux Enterprise products receive more intense testing than the upstream openSUSE community product, with the intention that only mature, stable versions of the included components will make it through to the released enterprise product. It is developed from a common code base with other SUSE Linux Enterprise products.
The initial stable release from the openSUSE Project, SUSE Linux 10.0, was available for download just before the retail release of SUSE Linux 10.0. In addition, Novell discontinued the Personal version, renaming the Professional version to simply "SUSE Linux," and repricing "SUSE Linux" to about the same as the old Personal version.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 25 January 2025. List of software distributions using the Linux kernel This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages) This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this ...
The acquisition was finalized in January 2004 [15] [16] and the name was changed from SuSE Linux AG to a Novell, Inc. subsidiary under the name SuSE Linux GmbH and SUSE Linux Products GmbH. SUSE Linux Products GmbH was entirely responsible for the development of the SUSE Linux distribution and was led by Markus Rex.
Version Claimed IPv6-ready Installed by default DHCPv6 ND RDNSS Notes AIX: 4.3 Yes Yes Yes No AlliedWare Plus: 5.4.4 Yes Yes Yes No Android: 4.2 (Ice Cream Sandwich) Yes [1] [2] Yes No [3] Yes ChromeOS: 67.0.3396.99 Yes Yes No Yes Cisco IOS: 15.3 Yes Yes Yes Yes [4] Support for RDNSS option as of 15.4(1)T, 15.3(2)S. Cisco Meraki: MR series 28.1 ...
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Classic Mac OS: Macintosh File System (MFS) 1985: ... SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 openSUSE 10.2 ext3 [3] [4]
The specific problem is: Active distributions composed entirely of free software (Dragora GNU/Linux-Libre, gNewSense, Guix System, LibreCMC, Musix GNU+Linux, Parabola GNU/Linux-libre, and Trisquel) need information in all sub categories, #General is complete. Please help improve this article if you can.
AppArmor ("Application Armor") is a Linux kernel security module that allows the system administrator to restrict programs' capabilities with per-program profiles. Profiles can allow capabilities like network access, raw socket access, and the permission to read, write, or execute files on matching paths.