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  2. Red Hat Enterprise Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux

    Originally, Red Hat's enterprise product, then known as Red Hat Linux, was made freely available to anybody who wished to download it, while Red Hat made money from support. Red Hat then moved towards splitting its product line into Red Hat Enterprise Linux which was designed to be stable and with long-term support for enterprise users and ...

  3. Red Hat Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat_Linux

    Red Hat Linux was a widely used commercial open-source Linux distribution created by ... First release to offer ISO images for FTP download. 6.9.5 beta ...

  4. Rocky Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Linux

    Rocky Linux is a clone of RHEL, which is also binary-compatible and is already supported by numerous large, financially strong sponsors. [22] On June 21, 2021, the stable release of Rocky Linux 8.4 was released, [ 23 ] with the code name "Green Obsidian".

  5. Comparison of Linux distributions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Linux...

    Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Red Hat: Red Hat 2002 9.5 [71] 12 years [72] 2024-11-13 X Red Hat Linux, Fedora general Commercial [73] [74] Active Red Hat Linux: Red Hat Red Hat 1995 9 [75] alias Shrike ? 2003-03-31 X – server, workstation None Inactive Rocks Cluster Distribution: UCSD Supercomputing Center, Clustercorp

  6. Oracle Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_Linux

    Potential users can freely download Oracle Linux through Oracle's server, or from a variety of mirror sites, and can deploy and distribute it without cost. [6] The company's Oracle Linux Support program aims to provide commercial technical support, covering Oracle Linux and existing RHEL or CentOS installations but without any certification ...

  7. AlmaLinux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlmaLinux

    On December 8, 2020, Red Hat announced that development of CentOS, a free-of-cost downstream fork of the commercial Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), would be discontinued and its official support would be cut short to focus on CentOS Stream, a stable LTS release without minor releases officially used by Red Hat to preview what is intended for inclusion in updates to RHEL.

  8. FreeIPA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeIPA

    FreeIPA aims to provide a centrally-managed Identity, Policy, and Audit (IPA) system. [5] It uses a combination of Fedora Linux, 389 Directory Server, MIT Kerberos, NTP, DNS, the Dogtag certificate system, SSSD and other free/open-source components.

  9. Linux kernel version history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_kernel_version_history

    Used in RHEL 9.x and derivatives [86] (Redhat ignores LTS-Kernel, own kernel-backports) and SLE 15 SP4/openSUSE Leap 15.4 5.13 27 June 2021 [87] 5.13.19 [88] Greg Kroah-Hartman & Sasha Levin September 2021 [88] Support for Zstd compressed modules [89] Landlock Linux security module [90] Named Opossums on Parade