Who cares?
My company’s 9,000 CentOS machines and over 100,000 containers now mostly run Amazon Linux or Alpine. Rocky Linux was preferred by some, but we led the way and the rest followed. Our final licensed RH systems will also disappear this quarter (legacies of a DC-centric era), and we will be free of them.
It was inertia that kept us with RH, but their bad faith moves kicked us into action. We now have better security tooling and processes all around, too.
Good riddance, Red Hat (and IBM, until your next acquisition and corporate strangling)!
I immediately called this after IBM bought Redhat. Its the same story that always happens: large company buys out other large company and runs it into the ground.
Wouldn’t say always. Here in Canada our telecoms have a great time buying out competitors, making a ton of money, and fucking over customers. The last one was Rogers’ acquisition of Shaw, Shaw being huge and Rogers being fucking massive.
I still can’t believe that deal was allowed to go through.
It just never ends. I’m so happy I’ve moved to Debian.
RedHat is the shittiest part of the Linux world.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
It looks like the Red Hat change restricting access to RHEL sources that was announced last year is having the unintended consequence of causing some headaches for CentOS special interest group (SIG) projects.
This is the special interest group maintaining extra kernel modules for CentOS Stream and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
We are working with Red Hat to resolve this situation and hope to be able to provide packages for Enterprise Linux again as soon as possible."
Due to restricting access to the RHEL kernel sources among other Red Hat Enterprise Linux source packages, it’s causing issues for the CentOS SIG trying to improve the kernel modules experience for RHEL (and CentOS Stream) users…
For the foreseeable future, the Hyperscale SIG will be tracking Fedora kernels to build and release into CentOS.
The kernel is still built with a RHEL-like configuration, modulo changes for CentOS Hyperscale specifically."
The original article contains 334 words, the summary contains 147 words. Saved 56%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Who rhelly didn’t see this coming.
OpenELA just became more relevant than ever!