Intel announced this morning on the second day of their Innovation 2023 conference that they are collaborating with software vendors such as Red Hat, Canonical, and SUSE for providing Intel-optimized Linux distributions.
Creating a release for an upstream open source package can take a lot of work. Big packages have whole teams dedicated to the process and a well-publicised release schedule. However, the GNU Binutils project is smaller and so just one or two people can handle the releases. This blog is a diary of what happened behind the scenes...
The Ansible community team at Red Hat is building and improving the web presence for the Ansible community. Our goal is to give everyone - from hobbyists, to...
Attend this talk if you wish to learn more about Ansible packaging in Fedora Linux and Fedora EPEL. You will learn about how the different parts of the Ansib...
This year’s Red Hat Summit took place in Boston, Massachusetts and was an opportunity for Red Hat customers and partners to learn, collaborate and gather together to shape the future of enterprise technology. In this article, we dive into how we listened to customers and partners throughout the duration of the event, as well...
SystemD is critical in the scheduling and management of services on a Linux host. In this episode, we’ll cover the basics of starting, stoping, and managing ...
This roundtable-style panel brings together several downstream communities of the Fedora Project. Each downstream community will start the panel with a short...
While Red Hat is the primary sponsor of the Fedora and CentOS Projects, internally, there is a bit of a split-brain syndrome where we separate our sponsorshi...
Matt Hicks talks up Red Hat’s efforts to support generative AI adoption through OpenShift AI and weighs in on the issues surrounding the company’s decision to limit access to RHEL source code.
Introduction In the ever-evolving landscape of container technology, Podman’s latest version, v4.6.0, includes a feature that promises to be a game-changer for system administrators: Podmansh…
Managing Microsoft Active Directory from non-Windows operating systems was once challenging. However, Microsoft has released Windows Admin Center, allowing you to access Active Directory Users and Computers directly from any browser running on any operating system.
GRUB2 and Linux bootloaders in general don't get too much attention these days as for the most part they 'just work' well and most Linux distributions prefer to keep their GRUB menu hidden if at all possible
The Open Enterprise Linux Association will provide the source code needed to create downstream distributions compatible with Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the companies announced.
Quadlet, a tool merged into Podman 4.4, hides the complexity of running containers under systemd to make it easier to maintain unit files written from scratch.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Presents is the show that features the people and technology that make Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® into the world’s leading enterpris...
SiliconANGLE reports that Red Hat's decision to limit access to RHEL sources "has sparked outrage in some circles," but observers contacted by the publication "were mostly sympathetic" to Red Hat's position: Most acknowledged that the company's explanation that it couldn't keep funding the develop...
With CentOS Linux 7 approaching its end of life (EOL) on June 30 2024, organizations using systems based on this version will no longer receive new features, patches, and critical vulnerability updates. If you're using CentOS Linux 7, it's imperative to transition to an alternative Linux distribution that delivers ongoing...
t's well known that Fedora is connected to Red Hat and Red Hat is connected to IBM but what influence does IBM and Red Hat actually have on Fedora Linux
In this episode of Into the Terminal, we continue our arc, discussing how to build and manage your applications on top of RHEL. We’ll be discussing Podman co...
First came AlmaLinux and Rocky Linux. Then Oracle. Now SUSE is coming after Red Hat for changing the rules on RHEL source code. What's next? Microsoft RHEL!?