


You can find the current status in the wiki. There are no options for enterprise support, but the community is documenting basically everything and has already set up mailing lists and chat option. For the near future, it is expected to have a stable release, which will be supported through the community. I strongly recommend not to use it in production, yet. You can download the Rocky Linux 8.4 release candidate and test it, if you wish. Unfortunately, the final release of Rocky Linux is not available, yet. Let's have a look what you can expect for today. Now we are having another, but community focused, RHEL downstream distribution, which is a good thing, if you ask me. We want to make sure that it’s not possible for what happened to CentOS to happen to Rocky Linux. To do this, we are establishing the necessary organizational structures to ensure that Rocky Linux remains in the hands of the community. Rocky Linux popped up and announced to provide a complete community driven and free option.įrom the FAQ: Our goal is to maintain Rocky Linux as a community-oriented distribution by the community, for the community. Now it is ahead of RHEL and the community demands something slow and predictable for productive use cases. Nevertheless, there was also the issue, that CentOS was a downstream fork of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) until December 2020. Due to lacking information and partly just wrong communication, this was to be expected. BackgroundĪfter the announcement of CentOS in December, the community was quite angry about it. Let's see what makes it special and why the community is hyped about it. In addition, you may have heard of Rocky Linux.

With Alma Linux OS, we already had a look at one of the new distributions, that try to fill this gap. Nowadays, you can get CentOS Stream with continuous updates, but that's not everybody's cake. CentOS shifted it's support and delivery.
