this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
274 points (98.9% liked)

linuxmemes

21263 readers
929 users here now

Hint: :q!


Sister communities:


Community rules (click to expand)

1. Follow the site-wide rules

2. Be civil
  • Understand the difference between a joke and an insult.
  • Do not harrass or attack members of the community for any reason.
  • Leave remarks of "peasantry" to the PCMR community. If you dislike an OS/service/application, attack the thing you dislike, not the individuals who use it. Some people may not have a choice.
  • Bigotry will not be tolerated.
  • These rules are somewhat loosened when the subject is a public figure. Still, do not attack their person or incite harrassment.
  • 3. Post Linux-related content
  • Including Unix and BSD.
  • Non-Linux content is acceptable as long as it makes a reference to Linux. For example, the poorly made mockery of sudo in Windows.
  • No porn. Even if you watch it on a Linux machine.
  • 4. No recent reposts
  • Everybody uses Arch btw, can't quit Vim, and wants to interject for a moment. You can stop now.

  • Please report posts and comments that break these rules!

    founded 1 year ago
    MODERATORS
     
    you are viewing a single comment's thread
    view the rest of the comments
    [–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago (2 children)

    For what i understand they will fork the last version of RHEL and them just keep updating themselves, but i haven't really looked into it to know if that's the case

    [–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    It's funny because this is a pretty obvious just PR grab by SUSE. SUSE for years now has already provided updates for RHEL. Part of their strategy for selling SUSE Manager is that you can update SUSE and RHEL from it without any vendor lock-in. It's a SUSE repository that provides those updates not Red Hat. It looks like the only thing changing is they'll provide a base image now too.

    [–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

    Oh! Thank you my friend now everything makes sense

    [–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    RHEL is not going closed source. That would be illegal for at least the copyleft components. They provide the full sources in the customer portal which is crap but not the same as closed source.

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    That part i understand, but is not a viable way to fork into another distro every update, ecen tho i believe or rocky linux or alma linux was going that route for now

    [–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

    Alma is actually doing the correct thing. Alma seems to be about the only group that realized what Red Hat is doing. Alma is now going to be based on CentOS Stream and will no longer be "bug by bug" compatible with RHEL. Instead they will, like CentOS Stream, be ABI compatible with RHEL. Not only are they going to do that, but they're actually adding to CentOS Stream to meet their customer's needs and contributing back to the community project. Kudos to them for making the community stronger.

    Rocky does not do that. Rocky hired sales people away from Red Hat, then started poaching RHEL customers by offering support at 20-30% of the cost. A savings they can afford because they're not putting in the engineering effort. They were taking all the work Red Hat put in, stealing their customers, and contributing nothing back. Rocky is now talking about using gray areas of legality to try and get source rpms from the UBI images and from cloud instances. They essentially want to rent a cloud instance on AWS, clone the entire srpm repo for export, then destroy the instance.