Article 5D2QC CentOS is gone—but RHEL is now free for up to 16 production servers

CentOS is gone—but RHEL is now free for up to 16 production servers

by
Jim Salter
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5D2QC)
Red-Hat-no-cost-800x456.png

Enlarge / CentOS used to be the preferred way to get RHEL compatibility at no cost. CentOS is gone now-but Red Hat is extending no-cost options for RHEL further than ever before. (credit: Red Hat / DFCisneros)

Last month, Red Hat caused a lot of consternation in the enthusiast and small business Linux world when it announced the discontinuation of CentOS Linux.

Long-standing tradition-and ambiguity in Red Hat's posted terms-led users to believe that CentOS 8 would be available until 2029, just like the RHEL 8 it was based on. Red Hat's early termination of CentOS 8 in 2021 cut eight of those 10 years away, leaving thousands of users stranded.

CentOS Stream

Red Hat's December announcement of CentOS Stream-which it initially billed as a "replacement" for CentOS Linux-left many users confused about its role in the updated Red Hat ecosystem. This week, Red Hat clarifies the broad strokes as follows:

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