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

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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Although CentOS Stream could be considered appropriate and perfectly adequate for enthusiasts and home-labbers, the lack of a long, well-defined life cycle made it inappropriate for most production use and, especially, production use by shops that chose a RHEL-compatible distribution in the first place.

New no-cost, low-cost, and simplified RHEL access

As of February 1, 2021, Red Hat will make RHEL available at no cost for small-production workloads—with "small" defined as 16 systems or fewer. This access to no-cost production RHEL is by way of the newly expanded Red Hat Developer Subscription program, and it comes with no strings—in Red Hat's words, "this isn't a sales program, and no sales representative will follow up."

Red Hat is also expanding the availability of developer subscriptions to teams, as well as individual users. Moving forward, subscribing RHEL customers can add entire dev teams to the developer subscription program at no cost. This allows the entire team to use Red Hat Cloud Access for simplified deployment and maintenance of RHEL on well-known cloud providers, including AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure.

Considering the previous public outrage about CentOS 8's early demise, we reached out to Red Hat for clarification regarding availability guarantees—specifically, whether any guarantee was given that the terms of the free small-production use will stay valid for the length of general support for the RHEL version they cover. After some deliberation, this was the official answer:

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

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Comments

  • edited January 2021

    I dunno, feels kind of like offering a man that died of starvation a meal at this point.

    Thanked by (1)jarland

    https://inceptionhosting.com
    Please do not use the PM system here for Inception Hosting support issues.

  • Now they start fearing of their own decisions.

  • No no, CentOS is gone. This story is finished. No backsies. :relieved:

  • Centos only if I need Centos6, for newer OS, Debian/Ubuntu

    Action and Reaction in history

  • Doesn't make sense, Long Live Debian/Ubuntu. However the enterprise customers heavily rely on RHEL, having 16 production server is still a lot for small and medium businesses.

  • havochavoc OGContent WriterSenpai

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  • SGrafSGraf Hosting ProviderServices Provider

    @gks said:
    Doesn't make sense, Long Live Debian/Ubuntu. However the enterprise customers heavily rely on RHEL, having 16 production server is still a lot for small and medium businesses.

    actually its not as much as you'd think.

    It also adds an extra step to deploying a new server,...

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  • jarlandjarland OGServices Provider
    edited January 2021

    To be honest I'm not opposed to even paying for RHEL, for profitable production servers. What I am reluctant to do is put my faith and money behind a company that violated the sacred bond of LTS on a distro that they were well aware runs the world.

    I'm also not on board with adopting a fork made by anyone with ownership ties to cPanel. Wasn't cloudlinux acquired by them or am I remembering wrong?

    Thanked by (2)jureve alwyzon

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  • How do they track my servers count ? with some kind of key ? can I move the key to another server ?

  • @yokowasis said:
    How do they track my servers count ? with some kind of key ? can I move the key to another server ?

    For RHEL, you need activation with their service before installing any tools with yum or upgrades all solely behind them.
    16 server limit is really awesome, but as @jarland expressed, they did a planned murder of hopes of 100s of thousands developers, their time around the eco-systems. We have spent more than 8000 man hours with CentOS. It is Cent OS enabled more businesses, as we remember, we helped to at least 20 plus companies [in past] to use RHEL subscription, just because our developers were trained well in CentOS, it was easy, the fat wallet clients who concerns about Linux security, opt in for RHEL.

    I see Ubuntu with firewall, minimal strip down version with control over packages and vigilance can be used, in my experience, as many analytics companies use Ubuntu distribution in AWS/Cloud, it is easy for small and medium companies to move forward with other eco-systems.

    I am sure, we will have customers with RHEL subscription,also who wants cost optimised solutions [ubuntu/free RHEL], but our ecosystem now shall be dividing one with Ubuntu and one with RHEL, twice the effort.

    Thanked by (1)jarland
  • @havoc said:

    haha. just wait until everyone get bonked harder than what oracle did


    can't you just slap selinux to debian stable and call it a day?. also most of stuff are inside container these days

  • havochavoc OGContent WriterSenpai

    @mobile said: can't you just slap selinux to debian stable and call it a day?. also most of stuff are inside container these days

    Unless I'm mistaken debian comes with apparmour...so you'd need to chuck that out before adding selinux.

    Containers, yes but not ideal for security. You need to VM it for that.

  • NeoonNeoon OGContent WriterSenpai
    edited January 2021
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