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CentOS version numbers for releases older than 7.0 have two parts, a major version and a minor version, which correspond to the major version and update set of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) used to build a particular CentOS release. For example, CentOS 6.5 is built from the source packages of RHEL 6 update 5 (also known as RHEL version 6.5 ...
In April 2019, it was announced that feature development for Scientific Linux would be discontinued, but that maintenance will continue to be provided for the 6.x and 7.x releases through the end of their life cycles. Fermilab and CERN will utilize CentOS Stream [4] and AlmaLinux [5] for their deployment of 8.x release instead.
CentOS Stream 9 was released on 3 December 2021, [9] with support of IBM Z architecture. In 2023, Red Hat announced that CentOS 7 and CentOS Stream 8 will be discontinued in 2024 in order to focus on Red Hat Enterprise Linux development. CentOS Stream 9 was given as one possible migration path. [10] CentOS Stream 10 was released on 12 December ...
CentOS: CentOS Project CentOS Project 2003 9 [10] 10 years [11] 2021-12-03 X Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) server, workstation None Inactive CentOS Stream: CentOS Project CentOS Project 2019 9 [12] 5 years [13] 2021-12-03 X Upstream of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) server, workstation None Active Chakra: Jan Mette and Arch Linux KDEmod ...
“This should be sufficient for you all to end all the rumors,” she said in the video. Two runways at Reagan National will remain closed for about a week: airport official 20:15 , Kelly Rissman
End of Full Support End of Maintenance Support 1 (RHEL 5, 6, 7) End of Maintenance Support (RHEL 8, 9, 10), Maintenance Support 2 (RHEL 5, 6, 7) (product retirement) End of Extended Lifecycle Support 2.1 U-7 26 March 2002 (AS) 1 May 2003 (ES) 30 November 2004 31 May 2005 31 May 2009 [73] —
CentOS 8 will die at the end of the year, There will not be a CentOS 9. That approach is similar to the one taken for Scientific Linux, which is discontinued, but still supported until RHEL 7 dies in 2024. Quetstar 21:42, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
[23] [24] The LTS support period was increased to 6 years; Linux kernel 4.4 will have 6 years of support before being taken over by the "Civil Infrastructure Platform" (CIP) project that plans to maintain it for a minimum of 10 years under "SLTS (Super Long Term Support)" (the CIP has only, for now, decided to maintain for 64-bit x86-64 and 32 ...