It's here - it works. It's available. Red Hat Enterprise Linux has just released 8.4 beta - what will be most interesting is how long it takes any of the clones other than Oracle to release an 8.4 when it finally comes out.
Yes, from the binary compatibility with RHEL point of view there will be nothing to choose between Alma and Rocky, so the differences will lie in areas like financial stability and the ability to track new RHEL releases in a timely fashion.
I'm running Almalinux on one of my systems, and it seems fine so far. Literally nothing worth reporting, which is a good thing in this case.
"An organization dries up if you don't challenge it with growth."
-- Mark Shepherd, former President and CEO of Texas Instruments
Almalinux (Score:1)
It's here - it works. It's available. Red Hat Enterprise Linux has just released 8.4 beta - what will be most interesting is how long it takes any of the clones other than Oracle to release an 8.4 when it finally comes out.
Re: (Score:1)
Yes, from the binary compatibility with RHEL point of view there will be nothing to choose between Alma and Rocky, so the differences will lie in areas like financial stability and the ability to track new RHEL releases in a timely fashion.
I'm running Almalinux on one of my systems, and it seems fine so far. Literally nothing worth reporting, which is a good thing in this case.