From the moment it was released, RHEL 9 has been engineered for automation, security, and edge computing. Here is why your infrastructure team should take a closer look:
Headline: π Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9: The backbone of the open hybrid cloud.
Whether you are running bare-metal, virtualized, or in a public cloud, RHEL 9 sets the new standard for enterprise-grade Linux. red hat enterprise linux 9
π Includes post-quantum cryptography and improved SELinux policies. βοΈ Image Mode: Deploy the OS as a container image for immutable, DevOps-friendly workflows. π Edge Simplified: Built-in zero-touch provisioning for remote edge devices. π¦ Latest Innovation: Supports Python 3.9, Node.js 18, GCC 11, and LLVM 14.
Weβve been rolling out RHEL 9 across our dev environments, and itβs a solid leap forward. If you are still on version 8 or 7, here is a snapshot of what is new in the RHEL 9 ecosystem (up to the latest 9.4 release): From the moment it was released, RHEL 9
Red Hat is pushing immutable infrastructure. You can now build a RHEL image using a Containerfile, push it to a registry, and boot it directly. This is huge for DevOps pipelines (think: RHEL as a container image, not just a VM).
Option 2: Forum / Blog / Slack Post (Detailed & Technical) Title: [Quick Look] Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 β What you need to know π¦ Latest Innovation: Supports Python 3
π‘ Pro tip: The "RHEL Developer Subscription" is free (up to 16 nodes) for those who want to test drive version 9.3 or 9.4.