Posts for: #linux-distribution

openSUSE Leap Micro 5.5 Beta Released for Container & VM Focused Distro

The openSUSE Leap Micro 5.5 Beta has been released, offering a lightweight Linux operating system designed for containers and virtualized workloads. As the community version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Micro, openSUSE Leap Micro focuses on reliability and caters to container and virtualization use-cases. One of the major changes in this release is improved Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) support. A release candidate for Leap Micro 5.5 will be available soon, with the official general availability (GA) release expected in early October. For more information and to download the Leap Micro 5.5 Beta, visit the openSUSE website.

Source: Phoronix.

Intel Expands Collaboration with Red Hat, Canonical, and SUSE for Optimized Linux Distros

Intel announced at their Innovation 2023 conference that they are collaborating with software vendors such as Red Hat, Canonical, and SUSE to provide Intel-optimized Linux distributions, Phoronix reports. This is part of Intel’s push for “optimized performance” in the Linux world.

The collaboration aims to provide Intel-optimized distributions of enterprise software releases, ensuring optimized performance for the latest Intel architectures. This is an extension of previous collaborations, such as Canonical and Intel’s work on Ubuntu optimized for select Intel CPUs.

In addition to the collaboration on Linux distributions, Intel and Red Hat announced an expanded collaboration with Intel contributing to upstream RHEL through CentOS Stream. Intel will also continue contributing performance optimizations to tools and frameworks in the AI space, such as PyTorch and TensorFlow.

These collaborations are expected to bring new optimizations for performance and power efficiency. Intel’s Clear Linux platform will continue to be maintained with aggressive performance optimizations. The enterprise Linux distributions, such as Red Hat and SUSE, are exploring raising their baseline requirements and implementing optimized libraries based on the CPU in use.

Phoronix promises to report on the results of these collaborations, including benchmarking.

Source: Phoronix.