RedSleeve

RedSleeve
Developer The RedSleeve Project
OS family Unix-like (based on RHEL)
Working state Current
Source model Open source
Initial release February 12, 2012 (2012-02-12)
Marketing target Free computing (desktops, servers, workstations)
Available in Multilingual
Update method Yum (PackageKit)
Package manager RPM Package Manager
Platforms ARM
Kernel type Monolithic (Linux)
Default user interface GNOME and KDE (user-selectable)
License GNU GPL & various others.
Official website RedSleeve.org

RedSleeve is a free operating system distribution based upon the Linux kernel. It is derived from the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) distribution, ported to the ARM architecture. RedSleeve exists to provide a free enterprise class computing platform and aims to maintain source compatibility with its upstream source, Red Hat.[1]

RedSleeve is derived from the free and open source software made available by Red Hat, Inc., but is not produced, maintained or supported by Red Hat. Specifically, this product is built from the source code for Red Hat Enterprise Linux versions, under the terms and conditions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux's EULA and the GNU General Public License. The name RedSleeve was chosen because it makes it intuitively obvious what upstream distribution it is derived from, while at the same time implying that it is for the ARM platform (we have sleeves covering our ARMs).

RedSleeve is different from other Red Hat Enterprise Linux derivatives such as CentOS and Scientific Linux in that it is also a port to a new platform (ARM) that is not supported by the upstream distribution.

History

The first official Alpha release was made available on February 12, 2012.

Versioning scheme

RedSleeve aims to maintain equal versioning with the upstream distribution, both in terms of distribution release numbering and the individual package release numbering. The only exception is with the packages that had to be modified from the upstream release. This is only done in order to either remove upstream branding as required by the upstream distributions terms and conditions, or in order to apply additional patches required to make the package build and work on the ARM architecture which at the time of writing the upstream distribution does not support. In such cases, .0 is appended to the package version after the distribution tag.

Media Coverage

RedSleeve Linux 6 was covered on The Register on May 29, 2012.[2]

References

  1. http://www.redsleeve.org/about/
  2. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/05/29/redsleeve_enterprise_linux_arm/
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