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Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)

Overview

What is Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)?

Red Hat Enterprise Linux is a Linux distribution mainly used in commercial data centers.

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Recent Reviews

Redhat RHEL Review

10 out of 10
February 26, 2024
Incentivized
Right now, primarily, we're using it to support a tools infrastructure for a hybrid cloud solution for our company itself. We also use it …
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Reviewer Pros & Cons

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Video Reviews

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Automation Architect Dissects | Red Hat RHEL Review
04:11
Systems Architect Doesn't Mince Words - Red Hat RHEL Review
04:46
Honest Senior Analytics Engineer Dishes | Red Hat RHEL Review
07:36
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Product Demos

Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8 Virtual Disk Optimizer (VDO) Demo.

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OCB: Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) for Edge - Ben Breard (Red Hat)

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Install Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8

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Product Details

What is Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)?

Red Hat Enterprise Linux is a Linux distribution mainly used in commercial data centers.


Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Technical Details

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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(231)

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Reviews

(1-9 of 9)
Companies can't remove reviews or game the system. Here's why
February 26, 2024

Redhat RHEL Review

Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Right now, primarily, we're using it to support a tools infrastructure for a hybrid cloud solution for our company itself. We also use it to manage, I won't mention the name, but a very large casino that has a mix of AIX and RHEL involved. And all the stuff that we typically use are more the backend functioning, regulatory, that sort of thing. So our job is to make sure they're up and running and doing what they need to do. If the regulators aren't happy, people can't do business. It's relatively inexpensive versus the traditional, which would be AIX or other UNIX systems that have been around forever. They can fit in niches, really small. The ability to work with some of the open source, all of them have that ability now, but RHEL it's certainly more integrated and it's actually just a very easy configurable functional OS that can do a lot and we can roll them out as we need.
  • Runs applications pretty well. It's quite configurable. I'm trying to think of specifics. She works with automation very, very well. Some of the vulnerability fixes and so forth. The way it's integrated within the whole entire Red Hat ecosystem, works pretty well too. So there's rolling out the software and the things that they're given in other OSS, there's a whole lot of hoops you got to go through RHEL, it's not there. So I hope that was specific enough.
  • From an automation perspective. RHEL is really moving forward, but some of their ideas are still not ideas, but their implementations of it still feel half-baked, like the functionality's there, but it's not the kind of functionality that to me makes it a full-on solution with OpenShift in particular as we're bringing this in and we're getting more into containers because it's more important for the banking industry and other industries. Justice General, well you can do this by script and we don't have an interface for this and sort of things sort of like that. I'm trying to think if there's anything else that RHEL does that bothers me as a general rule.
Where it's very well suited is just if you're rolling out systems quickly, web front ends, and so forth. I think it's really well suited for that. Even backend operations. It does a good job. However, I do think that it's not as industrial-proven as other operating systems out there. Like say the banking industry, they love AIX, cause it's IBM, it's been around forever and it's rock solid. And to try to get that much computing power in an intel box is difficult. So RHEL is limited in what it can do versus some of the P series and I series stuff that IBM does.
May 24, 2023

RHEL Review

Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Operating System of choice for scalable digital services. When it comes to a digital transformation the underlying platforms here are all Linux which allows for the deployment of the supporting apps and infra.
  • stability :)
  • patching
  • install packages
  • restart quick
  • live kernel patching?
Stable operating system. Easy to support at scale
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Multiple applications, including Oracle, Cloverleaf, Java, MQ, web servers, etc.
  • It is well documented and supported
  • It is a leading OS, and therefore has a great user community
  • Wide variety of apps and app vendors
  • Maybe a native GUI - not on the console - for my Windows users (who think the whole world should be like Windows)
  • There is really not much that Red Hat Enterprise Linux does badly
Well suited for those who are network savvy. And for those who like CLIs.
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) has been selected as the operating system of choice for our business critical development servers. With its reputation for stability, Red Hat Enterprise Linux was the obvious choice to support our business critical applications. Coupled with professional technical support and services, RHEL has been both reliable and stable in our deployment.
  • Stability. RHEL is well recognized for its stability while maintaining good support for necessary security patches.
  • Support. Unlike many free Linux distributions, Red Hat Enterprise Linux is run like a true first-class enterprise offering, with professional support.
  • Latest Features. By nature of it offering such strong stability, RHEL is often slow to offer newer packages, favoring stability over newness.
  • Price. All of the stability and support comes at a cost, and it can't compete when you don't need the added support.
As I've discussed previously, Red Hat Enterprise Linux is really well suited to environments where one requires near absolute stability. RHEL's reputation for extensive uptime is well deserved, and if you're hosting an enterprise application on a RHEL server, it's unlikely that the operating system will be a source of instability.

You should avoid RHEL if you're looking for a Linux development environment, as you'll not be satisfied with the speed of package updating, nor the daily user interface.
Chris Saenz | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
RHEL is one of the primary operating systems that we implement at our organization. It's a major Linux distribution that is supported by Red Hat for enterprise customers. We use it when an application requires Linux or our users prefer RHEL to host their application. When users prefer RHEL, it is typically the first or only Linux distribution that is compatible.
  • Stable OS.
  • Release security patches quickly.
  • Compatible with many third-party applications.
  • Support has been hit or miss
RHEL is a rock-solid server for some essential network services, such as NFS, DNS, SMTP, Apache, Tomcat, etc., in addition to running third-party applications. It may not as well suited for things like DHCP because of the lack of active directory integration. Also, if users are used to NTFS permissions backed by a domain, then running as a file share may not be as beneficial as running a Windows CIFS server.
Holman Cárdenas, M.Eng, TOGAF®, ITIL® | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Red Hat Enterprise Linux is used across the whole organization for our servers, mainly for the mission-critical environments running Oracle DB. It provides an efficient, secure and stable platform we are happy with.
  • Quick turnaround time on security releases.
  • Reliable OS providing a strong environnement.
  • Excellent support through the RHEL site.
  • Complex upgrade policies between major versions.
  • Hardware compatibility.
  • Cost.
This should be your first choice if you are thinking about using Linux mission-critical servers and/or Oracle databases. Price could be a con if you are a small or budget-restricted company starting operations (in that case I would recommend you CentOS because it is free and in case you don't mind searching in the community when you'd need support).
October 22, 2019

RHEL is worth using

Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
ResellerIncentivized
It's been used by my organization and we support the product which is robust and secure. It's easy to understand and helpful in troubleshooting issues with different trees assigned for each function.
  • It is very secure where root access is the only option to make any major changes, and profiles and roles have been defined to assign user-level access to different directories.
  • During troubleshooting it's easy to fix one since each feature has its own directory to look for and it's easy to point to the issue.
  • Vulnerabilities are fixed with easy patch creation which fixed the issue quickly and without affecting the other working features.
  • Graphical representation has to be more user-friendly.
  • Layman should be able to understand the directory and work on the feature enablement and disablement in Linux.
It's suited for data center and voice that needs to be very secure and robust. If basic user level changes are required, then Linux fails since it's not very user-friendly for the layman.
Ryan Payne | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Red Hat Enterprise Linux is the operating system of choice on which many of our major enterprise applications are running. It provides an efficient stable platform for major technology systems across the enterprise.
  • Stable and efficient OS
  • Addresses critical vulnerabilities quickly
  • Familiar command structure for technical resources
  • Task scheduling ease of use
  • Shared mounting protocol support
  • Third party services support
Very suitable for running large scale applications in a datacenter environment. Smaller applications or distributed systems are better suited for Windows or other Linux offerings. The manageability and scalability benefits do not outweigh the cost for these types of deployments.
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
The first name that comes to mind when any of us in the Tech industry think of about servers (except for Windows lovers) is Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
RHEL is used across the whole organization for our servers and we are more than happy with Red Hat products and their services.
  • Exceptional Support
  • Quick turnaround time on security releases
  • Reliable product
  • It's not bleeding edge in terms of updates/patches (but if it jeopardizes reliability we are better off one step behind)
  • Seen some severe issues with certain updates in the recent past
If you're thinking Linux servers, this should be your top choice. Unless you choose to go open source and pick CentOS (my personal favorite, Linux power users or lovers will know the bare differences). If you are a small company just starting out I'd recommend CentOS based on sheer cost (free).
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