}}
Red Hat Linux, assembled by the company
Red Hat, was a popular
Linux distribution until its discontinuation in 2004.
(1)Red Hat Linux 1.0 was released on
November 3,
1994. It was originally called "Red Hat Commercial Linux"
(2) It is the first Linux distribution to use packaging system, the
RPM Package Manager as its packaging format, and over time has served as the starting point for several other distributions, such as
Mandriva Linux and
Yellow Dog Linux.Since 2003, Red Hat has discontinued the Red Hat Linux line in favor of
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) for enterprise environments.
Fedora, developed by the community-supported
Fedora Project and sponsored by Red Hat, is the free version best suited for the home environment. Red Hat Linux 9, the final release, hit its official end-of-life on
2004-04-30, although updates were published for it through 2006 by the
Fedora Legacy project until that shut down in early 2007.
(3) Features
Version 3.0.3 was one of the first Linux distributions to support
Executable and Linkable Format instead of the older a.out format.
(4)Red Hat Linux introduced a graphical installer called
Anaconda, intended to be easy to use for novices, and which has since been adopted by some other Linux distributions. It also introduced a built-in tool called
Lokkit for configuring the
firewall capabilities.In version 6 Red Hat moved to
glibc 2.1,
egcs-1.2, and to the 2.2 kernel.
(5)Versions 7 was released in preparation for the 2.4 kernel, although the first release still used the stable 2.2 kernel. Glibc was updated to version 2.1.92, which was a beta of the upcoming version 2.2 and Red Hat used a patched version of GCC from CVS that they called "2.96".
(6) The decision to ship an unstable GCC version was due to GCC 2.95's bad performance on non-i386 platforms, especially
DEC Alpha(7). Newer GCCs had also improved support for the
C++ standard, which caused much of the existing code not to compile.In particular, the use of a non-released version of GCC caused some criticism, ie. from
Linus Torvalds'
(8) and The GCC Steering Committee
(9); Red Hat was forced to defend their decision.
(10)GCC 2.96 failed to compile the Linux kernel, and some other software used in Red Hat, due stricter checks. It also had an incompatible C++ ABI with other compilers. The distribution included a previous version of GCC for compiling the kernel, called "kgcc".As of Red Hat Linux 8.0,
UTF-8 was enabled as the default
character encoding for the system. This had little effect on
English-speaking users, but enabled much easier
internationalisation and seamless support for multiple languages, including
ideographic,
bi-directional and
complex script languages along with
European languages. However, this did cause some negative reactions among existing
Western European users, whose legacy
ISO-8859-based setups were broken by the change{{Fact|date=February 2008}}.Version 8.0 was also the second to include the
Bluecurve desktop theme. It used a common theme for GNOME-2 and KDE 3.0.2 desktops, as well as OpenOffice-1.0. KDE members did not appreciate the change, claiming that it was not in the best interests of KDE.
(11)Version 9 supported the
Native POSIX Thread Library, which was ported to the 2.4 series kernels by Red Hat.
(12)Red Hat Linux lacked many features due to possible
copyright and
patent problems. For example,
MP3 support was disabled in both
Rhythmbox and
XMMS; instead, Red Hat recommended using
Ogg Vorbis, which has no patents. MP3 support, however, could be installed afterwards, although
royalties are required everywhere MP3 is patented.{{Fact|date=May 2008}} Support for Microsoft's
NTFS file system was also missing, but could be freely installed as well.
Fedora
Red Hat Linux was originally developed exclusively inside Red Hat, with the only feedback from users coming through bug reports and contributions to the included software packages – not contributions to the distribution as such. This was changed in late 2003 when Red Hat Linux merged with the
community-based
Fedora Project. The new plan is to draw most of the codebase from Fedora when creating new Red Hat Enterprise Linux distributions. Fedora replaces the original Red Hat Linux download and retail version.{{Fact|date=May 2008}} The model is similar to the relationship between
Netscape Communicator and
Mozilla, or
StarOffice and
OpenOffice.org, although in this case the resulting commercial product is also fully
free software.
Nomenclature
The official name of the Red Hat Linux distribution is
Red Hat Linux (often abbreviated to
RHL). This name is a conjunction of two words. The first word
Red Hat is that of the Red Hat software company. The second word
Linux refers to the underlying
Linux kernel written by
Linus Torvalds. RedHat, Redhat, RH, Redhat linux, RedHat linux, Redhat Linux, RedHat Linux are common, unofficial names for the software and are discouraged from use.{{Fact|date=May 2008}}Red Hat's
trademark information page states that it is necessary to avoid confusion with redistributed copies which, unlike the official version from Red Hat, come with no support.{{Fact|date=May 2008}} Partly as a result of this, some CD vendors offering Red Hat Linux call it by other names. For example,
Lankum.com calls it
You-Know-Who and
LinuxCD.org calls it
Blue Jacket.
Version history
Release dates drawn from announcements on [news:comp.os.linux.announce comp.os.linux.announce]. Version names are chosen as to be cognitively related to the prior release, yet not related in the same way as the release before that.
(13)
- 1.0 (Mother's Day), 1994-11-03 (Linux 1.2.8)
- 1.1 (Mother's Day+0.1), August 1 1995 (Linux 1.2.11)
- 2.0, September 20 1995 (Linux 1.2.13-2)
- 2.1, November 23 1995 (Linux 1.2.13)
- 3.0.3 (Picasso), May 1 1996 - first release supporting DEC Alpha
- 4.0 (Colgate), October 3 1996 (Linux 2.0.18) - first release supporting SPARC
- 4.1 (Vanderbilt), February 3 1997 (Linux 2.0.27)
- 4.2 (Biltmore), May 19 1997 (Linux 2.0.30-2)
- 5.0 (Hurricane), December 1 1997 (Linux 2.0.32-2)
- 5.1 (Manhattan), May 22 1998 (Linux 2.0.34-0.6)
- 5.2 (Apollo), November 2 1998 (Linux 2.0.36-0.7)
- 6.0 (Hedwig), April 26 1999 (Linux 2.2.5-15)
- 6.1 (Cartman), October 4 1999 (Linux 2.2.12-20)
- 6.2 (Zoot), April 3 2000 (Linux 2.2.14-5.0)
- 7 (Guinness), September 25 2000 (this release is labeled "7" not "7.0") (Linux 2.2.16-22)
- 7.1 (Seawolf), April 16 2001 (Linux 2.4.2-2)
- 7.2 (Enigma), October 22 2001 (Linux 2.4.7-10, Linux 2.4.9-21smp)
- 7.3 (Valhalla), May 6 2002 (Linux 2.4.18-3)
- 8.0 (Psyche), September 30 2002 (Linux 2.4.18-14)
- 9 (Shrike), 2003-03-31 (Linux 2.4.20-8) (this release is labeled "9" not "9.0")
The Fedora and Red Hat Projects were merged on
September 22,
2003.
(14)
See also
References
-
[WEB, Free_Versions_of_Red_Hat_Linux_to_be_Discontinued,weblink fusionauthority.com, 2008-03-02, ]
-
[weblink ]
-
[WEB, The Fedora Legacy Project,weblink fedoralegacy.org, 2008-03-02, ]
-
[Linux Distributions Compared, LinuxJournal, 1996]
-
[The Truth Behind Red Hat/Fedora Names]
-
[LWN - Distributions]
-
[a/rh-tools]
-
[Linux Today - Linus Weighs in on Red Hat 7 Compiler Issues]
-
[Gerald Pfeifer - GCC 2.96]
-
[An Open Letter From Bob Young, Slashdot.org, Thu Oct 12, 2000 12:52 PM]
-
[weblink]
-
[Red Hat Linux 9 Release Notes]
-
[WEB, The Truth Behind Red Hat/Fedora Names,weblink smoogespace.com, 2008-03-02, ]
-
[WEB, Fedora and Red Hat to Merge,weblink 2008-08-02, ]
External links
{{Red Hat}}{{Linux-distro}}
Red Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxردهتRed Hat LinuxRed Hat Linux레드햇 리눅스Red Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat LinuxRed Hat Linux
(...as imported from WP)
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