Bashton Blog

Mar/10

15

So where’s RHEL 6?

As I keep getting asked by customers when they can expect Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, I thought it was worthwhile to make a post on the subject. This is a reasonably long post, but the simple answer to the question is that I don’t know, but my educated guess would be Q4 2010, and that we’ll have a firm(er) date by the end of June. Please note that I’m not a Red Hat employee, although my company is a Red Hat partner, and that nothing in this post is official in any way, shape or form.

Red Hat Enterprise releases have been traditionally 18-24 months apart, and on that basis one might have expected RHEL6 to have been released sometime between October 2008 and March 2009, as RHEL5 was released in March of 2007. So what’s taking Red Hat so long, and when can we expect RHEL6?

There are a number of reasons for the delay, but the biggest is related to the Fedora Project, who create Fedora, on which Red Hat Enterprise is based.
For Fedora releases up to version 6, on which RHEL5 was based, the Fedora Project was run very much as an in-house Red Hat project, with contributions from the wider Open Source community. Post FC6, the Fedora Project was much more run by the Open Source community, with Red Hat contributors. This seems to have led to a shift in focus from fixing bugs to implementing new features. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing – Fedora exists to be the ‘bleeding edge’ of development, pushing at the boundaries in a way Red Hat are obviously unable to do with an enterprise focussed product like RHEL. Unfortunately, Fedora 9, on which RHEL6 was to be based, released with a large number of critical bugs and stability issues. Red Hat made the decision that they therefore couldn’t base RHEL6 on this release, and instead poured man-power into the Fedora Project, fixing bugs and generally improving stability as much as possible.

The evidence is that RHEL6 will now be based on Fedora 12, which was released in November of last year. The was a gap of just under a year between Fedora 6 and RHEL5, so this would point to a release in Autumn of this year.

The other issue that has caused delays to RHEL is that of virtualisation. RHEL4/RHEL5 utilised the Xen hypervisor for their virtualisation. In September 2008 Red Hat purchased Qumranet, whose staff included the leaders of the KVM project, an alternate virtualisation technology. KVM is very much seen as the future for Linux virtualisation, and Red Hat immediately made it clear that this was the direction they would be pursuing. RHEL 5.4 included KVM as a ‘technology preview’, so clearly much progress has been made integrating it into the main Red Hat release. It’s therefore likely that this is no longer holding up RHEL6.

I expect the final release date for RHEL6 to be announced at the Red Hat summit at the end of June. There have been some suggestions that RHEL6 itself will be released at the summit. Unless Red Hat release a beta within the next couple of weeks, I’d say this looks distinctly unlikely.

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7 Comments for So where’s RHEL 6?

Mike Hanby | March 15, 2010 at 3:47 pm

Thanks for writing this. I searched Google this morning checking for updates on RHEL 6, so this post was timely :-) It’s interesting that EL6 will be based on Fedora 12 and not 13.

A typo updated:
“The was a gap of just under a year between Fedora Core 6 and RHEL6, so this would point to a release in Autumn of this year”

“There was a gap of just under a year between Fedora Core 6 and RHEL5, so this would point to a release in Autumn of this year”

Kurt | March 15, 2010 at 11:55 pm

Red Hat 5.4 includes KVM (as you mentioned) and quite a few major upgrades/new features so the need for Red Hat 6 by customers isn’t as strong (basically the only thing I need from Red Hat 6 is Python 2.6, Red Hat 5.x still ships 2.4.3).

Additionally Red Hat’s revenue model is subscription/support based so they aren’t as desperate to force people on to an artificial update treadmill in order to keep revenue up.

Anirban | March 21, 2010 at 12:09 am

Thanks for a timely blog. Fedora 12 is a good release, and its nice to know that RHEL 6 will be along those lines.

For Kurt: you can always install python 2.6 on your current RHEL 5.4 with “make altinstall” instead of “make install”.

Josh | March 27, 2010 at 4:37 am

Hmm… yikes! I need more advanced kernel version and SELinux tools to run mod_selinux for an advanced security project I’m doing. Looks like I’ll have to run FC12 if I want to play with this now… :(

Ian M | April 9, 2010 at 3:11 pm

Hopefully they’ll upgrade their version of PHP to something more recent.

Marky Goldstein | September 20, 2010 at 1:12 pm

Yes, we are all waiting for RHEL 6… any news now that the Beta 2 is out ?

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 Released - Bashton Blog | November 11, 2010 at 10:09 am

[...] So where’s RHEL 6? [...]

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