CIQ has unveiled a version of Rocky Linux backed by service level objectives and indemnities for enterprises requiring more than the support of an enthusiastic community behind an operating system.
Starting from $25,000 for an annual subscription, Rocky Linux from CIQ (RLC) retains its compatibility with Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) as well as its community origins, but adds service level objectives (SLOs) for CVE remediation and security updates, legal indemnification protections to deal with potential infringement claims related to open software in the distribution, and supply chain validation for packages. Support is available separately.
Gregory M Kurtzer, founder and CEO of CIQ and founder of Rocky Linux, said: "Rocky Linux from CIQ meets the needs of organizations who want to run community Rocky Linux within their IT infrastructure but need contractual guarantees and mitigation to liabilities that the open source community cannot provide. Now you can have the best of both worlds."
Rocky Linux is one of several enterprise Linux distributions to arise from Red Hat's decision to change the focus of CentOS – a community build of RHEL – to a development branch of RHEL, thus making it unsuitable for production workloads. A 2023 decision to stop making RHEL source code available to non-customers compounded the issue and resulted in the formation of the Open Enterprise Linux Association (OpenELA).