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Red Hat and Amazon make RHEL available online
Nov. 07, 2007

On Nov. 7, Red Hat joined the cloud and software as a service market by announcing the beta availability of RHEL 5.1 (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) on Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud).

EC2 is a Web service that provides resizable server capacity in the cloud. This collaboration makes all the capabilities of RHEL 5.1, including the Red Hat Network management service, technical support and over 3,400 certified applications, available to customers on Amazon's network infrastructure and data centers.

Together, RHEL and Amazon EC2 enable customers to pay only for the infrastructure software services and capacity that they actually use. RHEL on Amazon EC2 enables customers to increase or decrease capacity within minutes, removing the need to over-buy software and hardware capacity as a set of resources to handle periodic spikes in demand.

RHEL 5.1, with its integrated virtualization, provides a seamless deployment solution bridging both on-premise and cloud computing. As part of this solution, Red Hat Network offers a common set of management and automation tools across on-premises deployments and the Amazon EC2 cloud computing environment.

If you elect to use it, Red Hat will provide you with technical support and maintenance of RHEL on Amazon EC2. This is the first commercially supported operating system available on Amazon EC2.

This is also the first time that Red Hat has offered its operating system's resources as a service in the Internet cloud. Other companies, notably Sun with its grid computing efforts, have tried this approach with limited success.

In addition to access to the operating system itself, Red Hat will offer access to Red Hat certified applications as part of its Linux Automation strategy.

"In collaboration with Amazon Web Services, we are now able to offer customers yet another choice in how they deploy the Red Hat Enterprise Linux platform. This offering will be appealing to developers, customers looking to quickly and cost-effectively deploy web-scale services and businesses that require rapidly scaled compute resources," said Donald Fischer, VP of online services at Red Hat. "The marriage of RHEL with Amazon's EC2 service makes the promise of professional Web scale computing a reality."

Adam Selipsky, vice president of product management and developer relations for Amazon Web Services, said: "We are pleased to collaborate with Red Hat in making more choices available for Amazon EC2 users. This offering will further help customers to avoid the heavy lifting of deploying and managing their own infrastructure, while paying as they go for Red Hat's proven Enterprise Linux solution."

Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Amazon EC2 is available as a private beta today, with public beta availability planned for the fourth calendar quarter of 2007. Base prices are $19 per month, per user and $0.21, $0.53 or $0.94 for every compute hour used on Amazon's EC2 service, depending on whether customers choose a small, large or extra-large compute instance size, plus bandwidth and storage fees.

For more information on the offering, visit Red Hat's cloud page.


Steven J. Vaughan Nichols



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