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SUSE Linux

SUSE Linux (/ˈssə, ˈszə/ SOO-sə, SOO-zə,[1][2] German: [ˈzuːzə]) is a computer operating system developed by SUSE. It is built on top of the free and open source Linux kernel and is distributed with system and application software from other open source projects. SUSE Linux is of German origin, its name being an acronym of "Software und System-Entwicklung" (software and systems development), and it was mainly developed in Europe. The first version appeared in early 1994, making SUSE one of the oldest existing commercial distributions. It is known for its YaST configuration tool.

Novell bought the SUSE (then "SuSE") brands and trademarks in 2003. Novell, one of the founding members of the Open Invention Network, decided to make the community an important part of their development process by opening widely the distribution development to outside contributors in 2005, creating the openSUSE distribution and the openSUSE Project. Novell employed more than 500 developers working on SUSE in 2004.[3] On 27 April 2011, Novell (and SUSE) were acquired by The Attachmate Group,[4] which made SUSE an independent business unit. Later, in October 2014, the entire Attachmate Group, including SUSE, was acquired by the British firm Micro Focus International.[5] SUSE continues to operate as an independent business unit.[6] On 2 July 2018, it was announced that Micro Focus would sell SUSE to Blitz 18-679 GmbH, a subsidiary of EQT Partners, for $2.535 billion.[7] The acquisition was completed on March 18, 2019.[8]

History

 
SUSE at Linuxcon

The developer

The developing Gesellschaft für Software und System Entwicklung mbH (Lit. Company for Software and System Development) was founded on 2 September 1992 in Nuremberg, Germany, by Roland Dyroff, Thomas Fehr, Burchard Steinbild, and Hubert Mantel. Three of the founders were still mathematics students at a university; Fehr had already graduated and was working as a software engineer.

The original idea was that the company would develop software and function as an advisory UNIX group. According to Mantel, the group decided to distribute Linux, offering support.

Their name at founding was "S.u.S.E." (Software und System-Entwicklung "Software and systems development"); however, the full name has never been used. "S.u.S.E." was shortened to "SuSE" in October 1998 and restylized to "SUSE" in 2003.[9]

 
SUSE GEEKO official plush toy

The official logo and current mascot of the distribution is a veiled chameleon officially named GEEKO (a portmanteau of "gecko" and "geek"). As with the company's name, the GEEKO logo has evolved to reflect company name changes.[citation needed]

Origins

The company started as a service provider, regularly releasing software packages that included Softlanding Linux System (SLS, now defunct) and Slackware and printing UNIX and Linux manuals, and offering technical assistance.

These third-party products SUSE initially used had those characteristics and were managed by SUSE in different fashions:

  • In mid-1992, Peter MacDonald created the comprehensive Linux distribution known as SLS, which offered elements such as X and TCP/IP.[citation needed] This was distributed to people who wanted to get Linux via floppy disks.[6]
  • In 1993, Patrick Volkerding cleaned up the SLS Linux distribution, releasing a newer version as Slackware.
  • In 1994, with help from Patrick Volkerding, Slackware scripts were translated into German, which was marked as the first release of S.u.S.E. Linux 1.0 distribution. It was available first on floppies, and then on CDs.[6]

To build its own Linux distribution, S.u.S.E. used SLS in 1992 and jurix in 1996 as starting point.[10] This was created by Florian La Roche, who joined the S.u.S.E. team. He began to develop YaST, the installer and configuration tool that would become the central point of the distribution.[11][12]

In 1996, the first distribution under the name S.u.S.E. Linux was published as S.u.S.E. Linux 4.2, a reference to the answer to "The Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything" from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. YaST's first version number, 0.42, was a similar reference.

Expansion

 
FVWM running on SUSE 5.1

Over time, SuSE Linux incorporated many aspects of Red Hat Linux, such as its RPM Package Manager and its file structure.

S.u.S.E. became the largest Linux distributor in Germany. In 1997, SuSE, LLC was established under the direction of president and managing partner James Gray in Oakland, California, which enabled the company to develop Linux markets in the Americas and Asia. While Red Hat was ubiquitous in the United States, SuSE Linux continued to grow in Germany as well as in Nordic countries such as Finland and Sweden. In October 1998, the name was changed officially to, SuSE (without dots). Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel, used it fairly often. SuSE entered the UK in 1999.

In 2001, the company was forced to reduce its staff significantly in order to survive.

Novell

 
SUSE/Novell company building in Nürnberg

On 4 November 2003, Novell announced it would acquire SuSE Linux AG for $210 million.[13] The acquisition was finalized in January 2004.[14]

In a move to reach its business audience more effectively, SuSE introduced the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server in 2001, and a few months before Novell's purchase, changed the company name to "SUSE Linux".[9] "SUSE" is now a name, not an acronym.

According to J. Philips, Novell's corporate technology strategist for the Asia Pacific region, Novell would not "in the medium term" alter the way in which SUSE was developed.[15] At Novell's annual BrainShare conference in 2004, for the first time, all of their computers were run with SUSE Linux and it was announced that the proprietary SUSE administration program YaST2 would be released under the GPL license.[16]

The openSUSE Project

On 4 August 2005, Novell announced that the SUSE Professional series would become more open, with the launch of the openSUSE Project community. The software always had been open source, but openSUSE opened the development process, allowing developers and users to test and develop it. Previously, all development work had been accomplished in-house by SUSE. Version 10.0 was the first version that offered public beta testing.

SUSE Linux 10.0 included both open source and proprietary applications and retail boxed-set editions. As part of the change, YaST Online Update server access became free for all SUSE Linux users, and also for the first time, the GNOME desktop was upgraded to equal status with the traditional KDE.

In November 2005, SUSE founder Hubert Mantel announced his resignation from the company. He stated that Novell's acquisition had changed SUSE beyond his expectations and that he did not believe it was the same company that he had founded 13 years earlier. The resignation apparently stemmed from a dispute over the implementation of Ximian products in the GNOME-based default desktop environment for the Linux distribution.[17] He re-joined only a year later.[18]

Microsoft agreement

On 3 November 2006 (renewed 25 July 2011), Novell signed an agreement with Microsoft covering improvement of SUSE's ability to interoperate with Microsoft Windows, cross-promotion/marketing of both products and patent cross-licensing. The agreement is considered controversial by some in the Free Software community.[19][20]

The Attachmate Group takeover

On 22 November 2010, Novell announced that it had agreed to acquisition by The Attachmate Group for $2.2 billion. The Attachmate Group plans to operate Novell as two units with SUSE becoming a stand-alone business,[21] and it anticipates no change to the relationship between the SUSE business and the openSUSE project as a result of this transaction.[22]

The U.S. Department of Justice announced that in order to proceed with the first phase of their acquisition of certain patents and patent applications from Novell Inc., CPTN Holdings LLC and its owners would have to alter their original agreements to address the department's antitrust concerns. The department said that, as originally proposed, the deal would jeopardize the ability of open source software, such as Linux, to continue to innovate and compete in the development and distribution of server, desktop, and mobile operating systems as well as middleware and virtualization products.

Stipulations regarding the licensing the patents were:

  • All of the Novell patents will be acquired subject to the GNU General Public License, Version 2, a widely adopted open-source license, and the Open Invention Network (OIN) License, a significant license for the Linux System;
  • CPTN does not have the right to limit which of the patents, if any, are available under the OIN license; and
  • Neither CPTN nor its owners will make any statement or take any action with the purpose of influencing or encouraging either Novell or Attachmate to modify which of the patents are available under the OIN license.

The acquisition was completed on 27 April 2011.[4] Subsequently, on 23 July 2011 The Attachmate Group launched a new website for the SUSE business.

Micro Focus merger

On 20 November 2014, the Attachmate Group merged with Micro Focus to form the Micro Focus Group. SUSE is operated as a separate business unit with a dedicated product portfolio.[23]

EQT Partners acquisition

On 2 July 2018, it was announced that Micro Focus would sell its SUSE business segment to EQT Partners for $2.535 billion.[24][25] The acquisition was completed on March 18, 2019.[8]

Versions

SUSE provides a thirteen-year product life cycle for SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 & 12.[citation needed]

SUSE distributions

Project Version Date of issue End of General Support End of LTSS Linux kernel version
S.u.S.E. Linux (Slackware-based) 4/94 1994-03-29 ???? ???? 1.0
7/94 1994-07 ???? ???? 1.0.9
11/94 1994-11 ???? ???? 1.1.62
4/95 1995-04 ???? ???? 1.2.9
8/95 1995-08 ???? ???? 1.1.12
11/95 1995-11 ???? ???? 1.2.13
S.u.S.E. Linux (jurix-based) 4.2 1996-05 ???? ???? 2.0.0
4.3 1996-09 ???? ???? 2.0.18
4.4 1997-04 ???? ???? 2.0.24
4.4.1 1997-04-24 ???? ???? 2.0.28
5.0 1997-07 ???? ???? 2.0.30
5.1 1997-10 ???? ???? 2.0.32
5.2 1998-03-23 2000 ???? 2.0.33
5.3 1998-09-10 2000 ???? 2.0.35
SuSE Linux 6.0 1998-12-21 2000 ???? 2.0.36
6.1 1999-04-07 2001 ???? 2.2.6
6.2 1999-08-12 2001 ???? 2.2.10
6.3 1999-11-25 2001-12-10[26] ???? 2.2.13
6.4 2000-03-09 2002-06-17[27] ???? 2.2.14
7.0 2000-09-27 2002-11-04[28] ???? 2.2.16
7.1 2001-04-21 2003-05-16[29] ???? 2.2.18 / 2.4.0
7.2 2001-06-15 2003-10-01[30] ???? 2.2.19 / 2.4.4
7.3 2001-10-13 2003-12-15[31] ???? 2.4.9
8.0 2002-04-22 2004-06-30[32] ???? 2.4.18
8.1 2002-09-30 2005-01-31[33] ???? 2.4.19
8.2 2003-04-07 2005-07-14[34] ???? 2.4.20
SUSE Linux Enterprise 9.0 2003-10-15 2005-12-15[35] ???? 2.4.21 / 2.6.1
9.1 2004-04-23 2006-06-30[36] ???? 2.6.4
9.2 2004-10-25 2006-10-31[37] ???? 2.6.8
9.3 2005-04-16 2007-04-30[38] ???? 2.6.11
10.0 2006-07-17 2007-12-31 N/A 2.6.16
10.1 2007-06-18 2008-11-30 2010-12-01 2.6.16.46
10.2 2008-05-19 2010-04-11 2013-04-10 2.6.16.60
10.3 2009-10-12 2011-10-11 2014-10-31 2.6.16.60
10.4 2011-04-12 2013-07-31 2016-06-30 2.6.16.60
11.0 2009-03-24 2010-12-31 N/A 2.6.27
11.1 2010-06-02 2012-08-31 2015-08-30 2.6.32
11.2 2012-02-29 2014-01-31 2017-01-30 3.0.13
11.3 2013-07-01 2016-01-31[39] 2019-01-30 3.0.76
11.4 2015-10-13 2019-03-31 2022-03-31 3.0.101
12.0 2014-10-10 2016-06-30 2019-07-01 3.12
12.1 2015-12-22 2017-05-31 2020-05-31 3.12
12.2 2016-11-08 2018-03-31 2021-03-31 4.4
12.3 2017-09-07 2019-06-30 2022-06-30 4.4
12.4 2018-12-12 2020-06-30 2023-06-30 4.12
12.5 2019-12-09 2024-10-31 2027-10-31 4.12
15.0 2018-07-16 2019-12-31 2022-12-31 4.12
15.1 2019-06-24 2021-01-31 2024-01-31 4.12
15.2 2020-07-21 2021-12-31 2024-12-31 5.3.18
15.3 2021-06-21 6 months after SLES 15 SP4 release TBD 5.3.18
15 Overall 2018-07-16 2028-07-31 2031-07-31 4.12
Project Version Date of issue End of General Support End of LTSS Linux kernel version
  End of Life
  Long-term support and service

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

SLES version Latest SP FCS Release date[40] General Ends[40] LTSS Ends[41]
Old version, no longer maintained: first 31 October 2000 ?
Old version, no longer maintained: 7 13 October 2001 ?
Old version, no longer maintained: 8 4 1 October 2002 30 December 2007 30 December 2009
Old version, no longer maintained: 9 4 3 August 2004 31 August 2011 1 August 2014
Old version, no longer maintained: 10 4 17 June 2006 31 July 2013 30 July 2016
Old version, no longer maintained: 11 4 24 March 2009 31 March 2019 31 March 2022
Older version, yet still maintained: 12 5 27 October 2014 31 October 2024 31 October 2027
Current stable version: 15 4 16 July 2018 31 July 2028 31 July 2031
Legend:
Old version
Older version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release

SUSE family products

SUSE Linux is available under two brands, openSUSE and SUSE Linux Enterprise. openSUSE is a free, community distribution driven by the openSUSE Project. It includes some of the latest "bleeding edge" Linux technologies and is designed for home users and enthusiasts. SUSE Linux Enterprise is Suse's tested and certified open-source solution for major enterprises.

openSUSE vs SUSE Linux Enterprise

openSUSE is a freely available, community project that releases versions on a comparatively frequent basis, and generally uses the latest versions of the various open source projects that it includes.

SUSE Linux Enterprise is SUSE's commercial edition, which SUSE releases much less frequently, enabling it to offer support more effectively for enterprise and production deployments. It is certified for a wide variety of enterprise applications and offers a number of special enterprise features including, High Availability and Point of Sale extensions. SUSE historically uses a heavily tested subset of packages from openSUSE Linux as the basis for SUSE Linux Enterprise. Starting with openSUSE 15, SUSE made its "Leap" variant directly upgradable to SUSE Linux Enterprise.[42][43][44]

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server vs Desktop

SUSE offers SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop. Each focuses on packages that fit its specific purpose. For example, SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop does not include the Apache Web Server, and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server does not include Xgl/Compiz.

In contrast, openSUSE does not have separate distributions for server, desktop, and tablets. Rather, its repositories contain the needed software, and use installation patterns to accomplish the same.

openSUSE Linux

openSUSE is driven by the openSUSE Project community and sponsored by SUSE, to develop and maintain SUSE Linux components. It is the equivalent of the historic "SuSE Linux Professional". After their acquisition of SUSE Linux, Novell (now SUSE) decided to make the community central to their development process.[45][46]

It has a theoretical development cycle of 8 months and a lifetime (duration of the critical updates) of 18 months from the date of release. It is fully and freely available for immediate download.

openSUSE was the sixth most popular Linux distribution for 2013 and the fourth most popular for 2014, according to DistroWatch.[47][48]

SUSE Linux Enterprise

SUSE develops multiple products for its "enterprise" business line. These business products target corporate environments, with a higher life cycle (10 years, extendable to 13), a longer development cycle (6 to 18 months), a guarantee of stability at the potential expense of development speed, technical support, and certification by independent hardware and software vendors. SUSE Linux Enterprise products are only available for sale (updates fees).

SUSE Linux Enterprise has fewer packages than the openSUSE distribution. Most of the differences are desktop applications that are more suited to consumers than to business. The enterprise products are:

  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) is a server-oriented operating system targeted at corporate environments.
  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Real Time is a modified version of SLES supporting low-latency operations where the time factor is critical.
  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) is a desktop-oriented operating system targeted at corporate environments.
  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Thin Client (SLETC) is a modified version of SLED targeted at thin client terminals.

When installed using a Linux kernel, Novell Open Enterprise Server (OES) uses SUSE Linux Enterprise Server as a platform. This product is also known as OES-Linux.

SUSE Linux Enterprise was included with VMware's vSphere licensing, up until June 25, 2014 for 'free', as noted on SUSE Partners website

SUSE Studio

SUSE's SUSE Studio product was a web interface (built using Ruby on Rails) to openSUSE's KIWI and the Open Build Service tools. It allowed users to put together a custom Linux distribution graphically and to generate output including a large variety of Virtual Machine and Disk Images. SUSE Studio merged with Open Build Service and the resulting project was renamed to SUSE Studio Express in September 2017.[49]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 Demo November 8, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Maria Saavedra (Executive Creative Director), Scott Worley (Director of Video Production). SUSE - Rosetta Stone (Marketing Video). Hewlett-Packard. {{cite AV media}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help) (behance.net, YouTube)
  3. ^ Arthur Griffith, CompTIA Linux+ Certification (Virtual Training Company, 2004)
  4. ^ a b "Novell Completes Merger with Attachmate and Patent Sale to CPTN Holdings LLC". novell.com. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  5. ^ "Micro Focus to Buy Attachmate in $1.2 Billion Share Deal". Bloomberg L.P. 15 September 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  6. ^ a b c "View SUSE Through the Years". SUSE. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  7. ^ "Proposed sale of the SUSE Business". otp.investis.com. Retrieved 2018-07-02.
  8. ^ a b Ian Murphy (2019-03-18). "EQT completes aquisition [sic] of SUSE from Micro Focus". www.enterprisetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  9. ^ a b "SuSE Rebrands Ahead of 9.0 Launch". internetnews.com. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
  10. ^ "Archive:S.u.S.E. Linux 4.2 - openSUSE Wiki".
  11. ^ jurix Readme file
  12. ^ History of Jurix.
  13. ^ "Novell to acquire SuSE Linux". CNET news. Retrieved 2020-01-13.
  14. ^ Kennedy, D. (2003). Novell's Linux buy opens road to top. Retrieved December 20, 2003.
  15. ^ Ramesh, R. (2004). Novell: SuSE stays the same, for now. Retrieved 14 January 2004.
  16. ^ The previous YaST license allowed modification and redistribution, but not sale of the code.
  17. ^ "Why did SuSE Linux's founder resign from Novell?". 2005-11-17.
  18. ^ "Suse founder returns to Novell". ZDNet.
  19. ^ "Microsoft, Novell Extend Controversial Partnership". WIRED. 2008-08-20. Retrieved 2018-06-26.
  20. ^ "Microsoft cannot declare itself exempt from the requirements of GPLv3". Free Software Foundation. 2007-08-28.
  21. ^ Novell Agrees to be Acquired by Attachmate Corporation, Novell, 22 November 2010, retrieved 2010-11-22
  22. ^ Attachmate Corporation Statement on openSUSE project, Attachmate Corporation, 22 November 2010, retrieved 2010-11-23
  23. ^ "SUSE is now part of Micro Focus | SUSE". www.suse.com. Retrieved 2016-05-01.
  24. ^ Burton, Graham (2 July 2018). "Micro Focus to sell SUSE Linux to private equity firm for US$2.5bn". Computing. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  25. ^ "Proposed sale of the SUSE Business". otp.investis.com. Retrieved 2018-07-02.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-02-15. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
  27. ^ [SuSE] Support fuer SuSE Linux 6.4 wird eingestellt
  28. ^ [suse-security] Supported Distributions
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
  30. ^ Linux Today - End of Life for SuSE Linux 7.2, Mandrake Linux 8.2
  31. ^ Discontinued SuSE Linux Distributions [LWN.net]
  32. ^ End of support for SUSE 8.0 [LWN.net]
  33. ^ Discontinued SUSE Linux Distributions: 8.1
  34. ^ Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution: 8.2
  35. ^ SuSE Security announcements: [suse-security-announce] Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution: 9.0
  36. ^ Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution: 9.1
  37. ^ Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution: 9.2
  38. ^ SUSE Linux 9.3 security support discontinued soon
  39. ^ "Release Notes for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 Service Pack 4 (SP4)". www.suse.com. Retrieved 2015-11-27.
  40. ^ a b SLES Lifecycle Dates
  41. ^ SLES Long Term Service Pack Support
  42. ^ Prakash, Abhishek (May 26, 2018). "openSUSE Leap 15 Released! See the New Features". It's FOSS. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  43. ^ Bhartiya, Swapnil (June 27, 2017). "openSUSE Leap Is Now 99.9% Enterprise Distribution". Linux.com. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  44. ^ "Drive transformation of your IT infrastructure with Enterprise Linux" (Press release). Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  45. ^ Toulas, Bill (2012-01-23). . osarena.net. Archived from the original on 2012-05-09. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  46. ^ "openSUSE:Factory development model - openSUSE". en.opensuse.org. Retrieved 2012-10-30.
  47. ^ "DistroWatch home page". DistroWatch. 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  48. ^ "DistroWatch home page". DistroWatch. 2015-01-21. Retrieved 2015-01-21.
  49. ^ SUSE Studio online + Open Build Service = SUSE Studio Express, September 22, 2017, retrieved 2018-06-12

General sources

External links

suse, linux, german, ˈzuːzə, computer, operating, system, developed, suse, built, free, open, source, linux, kernel, distributed, with, system, application, software, from, other, open, source, projects, german, origin, name, being, acronym, software, system, . SUSE Linux ˈ s uː s e ˈ s uː z e SOO se SOO ze 1 2 German ˈzuːze is a computer operating system developed by SUSE It is built on top of the free and open source Linux kernel and is distributed with system and application software from other open source projects SUSE Linux is of German origin its name being an acronym of Software und System Entwicklung software and systems development and it was mainly developed in Europe The first version appeared in early 1994 making SUSE one of the oldest existing commercial distributions It is known for its YaST configuration tool Novell bought the SUSE then SuSE brands and trademarks in 2003 Novell one of the founding members of the Open Invention Network decided to make the community an important part of their development process by opening widely the distribution development to outside contributors in 2005 creating the openSUSE distribution and the openSUSE Project Novell employed more than 500 developers working on SUSE in 2004 3 On 27 April 2011 Novell and SUSE were acquired by The Attachmate Group 4 which made SUSE an independent business unit Later in October 2014 the entire Attachmate Group including SUSE was acquired by the British firm Micro Focus International 5 SUSE continues to operate as an independent business unit 6 On 2 July 2018 it was announced that Micro Focus would sell SUSE to Blitz 18 679 GmbH a subsidiary of EQT Partners for 2 535 billion 7 The acquisition was completed on March 18 2019 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 The developer 1 1 1 Origins 1 1 2 Expansion 1 2 Novell 1 2 1 The openSUSE Project 1 2 2 Microsoft agreement 1 3 The Attachmate Group takeover 1 4 Micro Focus merger 1 5 EQT Partners acquisition 1 6 Versions 1 6 1 SUSE distributions 1 6 2 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 2 SUSE family products 2 1 openSUSE vs SUSE Linux Enterprise 2 2 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server vs Desktop 3 openSUSE Linux 4 SUSE Linux Enterprise 5 SUSE Studio 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General sources 8 External linksHistory Edit SUSE at Linuxcon The developer Edit The developing Gesellschaft fur Software und System Entwicklung mbH Lit Company for Software and System Development was founded on 2 September 1992 in Nuremberg Germany by Roland Dyroff Thomas Fehr Burchard Steinbild and Hubert Mantel Three of the founders were still mathematics students at a university Fehr had already graduated and was working as a software engineer The original idea was that the company would develop software and function as an advisory UNIX group According to Mantel the group decided to distribute Linux offering support Their name at founding was S u S E Software und System Entwicklung Software and systems development however the full name has never been used S u S E was shortened to SuSE in October 1998 and restylized to SUSE in 2003 9 SUSE GEEKO official plush toy The official logo and current mascot of the distribution is a veiled chameleon officially named GEEKO a portmanteau of gecko and geek As with the company s name the GEEKO logo has evolved to reflect company name changes citation needed Origins Edit The company started as a service provider regularly releasing software packages that included Softlanding Linux System SLS now defunct and Slackware and printing UNIX and Linux manuals and offering technical assistance These third party products SUSE initially used had those characteristics and were managed by SUSE in different fashions In mid 1992 Peter MacDonald created the comprehensive Linux distribution known as SLS which offered elements such as X and TCP IP citation needed This was distributed to people who wanted to get Linux via floppy disks 6 In 1993 Patrick Volkerding cleaned up the SLS Linux distribution releasing a newer version as Slackware In 1994 with help from Patrick Volkerding Slackware scripts were translated into German which was marked as the first release of S u S E Linux 1 0 distribution It was available first on floppies and then on CDs 6 To build its own Linux distribution S u S E used SLS in 1992 and jurix in 1996 as starting point 10 This was created by Florian La Roche who joined the S u S E team He began to develop YaST the installer and configuration tool that would become the central point of the distribution 11 12 In 1996 the first distribution under the name S u S E Linux was published as S u S E Linux 4 2 a reference to the answer to The Ultimate Question of Life the Universe and Everything from the Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy YaST s first version number 0 42 was a similar reference Expansion Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message FVWM running on SUSE 5 1 Over time SuSE Linux incorporated many aspects of Red Hat Linux such as its RPM Package Manager and its file structure S u S E became the largest Linux distributor in Germany In 1997 SuSE LLC was established under the direction of president and managing partner James Gray in Oakland California which enabled the company to develop Linux markets in the Americas and Asia While Red Hat was ubiquitous in the United States SuSE Linux continued to grow in Germany as well as in Nordic countries such as Finland and Sweden In October 1998 the name was changed officially to SuSE without dots Linus Torvalds the creator of the Linux kernel used it fairly often SuSE entered the UK in 1999 In 2001 the company was forced to reduce its staff significantly in order to survive Novell Edit SUSE Novell company building in Nurnberg On 4 November 2003 Novell announced it would acquire SuSE Linux AG for 210 million 13 The acquisition was finalized in January 2004 14 In a move to reach its business audience more effectively SuSE introduced the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server in 2001 and a few months before Novell s purchase changed the company name to SUSE Linux 9 SUSE is now a name not an acronym According to J Philips Novell s corporate technology strategist for the Asia Pacific region Novell would not in the medium term alter the way in which SUSE was developed 15 At Novell s annual BrainShare conference in 2004 for the first time all of their computers were run with SUSE Linux and it was announced that the proprietary SUSE administration program YaST2 would be released under the GPL license 16 The openSUSE Project Edit On 4 August 2005 Novell announced that the SUSE Professional series would become more open with the launch of the openSUSE Project community The software always had been open source but openSUSE opened the development process allowing developers and users to test and develop it Previously all development work had been accomplished in house by SUSE Version 10 0 was the first version that offered public beta testing SUSE Linux 10 0 included both open source and proprietary applications and retail boxed set editions As part of the change YaST Online Update server access became free for all SUSE Linux users and also for the first time the GNOME desktop was upgraded to equal status with the traditional KDE In November 2005 SUSE founder Hubert Mantel announced his resignation from the company He stated that Novell s acquisition had changed SUSE beyond his expectations and that he did not believe it was the same company that he had founded 13 years earlier The resignation apparently stemmed from a dispute over the implementation of Ximian products in the GNOME based default desktop environment for the Linux distribution 17 He re joined only a year later 18 Microsoft agreement Edit On 3 November 2006 renewed 25 July 2011 Novell signed an agreement with Microsoft covering improvement of SUSE s ability to interoperate with Microsoft Windows cross promotion marketing of both products and patent cross licensing The agreement is considered controversial by some in the Free Software community 19 20 The Attachmate Group takeover Edit On 22 November 2010 Novell announced that it had agreed to acquisition by The Attachmate Group for 2 2 billion The Attachmate Group plans to operate Novell as two units with SUSE becoming a stand alone business 21 and it anticipates no change to the relationship between the SUSE business and the openSUSE project as a result of this transaction 22 The U S Department of Justice announced that in order to proceed with the first phase of their acquisition of certain patents and patent applications from Novell Inc CPTN Holdings LLC and its owners would have to alter their original agreements to address the department s antitrust concerns The department said that as originally proposed the deal would jeopardize the ability of open source software such as Linux to continue to innovate and compete in the development and distribution of server desktop and mobile operating systems as well as middleware and virtualization products Stipulations regarding the licensing the patents were All of the Novell patents will be acquired subject to the GNU General Public License Version 2 a widely adopted open source license and the Open Invention Network OIN License a significant license for the Linux System CPTN does not have the right to limit which of the patents if any are available under the OIN license and Neither CPTN nor its owners will make any statement or take any action with the purpose of influencing or encouraging either Novell or Attachmate to modify which of the patents are available under the OIN license The acquisition was completed on 27 April 2011 4 Subsequently on 23 July 2011 The Attachmate Group launched a new website for the SUSE business Micro Focus merger Edit On 20 November 2014 the Attachmate Group merged with Micro Focus to form the Micro Focus Group SUSE is operated as a separate business unit with a dedicated product portfolio 23 EQT Partners acquisition Edit On 2 July 2018 it was announced that Micro Focus would sell its SUSE business segment to EQT Partners for 2 535 billion 24 25 The acquisition was completed on March 18 2019 8 Versions Edit SUSE provides a thirteen year product life cycle for SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 amp 12 citation needed SUSE distributions Edit Project Version Date of issue End of General Support End of LTSS Linux kernel versionS u S E Linux Slackware based 4 94 1994 03 29 1 07 94 1994 07 1 0 911 94 1994 11 1 1 624 95 1995 04 1 2 98 95 1995 08 1 1 1211 95 1995 11 1 2 13S u S E Linux jurix based 4 2 1996 05 2 0 04 3 1996 09 2 0 184 4 1997 04 2 0 244 4 1 1997 04 24 2 0 285 0 1997 07 2 0 305 1 1997 10 2 0 325 2 1998 03 23 2000 2 0 335 3 1998 09 10 2000 2 0 35SuSE Linux 6 0 1998 12 21 2000 2 0 366 1 1999 04 07 2001 2 2 66 2 1999 08 12 2001 2 2 106 3 1999 11 25 2001 12 10 26 2 2 136 4 2000 03 09 2002 06 17 27 2 2 147 0 2000 09 27 2002 11 04 28 2 2 167 1 2001 04 21 2003 05 16 29 2 2 18 2 4 07 2 2001 06 15 2003 10 01 30 2 2 19 2 4 47 3 2001 10 13 2003 12 15 31 2 4 98 0 2002 04 22 2004 06 30 32 2 4 188 1 2002 09 30 2005 01 31 33 2 4 198 2 2003 04 07 2005 07 14 34 2 4 20SUSE Linux Enterprise 9 0 2003 10 15 2005 12 15 35 2 4 21 2 6 19 1 2004 04 23 2006 06 30 36 2 6 49 2 2004 10 25 2006 10 31 37 2 6 89 3 2005 04 16 2007 04 30 38 2 6 1110 0 2006 07 17 2007 12 31 N A 2 6 1610 1 2007 06 18 2008 11 30 2010 12 01 2 6 16 4610 2 2008 05 19 2010 04 11 2013 04 10 2 6 16 6010 3 2009 10 12 2011 10 11 2014 10 31 2 6 16 6010 4 2011 04 12 2013 07 31 2016 06 30 2 6 16 6011 0 2009 03 24 2010 12 31 N A 2 6 2711 1 2010 06 02 2012 08 31 2015 08 30 2 6 3211 2 2012 02 29 2014 01 31 2017 01 30 3 0 1311 3 2013 07 01 2016 01 31 39 2019 01 30 3 0 7611 4 2015 10 13 2019 03 31 2022 03 31 3 0 10112 0 2014 10 10 2016 06 30 2019 07 01 3 1212 1 2015 12 22 2017 05 31 2020 05 31 3 1212 2 2016 11 08 2018 03 31 2021 03 31 4 412 3 2017 09 07 2019 06 30 2022 06 30 4 412 4 2018 12 12 2020 06 30 2023 06 30 4 1212 5 2019 12 09 2024 10 31 2027 10 31 4 1215 0 2018 07 16 2019 12 31 2022 12 31 4 1215 1 2019 06 24 2021 01 31 2024 01 31 4 1215 2 2020 07 21 2021 12 31 2024 12 31 5 3 1815 3 2021 06 21 6 months after SLES 15 SP4 release TBD 5 3 1815 Overall 2018 07 16 2028 07 31 2031 07 31 4 12Project Version Date of issue End of General Support End of LTSS Linux kernel version End of Life Long term support and service SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Edit Main article SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Version history SLES version Latest SP FCS Release date 40 General Ends 40 LTSS Ends 41 Old version no longer maintained first 31 October 2000 Old version no longer maintained 7 13 October 2001 Old version no longer maintained 8 4 1 October 2002 30 December 2007 30 December 2009Old version no longer maintained 9 4 3 August 2004 31 August 2011 1 August 2014Old version no longer maintained 10 4 17 June 2006 31 July 2013 30 July 2016Old version no longer maintained 11 4 24 March 2009 31 March 2019 31 March 2022Older version yet still maintained 12 5 27 October 2014 31 October 2024 31 October 2027Current stable version 15 4 16 July 2018 31 July 2028 31 July 2031Legend Old versionOlder version still maintainedLatest versionLatest preview versionFuture releaseSUSE family products EditSUSE Linux is available under two brands openSUSE and SUSE Linux Enterprise openSUSE is a free community distribution driven by the openSUSE Project It includes some of the latest bleeding edge Linux technologies and is designed for home users and enthusiasts SUSE Linux Enterprise is Suse s tested and certified open source solution for major enterprises openSUSE vs SUSE Linux Enterprise Edit openSUSE is a freely available community project that releases versions on a comparatively frequent basis and generally uses the latest versions of the various open source projects that it includes SUSE Linux Enterprise is SUSE s commercial edition which SUSE releases much less frequently enabling it to offer support more effectively for enterprise and production deployments It is certified for a wide variety of enterprise applications and offers a number of special enterprise features including High Availability and Point of Sale extensions SUSE historically uses a heavily tested subset of packages from openSUSE Linux as the basis for SUSE Linux Enterprise Starting with openSUSE 15 SUSE made its Leap variant directly upgradable to SUSE Linux Enterprise 42 43 44 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server vs Desktop Edit SUSE offers SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Each focuses on packages that fit its specific purpose For example SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop does not include the Apache Web Server and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server does not include Xgl Compiz In contrast openSUSE does not have separate distributions for server desktop and tablets Rather its repositories contain the needed software and use installation patterns to accomplish the same openSUSE Linux EditMain articles openSUSE and OpenSUSE Project openSUSE is driven by the openSUSE Project community and sponsored by SUSE to develop and maintain SUSE Linux components It is the equivalent of the historic SuSE Linux Professional After their acquisition of SUSE Linux Novell now SUSE decided to make the community central to their development process 45 46 It has a theoretical development cycle of 8 months and a lifetime duration of the critical updates of 18 months from the date of release It is fully and freely available for immediate download openSUSE was the sixth most popular Linux distribution for 2013 and the fourth most popular for 2014 according to DistroWatch 47 48 SUSE Linux Enterprise EditMain article SUSE Linux Enterprise SUSE develops multiple products for its enterprise business line These business products target corporate environments with a higher life cycle 10 years extendable to 13 a longer development cycle 6 to 18 months a guarantee of stability at the potential expense of development speed technical support and certification by independent hardware and software vendors SUSE Linux Enterprise products are only available for sale updates fees SUSE Linux Enterprise has fewer packages than the openSUSE distribution Most of the differences are desktop applications that are more suited to consumers than to business The enterprise products are SUSE Linux Enterprise Server SLES is a server oriented operating system targeted at corporate environments SUSE Linux Enterprise Real Time is a modified version of SLES supporting low latency operations where the time factor is critical SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop SLED is a desktop oriented operating system targeted at corporate environments SUSE Linux Enterprise Thin Client SLETC is a modified version of SLED targeted at thin client terminals When installed using a Linux kernel Novell Open Enterprise Server OES uses SUSE Linux Enterprise Server as a platform This product is also known as OES Linux SUSE Linux Enterprise was included with VMware s vSphere licensing up until June 25 2014 for free as noted on SUSE Partners websiteSUSE Studio EditMain article SUSE Studio SUSE s SUSE Studio product was a web interface built using Ruby on Rails to openSUSE s KIWI and the Open Build Service tools It allowed users to put together a custom Linux distribution graphically and to generate output including a large variety of Virtual Machine and Disk Images SUSE Studio merged with Open Build Service and the resulting project was renamed to SUSE Studio Express in September 2017 49 See also EditLinux on IBM Z List of Linux distributions Comparison of Linux distributions SUSE Studio Novell UnixWare Novell Corsair Novell Expose Caldera OpenLinux and Caldera Network Desktop List of computing mascotsReferences EditCitations Edit SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 Demo Archived November 8 2006 at the Wayback Machine Maria Saavedra Executive Creative Director Scott Worley Director of Video Production SUSE Rosetta Stone Marketing Video Hewlett Packard a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a access date requires url help behance net YouTube Arthur Griffith CompTIA Linux Certification Virtual Training Company 2004 a b Novell Completes Merger with Attachmate and Patent Sale to CPTN Holdings LLC novell com Retrieved 28 April 2011 Micro Focus to Buy Attachmate in 1 2 Billion Share Deal Bloomberg L P 15 September 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b c View SUSE Through the Years SUSE Retrieved 10 February 2015 Proposed sale of the SUSE Business otp investis com Retrieved 2018 07 02 a b Ian Murphy 2019 03 18 EQT completes aquisition sic of SUSE from Micro Focus www enterprisetimes co uk Retrieved 2020 05 02 a b SuSE Rebrands Ahead of 9 0 Launch internetnews com Retrieved 2008 03 03 Archive S u S E Linux 4 2 openSUSE Wiki jurix Readme file History of Jurix Novell to acquire SuSE Linux CNET news Retrieved 2020 01 13 Kennedy D 2003 Novell s Linux buy opens road to top Retrieved December 20 2003 Ramesh R 2004 Novell SuSE stays the same for now Retrieved 14 January 2004 The previous YaST license allowed modification and redistribution but not sale of the code Why did SuSE Linux s founder resign from Novell 2005 11 17 Suse founder returns to Novell ZDNet Microsoft Novell Extend Controversial Partnership WIRED 2008 08 20 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Microsoft cannot declare itself exempt from the requirements of GPLv3 Free Software Foundation 2007 08 28 Novell Agrees to be Acquired by Attachmate Corporation Novell 22 November 2010 retrieved 2010 11 22 Attachmate Corporation Statement on openSUSE project Attachmate Corporation 22 November 2010 retrieved 2010 11 23 SUSE is now part of Micro Focus SUSE www suse com Retrieved 2016 05 01 Burton Graham 2 July 2018 Micro Focus to sell SUSE Linux to private equity firm for US 2 5bn Computing Retrieved 29 August 2018 Proposed sale of the SUSE Business otp investis com Retrieved 2018 07 02 SuSE Version 6 3 end of life announcement The Community s Center for Security Archived from the original on 2017 02 15 Retrieved 2010 08 28 SuSE Support fuer SuSE Linux 6 4 wird eingestellt suse security Supported Distributions Re Discontinued 7 7 2 7 3 msg 00105 linux suse security Archived from the original on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 2010 08 28 Linux Today End of Life for SuSE Linux 7 2 Mandrake Linux 8 2 Discontinued SuSE Linux Distributions LWN net End of support for SUSE 8 0 LWN net Discontinued SUSE Linux Distributions 8 1 Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution 8 2 SuSE Security announcements suse security announce Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution 9 0 Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution 9 1 Discontinued SUSE Linux Distribution 9 2 SUSE Linux 9 3 security support discontinued soon Release Notes for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 Service Pack 4 SP4 www suse com Retrieved 2015 11 27 a b SLES Lifecycle Dates SLES Long Term Service Pack Support Prakash Abhishek May 26 2018 openSUSE Leap 15 Released See the New Features It s FOSS Retrieved March 21 2020 Bhartiya Swapnil June 27 2017 openSUSE Leap Is Now 99 9 Enterprise Distribution Linux com Retrieved March 21 2020 Drive transformation of your IT infrastructure with Enterprise Linux Press release Retrieved March 21 2020 Toulas Bill 2012 01 23 Interview with Jos Poortvliet from SUSE osarena net Archived from the original on 2012 05 09 Retrieved 2016 02 06 openSUSE Factory development model openSUSE en opensuse org Retrieved 2012 10 30 DistroWatch home page DistroWatch 2014 01 07 Retrieved 2014 01 07 DistroWatch home page DistroWatch 2015 01 21 Retrieved 2015 01 21 SUSE Studio online Open Build Service SUSE Studio Express September 22 2017 retrieved 2018 06 12 General sources Edit Naba Barkakati 2005 12 27 SUSE Linux 10 For Dummies p 356 ISBN 978 0 471 75493 0 Keir Thomas 2005 02 15 Beginning SUSE Linux From Novice to Professional p 544 ISBN 978 1 59059 458 2 External links EditSUSE openSUSE org Planet SUSE suse at DistroWatch novell at DistroWatch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SUSE Linux amp oldid 1119490837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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