On 2/2/21 4:04 PM, Matthew Miller wrote: > On Tue, Feb 02, 2021 at 03:49:35PM -0700, R C wrote: >> This is what I read today, might have been around longer though, don't know. >> >> >> "New Year, new Red Hat Enterprise Linux programs: Easier ways to >> access RHEL" >> >> https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/new-year-new-red-hat-enterprise-linux-programs-easier-ways-access-rhel > It came out a few weeks ago but the program is live as of yesterday. > > In short: > > 1. Register at https://developers.redhat.com/register > > 2. You'll now see a developer subscription allowing up to 16 systems listed > at https://access.redhat.com/management/subscriptions > > 3. Download and install from https://developers.redhat.com/products/rhel/download > > 4. sudo subscription-manager register --username $USERNAME > (where $USERNAME is the email address you registered with) > > and there you go. > > It says "Developer Subscription" but the new terms allow each individual to > have up to 16 systems for production use. See the (single page) terms here: I would not use it for production, or commercial purposes, just so I have the same at home (or close) as at work. I wonder, does that mean you can have up to 16 licensed servers/workstations running at a time? Or over time, when you discard equipment, and need to install another machine/desktop, whatever by the time you're at 17 start paying? (I am checking that with a redhat rep that we have at work too). > https://www.redhat.com/wapps/tnc/viewterms/72ce03fd-1564-41f3-9707-a09747625585?extIdCarryOver=true&sc_cid=701f2000001Css0AAC > > > It may also be of interest to note something which I hadn't realized before: > this subscription includes the "EUS" offering which provides security > updates to select minor releases (so you can "pin" to that minor release), > which is something CentOS never did. > >