NEWS
Huawei Releases CentOS-Based openEuler as Open Source
With the US ban on Huawei, the company has opted to focus some of their efforts on their own server solution. To prevent a continued dependence on US software, the Chinese company has released an open source version of EulerOS, a server platform based on CentOS.
Geared for IoT and cloud infrastructure, openEuler (https://openeuler.org/en/) has been released for ARM64 architecture and is compatible with the Open Containers Initiative (OCI). Huawei claims it has made changes to CentOS to give it a performance boost and reliability.
OpenEuler currently has more than 50 contributors and 600 commits. The openEuler repositories include two new projects: iSulad, a lightweight container run-time daemon created specifically for IoT and the cloud (https://gitee.com/openeuler/iSulad), and A-Tune, an OS-tuning software (https://gitee.com/openeuler/A-Tune).
At the moment, there is very little information about openEuler, and the only documentation to be found has yet to be translated to English. However openEuler's source code has been made available and can be found on Gitee (https://gitee.com/openeuler).
The official mission of openEuler states "through community contributions, openEuler builds an innovative platform and a unified and open OS that supports the multi-processor architecture, and promotes the robustness of the software and hardware application ecosystem."
Anyone wishing to contribute to the project can read up on the process in the Contributions to the Community documentation (https://openeuler.org/en/developer.html).
Huawei also claims that openEuler is one of the most secure operating systems available by offering:
- Configurable hardening policies
- Kernel-level OS security capabilities
- China's Ministry of Public Security operating system information security technology certification
- CC EAL4+ certification with the German BSI Protection Profile (PP) standard
- CC EAL2+ certification with the US NIAP PP standard
- US NIST CAVP cryptographic algorithm certification
- Support for Nessus security leak detection tool
- Support for NSFOCUS RSAS security leak detection tool
More Online
Linux Magazine
Paw Prints * Jon "maddog" Hall
TCO of FOSS vs. Closed Source: Mr. Bacil, you are wrong
Today I received a link to a news article from Brazil where first-term Paraná state deputy Emerson Bacil of Jair Bolsonaro's PSL party is proposing to change a law that prefers Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) used by government over closed source, proprietary software.
GPU Computing
http://www.admin-magazine.com/HPC/
Exploring AMD's Ambitious ROCm Initiative * Joe Casad
Three years ago, AMD released the innovative ROCm hardware-accelerated, parallel-computing environment.
Porting CUDA to HIP * Joe Casad
You've invested money and time in writing GPU-optimized software with CUDA, and you're wondering if your efforts will have a life beyond the narrow, proprietary hardware environment supported by the CUDA language. Welcome to the world of HIP.
ADMIN Online
http://www.admin-magazine.com/
Transcoding Optical Media in Linux * Erik Bärwaldt
We test two candidates for viewing and converting video DVDs and Blu-ray discs, HandBrake and MakeMKV, and point out legal hurdles.
Storage Monitoring with Grafana * Andreas Stolzenberger
Create intuitive and meaningful visualizations of storage performance values with a "TIG" stack: Telegraf, InfluxDB, and Grafana.
Call Web Pages in the Terminal with Browsh * Tim Schürmann
The Browsh command-line browser displays web pages with text characters and thus supports true-to-layout browsing at the command line.
« Previous 1 2
Buy this article as PDF
(incl. VAT)