Red Hat Enterprise Linux

This latest release delivers dramatic improvements in reliability, performance, scalability, and infrastructure flexibility and provides unprecedented control designed to support today's flexible and varied enterprise architectures and most mission-critical environments

Enterprise Linux is designed to help agencies make a seamless transition to emerging datacenter models that include virtualization and cloud computing. Support is included for major hardware architectures, hypervisors, and cloud providers, making deployments across physical and different virtual environments predictable and secure. Enhanced tools and new capabilities enable administrators to tailor the application environment to efficiently monitor and manage compute resources and security.

 
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Red Hat Directory Server

Red Hat Directory Server is an LDAP-based server that centralizes application settings, user profiles, group data, policies, and access control information into an operating system-independent, network-based registry. By storing policies and access control information, Directory Server creates a single authentication source across entire enterprise for both intra- and extranet applications, improving security. To manage a cluster of servers, the Red Hat Global File System (GFS) helps you maximize the benefits of clustering and minimize the costs.

Red Hat provides a simple, rapidly-deployable tool that allows a systems administrator to manage complex, geographical deployments. Red Hat Network Satellite is an easy-to-use systems management platform for your agency’s growing Linux infrastructure. Built on open standards, Satellite provides powerful systems administration capabilities such as management, provisioning and monitoring for large deployments. Manage multiple servers as easily as you would manage one.

Every day, organizations are improving the performance of their applications, scaling their IT environments and carving out costs by migrating from UNIX to Red Hat® Enterprise Linux®.

If your agency is still running on proprietary UNIX systems, you're tied to a less flexible, more costly deployment with performance issues and cost constraints. When you include all of the limits - and all of the overhead - what is your total cost of ownership? We bet it's more than you think.