Dan's Take
        
        Red Hat Targets Multi-Cloud Deployments With RHEL 7.4
        A strong platform for enterprise computing.
        
        
			- By Dan Kusnetzky
 - 08/04/2017
 
		
          
  Red Hat just announced the general availability of Red Hat  Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 7.4, saying "Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.4 offers  new automation capabilities designed to limit IT complexity while enhancing  workload security and performance for traditional and cloud-native  applications."
  Here's a quick summary of key features:
Security
  - Updated audit capabilities to help simplify how  administrators filter the events logged by the audit system, gather more  information from critical events and to interpret large numbers of records.
 
  - USB Guard, a feature that allows for greater  control over how plug-and-play devices can be used by specific users to help  limit both data leaks and data injection.
 
  - Enhanced container security functionality with  full support for using SELinux with OverlayFS helps secure the underlying file  system and provides the ability to use docker and use namespaces together for  fine-grained access control. 
 
Performance
  - Support for NVMe Over       Fabric helps to provide customers with increased flexibility and reduced       overhead when accessing high performance NVMe storage devices located in       the data center on both Ethernet or Infiniband fabric infrastructures.
 
  - General enhancements to Red Hat Enterprise  Linux's performance when deployed on the public cloud, highlighted by decreased  boot times to better enable mission-critical applications to start sooner, and  support for the Elastic Network Adapter (ENA) on Amazon Web Services (AWS) to  enable new network capabilities. 
 
Linux Containers  and Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host
  Based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.4, enhancements include:
  - Improved security. Integrated support for  SELinux and OverlayFS, as well as full support for the overlay2 storage graph  driver.
 
  - Full support for package layering with  rpm-ostree, providing a means of adding packages like monitoring agents and  drivers to the host operating system.
 
  - The introduction of LiveFS as a Technology  Preview, which enables users to install security updates and layer packages  without a reboot. 
 
Management and Automation
  Designed to complement the capabilities of Red Hat  Satellite and automation via Ansible, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.4 introduces  Red Hat Enterprise Linux System Roles as a Technology Preview. System Roles  provide a common management interface across all major versions of Red Hat  Enterprise Linux, enabling an automated workflow via Ansible automation to be  created once and used across large, heterogeneous Red Hat Enterprise Linux  deployments without additional modifications.
  Red Hat Enterprise  Linux for Multiple Architectures
RHEL 7.4 supports X86,   IBM Power, IBM z Systems and 64-bit ARM (as a Development Preview). For  the IBM Power Little Endian architecture, this release enables support for the  High Availability and Resilient Storage Add-Ons as well as the Open Container  Initiative (OCI) runtime and image format.
Dan's Take: Riding Many Horses Without Falling Into the River
  Red Hat continues to demonstrate the ability to seamlessly  work with different open source projects. If we examine this announcement, we  see that the company has participated in many different open source projects,  integrated the results, tested them, then productized them. The latest edition  includes:
  - Enhancements to the base operating system to  improve security, manageability, reliability and performance while executing on  a broad array of microprocessor architectures.
 
  - Enhancements to the capabilities of the platform  so that it can support many types of processing virtualization, including  virtual machine and operating system virtualization and partitioning  capabilities. Although not mentioned in this announcement, the company already  works with workload managers, parallel processing managers and several forms of  cluster managers. This also includes tighter integration with Amazon's AWS  computing environment.
 
  - Further integration of Red Hat's recent  acquisition of Ansible for monitoring and management of complex physical,  virtual and cloud-based computing environments.
 
  - Let's not forget the company's strong support  of  access, application, storage and  network virtualization as well.
 
Each iteration makes RHEL an even stronger platform for  enterprise-level computing functions. It's clear that the company has listened  to its customers and partners and is doing its best to address their  requirements.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Daniel Kusnetzky, a reformed software engineer and product manager, founded Kusnetzky Group LLC in 2006. He's literally written the book on virtualization and often comments on cloud computing, mobility and systems software. He has been a business unit manager at a hardware company and head of corporate marketing and strategy at a software company.