Difference between revisions of "Supported Platforms for ASL"

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m (ASL 2.2 UnSupported Distributions)
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4, 5 and 6
+
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and 6
  
CentOS 4, 5 and 6
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CentOS 5 and 6
  
Cloudlinux 5
+
Cloudlinux 5 and 6
  
 
Scientific Linux 5 and 6
 
Scientific Linux 5 and 6
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Amazon EC2
 
Amazon EC2
  
== ASL 2.2 Supported Distributions ==
 
  
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and 5
+
== UnSupported Distributions ==
  
CentOS 4 and 5
+
These distributions were previously supported, but are no longer supported (they are end of life by the OS vendor), although updates and builds may still be available for these platforms.
  
 +
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 and 4
  
== ASL 2.2 UnSupported Distributions ==
+
CentOS 3 and 4
  
These distributions are no longer supported (they are end of life by the OS vendor), although updates and builds may still be available for these platforms.
+
Fedora (Fedora is no longer supported)
 
+
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3
+
 
+
CentOS 3
+
 
+
Fedora 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13
+
  
 
== Special notes for VPS servers ==
 
== Special notes for VPS servers ==
  
VPS servers do not have their own kernel, instead a VPS is actually a system with one kernel.  Therefore, when installing ASL into a VPS you will not be able to install the kernel into the VPS.
+
VPS servers do not have their own kernel, instead a VPS is actually a "sub"system shaving the host servers one kernel.  Therefore, when installing ASL into a VPS you will not be able to install the kernel into the VPS.

Revision as of 18:57, 22 March 2012

ASL 3.0 Supported Distributions

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and 6

CentOS 5 and 6

Cloudlinux 5 and 6

Scientific Linux 5 and 6

Trixbox

Amazon EC2


UnSupported Distributions

These distributions were previously supported, but are no longer supported (they are end of life by the OS vendor), although updates and builds may still be available for these platforms.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 and 4

CentOS 3 and 4

Fedora (Fedora is no longer supported)

Special notes for VPS servers

VPS servers do not have their own kernel, instead a VPS is actually a "sub"system shaving the host servers one kernel. Therefore, when installing ASL into a VPS you will not be able to install the kernel into the VPS.

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