Overview

Product video
This AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal image is a repackaged open source software product wherein additional charges apply for technical support and maintenance provided by ProComputers.
Login using ec2-user and ssh public key authentication .
AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal on AWS EC2
Alma Linux 10.1 Minimal provides a streamlined and modern Linux platform prepared for cloud infrastructure environments that value stability, predictable updates, and disciplined system configuration. Delivered with a minimal installation footprint, the operating system includes only the essential components required to operate a secure and functional Linux environment. Fully aligned with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 ecosystem, AlmaLinux maintains consistent application compatibility and dependable runtime behavior. Integration with official repositories ensures ongoing update availability, while cloud-init enables automated provisioning, configuration management, and lifecycle orchestration across AWS infrastructure. The architecture of Alma Linux 10.1 promotes portability, controlled software layering, and long-term operational reliability.
Benefits of Using AlmaLinux 10.1 AMI in AWS Cloud
- Modern enterprise Linux platform: Built on the latest AlmaLinux generation aligned with the RHEL 10 ecosystem.
- Minimal system exposure: Reduced package surface simplifies security management and auditing.
- Operational consistency: Compact system composition helps minimize configuration drift.
- Golden image readiness: Clean operating system base ideal for enterprise image pipelines.
- Reliable production behavior: Suitable for workloads requiring predictable operating conditions.
- Automation alignment: Works seamlessly with Terraform, Ansible, CI/CD systems, and DevOps tooling.
- Efficient resource utilization: Fewer background services reduce system overhead.
- Intentional software layering: Administrators install only the packages required by the workload.
- Compliance facilitation: Smaller footprint simplifies validation in regulated environments.
- Infrastructure repeatability: Designed to support consistent deployments across AWS regions.
Use Cases for AlmaLinux 10.1 VM in AWS EC2
- Base layer for custom appliances: Build application-focused virtual systems using Alma 10.1 as the underlying OS.
- Enterprise image factories: Use Alma10 as a foundation for standardized infrastructure images.
- Security-sensitive systems: Appropriate for hardened deployments with strict change control.
- Container host baselines: Lightweight substrate for Kubernetes, Docker, or Podman stacks.
- DevOps automation nodes: Stable environment for CI/CD agents and orchestration tools.
- Compatibility-bound applications: Suitable for workloads targeting the RHEL 10 ecosystem.
- Regulated industry workloads: Finance, healthcare, and public sector infrastructure.
- Purpose-built cloud appliances: Minimal OS profile for specialized virtual appliances.
- Validation and QA platforms: Consistent baseline for software testing and certification.
- Persistent infrastructure roles: Designed for dependable long-running system services.
Conclusion
Start using AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal on AWS EC2 today to deploy a modern enterprise Linux platform designed for predictable operations and flexible infrastructure development. Alma 10.1 provides a clean and efficient operating system base suitable for building reliable platforms, automated infrastructure templates, and controlled application environments in the AWS Cloud. Maintained and supported by ProComputers, this Alma10 AMI enables organizations to deploy stable, secure, and well-structured Linux environments at scale.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I connect after launch? Use ec2-user with SSH public key authentication. Root login is disabled.
- Is this image compatible with RHEL 10? Yes. AlmaLinux 10.1 is fully binary compatible with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 ecosystem.
- Who maintains this AMI? ProComputers packages, tests, and maintains the AlmaLinux 10.1 image with continuous updates and AWS-specific optimization.
Why Choose ProComputers
With more than a decade of cloud expertise, ProComputers delivers secure, optimized Linux VM images for AWS EC2, including this AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal AMI. Each image is minimal, hardened, regularly updated, and engineered for enterprise-grade stability and performance.
ProComputers is a proud sponsor of the AlmaLinux OS Foundation and the Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation .
Highlights
- AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal provides a compact and enterprise-aligned operating system base designed for AWS EC2 deployments that prioritize predictability, stability, and disciplined system composition. With strict binary compatibility with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 ecosystem, integrated cloud-init automation, and enforced SELinux policies, AlmaLinux10 delivers a reliable platform foundation for building controlled infrastructure and application environments.
- The AlmaLinux 10.1 AMI is engineered for AWS EC2 environments with ENA-enabled networking, optimized boot behavior, native instance metadata integration, and seamless cloud-init configuration support. The Minimal installation profile intentionally limits package scope, creating a clean and efficient operating system base that integrates smoothly into automated image pipelines and infrastructure-as-code workflows.
- Alma Linux 10.1 Minimal is a community-driven, enterprise-grade Linux operating system image curated and continuously maintained by ProComputers. Designed with a security-conscious and performance-oriented approach, this minimal system foundation helps reduce operational complexity while supporting scalable, long-running production workloads in modern cloud infrastructures.
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Pricing
- ...
Dimension | Cost/hour |
|---|---|
t3.small Recommended | $0.05 |
t2.micro | $0.05 |
t3.micro | $0.05 |
z1d.large | $0.10 |
c7i-flex.4xlarge | $0.80 |
c4.4xlarge | $0.80 |
hpc6id.32xlarge | $3.20 |
r7a.16xlarge | $3.20 |
r8a.48xlarge | $6.40 |
m7a.xlarge | $0.20 |
Vendor refund policy
The AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal (Alma Linux 10.1) VM can be terminated anytime to stop additional charges. Usage is billed by AWS on a pay-as-you-go basis, and refunds are not available once launched. To avoid further costs, stop or terminate the AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal (Alma Linux 10.1) VM and consider canceling your AMI marketplace subscription to prevent accidental restarts and extra charges.
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Delivery details
64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.
Version release notes
- Repackaged on a default 8 GiB volume using the latest AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) security updates available at the release date.
- In this AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) AMI version, the primary partition and filesystem automatically extend during boot if the instance volume is bigger than the default one.
Additional details
Usage instructions
Ssh to the AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) instance public IP address and login as 'ec2-user' using the key specified at launch time. Use 'sudo su -' in order to get a root prompt. For more information please visit the links below:
- Connect to your AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) instance using an SSH client .
- Connect to your AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) instance from Windows using PuTTY .
- Transfer files to your AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) instance using SCP .
Monitor the health and proper function of the AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) virtual machine you have just launched:
- Navigate to your Amazon EC2 console and verify that you are in the correct region.
- Choose Instances from the left menu and select your AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) launched virtual machine instance.
- Select Status and alarms tab at the bottom of the page to review if your AlmaLinux 10 (Alma Linux 10) virtual machine status checks passed or failed.
- For more information visit the Status checks for Amazon EC2 instances page in AWS Documentation.
Resources
Vendor resources
Support
Vendor support
For technical assistance, maintenance inquiries, or troubleshooting related to this AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal (Alma Linux 10.1) image, please visit the ProComputers Support Portal . Our team is ready to help with configuration guidance, deployment issues, or general image feedback. If you encounter any problem with this AlmaLinux 10.1 Minimal (Alma Linux 10.1) AMI, please contact us immediately for prompt investigation and resolution.
AWS infrastructure support
AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.

Standard contract
Customer reviews
Migration projects have delivered smooth moves from legacy servers and improved security
What is our primary use case?
My main use case for AlmaLinux involves helping customers migrate from CentOS to AlmaLinux 8 and now AlmaLinux 9 as well. Most of the customers are from CentOS , and I assist them with the traditional migration and using the in-place OS upgrade workflow as well.
Regarding my main use case for AlmaLinux, we did not face any issues during the migration. Most of the customers used traditional migration, which means setting up a new server with AlmaLinux 8, and then our migration team helped them migrate from CentOS 7 to AlmaLinux. It was an easy process because the in-place OS upgrade was taking longer to get upgraded to AlmaLinux, nearly thirty to forty-five days. That was not workable for a couple of customers. That is why we introduced traditional migration, where we set up a new server with AlmaLinux. It was easy, and for about a month, customers had to pay for both servers, but all their domains, files, databases, and everything would be migrated from CentOS to AlmaLinux. We did not face any issues, especially in AlmaLinux. It was great, and most customers were asking for an upgrade since CentOS was end of life.
During the switching to AlmaLinux, the traditional migration with IP swap had very little downtime, and even in-place OS upgrades had a downtime of about three to four hours because customers do not need to buy a new server; we upgrade the OS on the existing server from CentOS to AlmaLinux. We clone their server to a temporary server for testing the upgrade and their website files before applying the same on the production server. We inform our customers that there will be a three to four hour downtime. Traditional migration with the IP swap had very little downtime, and to minimize downtime, we introduced that IP swap along with the traditional migration. However, most customers were not willing to pay for the second server during migration. After we introduced in-place OS upgrades, most customers chose that option instead, even though the downtime was three to four hours. We scheduled downtime during off-peak hours, and everything went well.
What is most valuable?
AlmaLinux offers several valuable features that I appreciate. The best features include the updated PHP versions available from AlmaLinux. Most of our customers use WordPress websites, which always show a kind of security vulnerability notification saying that their PHP version is out of date. Most customers were asking to upgrade their PHP version, which was not available in CentOS 7. They prefer the latest PHP versions, and we guide them with AlmaLinux. Overall, AlmaLinux 8 is really great, and version 9 is even better. The next better version always has better performance and options. Since CentOS reached end of life, ninety percent of customers have chosen AlmaLinux rather than Ubuntu .
Regarding the features of AlmaLinux, we normally work on fully managed servers. Most of the customers choose cPanel and WHM. I do not see much compatibility issue working on cPanel and WHM in AlmaLinux 8 compared to CentOS. Overall, the performance was really great, the options were excellent, and all services were up to date in AlmaLinux, which was not the case in CentOS. Regarding security, AlmaLinux is more secure than CentOS.
AlmaLinux has positively impacted my organization significantly. Most of our customers were on CentOS 7, and when CentOS announced it would reach end of life, they began to panic, asking what their next options were.
What needs improvement?
I wish host access control in AlmaLinux could be made easier the way it was in CentOS because host access control was not working as expected in AlmaLinux during the initial stages. Later, we implemented some other methods that began to work, but initially, it was not operational. Host access control in WHM with AlmaLinux is my concern. Apart from that, AlmaLinux is really good, easier as well, and I do not see much difference between CentOS and AlmaLinux.
Regarding improvements needed for AlmaLinux, the documentation available is great. A simple Google search yields related documents which help in our work. About the documentation, I would say eighty percent of it is available, so if there is a plan to improve, focusing on that remaining twenty percent would be beneficial. Additionally, I would prefer documentation available for AlmaLinux when cPanel WHM is installed on the server, including how to use the tools. If documentation for Plesk or NodeWorx and SiteWorx is available, it would be very helpful for customers using AlmaLinux to navigate their servers.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using AlmaLinux for the past two years.
What other advice do I have?
Overall, AlmaLinux is really good. After CentOS, most customers panicked about what to do when their OS reached end of life. We introduced AlmaLinux, which is truly great regarding performance and efficiency. Everything looks very good in AlmaLinux. I believe people always look for more features and easier ways to handle servers, so any tools or improvements in the future would be beneficial. Overall, AlmaLinux is an excellent option.
My advice for others considering using AlmaLinux is to keep everything up to date, especially the OS, which is very important. I believe AlmaLinux is good until at least twenty twenty-seven or twenty twenty-nine. I give this product an overall rating of eight out of ten.
Using a free, reliable platform has supported container performance and reduced client costs
What is our primary use case?
My main use case for AlmaLinux is using it as a container base image. As a product-based company, we use AlmaLinux as the base image in our performance testing tool. According to client requirements, if they require a Debian base container, we provide Ubuntu . If they require an RHEL base container, we provide AlmaLinux. On top of that, we provide our product.
What is most valuable?
AlmaLinux offers the best features in that it is freeware for RHEL , and it is really reliable. AlmaLinux is reliable because it is stable, and it is easy to maintain since our environment is secure on layer one and AlmaLinux works on layer four. Security is not a concern for us in this context.
AlmaLinux has positively impacted my organization in terms of performance and cost savings. In terms of cost saving, using an RHEL-based container image requires a subscription for RHEL, and for AlmaLinux, we do not require any subscription. We can easily use it and save considerable money. We have a number of clients, and if we provide a container image to each client, using RHEL requires a subscription, but for AlmaLinux, we can provide it as freeware which saves substantial money. I cannot calculate the exact amount because it is not a fixed number for clients; it applies to more than fifty clients.
What needs improvement?
AlmaLinux could be improved by having some basic components, such as ifconfig and netstat, pre-installed on the container image, as that would be really helpful for us. I chose nine out of ten because for some use cases, any client may require something specific that necessitates a subscription for RHEL. Since it is not possible to add a subscription on AlmaLinux, we use the RHEL official container image with the subscription in those cases. If something is added to AlmaLinux that allows for some subscription or makes it exactly equal to RHEL, it would be perfect.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using AlmaLinux for four to five years.
What other advice do I have?
If you require an RHEL based container image or operating system, you must try AlmaLinux as it is freeware. I give this product a rating of nine out of ten.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Long-term use has simplified web hosting and testing for diverse on-premises environments
What is our primary use case?
My main use cases for AlmaLinux include running Apache and sub-applications for our web application. I also use it for long-term support capabilities. I use it for testing, production servers, VMs, and other infrastructure needs. I use AlmaLinux for production, UAT, and test environments, as well as for cloud containerization.
AlmaLinux helps with these use cases by allowing me to use the virtual environment for hosting our web application using Apache services. I use it for both testing and production environments. It is compatible because it is robust and has efficient storage for application deployment.
Different types of developers in my organization use AlmaLinux for building applications. We use AlmaLinux rather than Windows subsystem for our projects, testing, UAT, and production work.
AlmaLinux's open-source nature stands out the most for my team. We do not directly use CentOS or Windows servers. AlmaLinux is compatible with our application for testing purposes. We perform stage-to-stage checking, updating, and patching of applications for security reasons and assessment testing. It is suitable for our environment.
AlmaLinux is supported on high-performance computing, which I find valuable for my main use cases.
What is most valuable?
The GUI features are excellent, and I find both the GUI features and console access valuable about AlmaLinux.
AlmaLinux has positively impacted our organization.
We are using the web application in our on-premises environment. It is faster for deployment and comfortable for our on-premises environment, allowing us to handle and manage it smoothly.
What needs improvement?
I do not wish to add anything regarding needed improvements.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using AlmaLinux for five years.
What other advice do I have?
AlmaLinux is better than other Linux flavors, and I recommend it for maintaining systems. To make it better, utilize the GUI so that you can use it more effectively for your computers. I have given this product a rating of eight out of ten.
Private cloud practice has become seamless and deployments run smoothly for my projects
What is our primary use case?
My main use case for AlmaLinux is based on my recent hands-on experience with AlmaLinux 9 for OpenStack deployment, and I am happy to share my feedback on PeerSpot .
To give a quick example of how I am using AlmaLinux for my OpenStack deployment, here is a brief review based on my recent production deployment experience. It involves deploying a full OpenStack Yoga environment for a private cloud setup, which is my personal project for practicing. The initial attempts on Red Hat distribution faced compatibility and subscription repository configuration hurdles, but I found solutions to switch to AlmaLinux 9.6, which offered perfect compatibility with Packstack without the licensing overhead.
There are key wins from my side: AlmaLinux 9 has zero subscription friction, direct access to the latest patches, and smooth installation of OpenStack Keystone, Nova, Neutron, and Horizon via Packstack. Moreover, stable OVS networking and floating IP configuration is very easy for me when using AlmaLinux, making it a reliable and highly recommended option for teams needing an enterprise-grade Red Hat compatible workflow without the subscription cost.
After struggling with various Linux distributions for almost seven days, mainly dealing with missing tools while installing network components like Neutron in OpenStack, I turned to AlmaLinux. It was then that I discovered that full OpenStack installation with AlmaLinux is highly compatible. Eventually, I successfully configured the full OpenStack platform, which is something my interviewer board also accepted.
My deployment of AlmaLinux starts locally to connect servers, requiring multiple nodes. Initially, I test in a local environment before transitioning toward a public cloud setup, which is a practice session for me. I also suggest to our public cloud team that they utilize AlmaLinux, as I find it quite comfortable.
Regarding AlmaLinux's scalability, I find that it scales well in both vertical and horizontal dimensions due to its one-to-one compatibility with Red Hat and an enterprise-grade kernel. For vertical scaling, adding more CPU, RAM, or storage is seamless, and tools like tune allow for quick performance profiling. Horizontally, while using AWS , I successfully scaled applications significantly during traffic spikes without OS-related issues, and I managed to add new compute nodes effortlessly within the OpenStack cluster.
What is most valuable?
The best features AlmaLinux offers include zero-subscription friction and direct access to the latest patches, which I think are essential. Additionally, it also provides up-to-date packages and stable versions that are very useful for me.
When I say direct access to the latest patches, it has greatly benefited my projects by being absolutely hassle-free. In contrast to Red Hat, where I had to configure the Yum server for updates or deal with subscriptions, AlmaLinux allows a far simpler process without the complexities involved.
At this moment, AlmaLinux is a very open platform. It not only includes the latest security patches but also integrates very recent AI technologies alongside the direct patches that help harden the server.
I have noticed several positive impacts of using AlmaLinux on my organization and personal projects. Trying multiple distributions like CentOS , Red Hat, and Ubuntu for my personal OpenStack installation revealed how complex it can be to set up. I find AlmaLinux to be reliable, providing the latest patches on a secure platform. Many people suggest AlmaLinux 9 on public platforms for its excellent features, and I benefited from the step-by-step configuration provided, leading to the acceptance of my project.
What needs improvement?
I follow the documentation for AlmaLinux, which I believe could be more extensive for enterprise setups. My primary use case remains deploying private cloud infrastructure using OpenStack Yoga, thus suggesting improvements to cater to specific cloud instances like AWS Graviton or Azure NVMe .
Driver or kernel updates for new hardware or cloud instances like AWS Graviton or Azure NVMe tend to arrive a little later in AlmaLinux than they do in the Red Hat distribution. Therefore, I suggest that faster releases of cloud-optimized images and updated hardware drivers could enhance AlmaLinux's competitiveness. Additionally, I find it sometimes difficult to find answers on forums due to the community not being as large as that of Red Hat or CentOS . My suggestion is to create an active forum or Q&A session where developers can directly address user problems, growing the community and providing optional enterprise support tiers for large organizations.
Additionally, I have continued to consider improvements. For server administration and language runtime management, I encountered conflicts on production servers with older and newer versions of tools such as Python and Node.js. Simplifying the application space management would reduce the friction in multi-language development environments. Moreover, including more pre-configured or auto-remediation scripts like CIS Benchmark or STIG compliance would be immensely helpful for enterprise security hardening.
For how long have I used the solution?
My experience with AlmaLinux spans almost two years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
While I do not yet use AlmaLinux in a production capacity, my use case for my blogging activity has demonstrated its stability. Official blogs also verify that the stable version of AlmaLinux is acceptable for production purposes.
How are customer service and support?
I have not utilized customer support for AlmaLinux as of yet, mainly relying on public resources and the official documentation.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Prior to using AlmaLinux, we utilized Red Hat, which posed significant financial challenges due to its subscription model and complexity. Comparatively, AlmaLinux serves as a very suitable alternative, matching the Red Hat environment with lower costs.
How was the initial setup?
I follow the documentation for AlmaLinux, which I believe could be more extensive for enterprise setups. My primary use case remains deploying private cloud infrastructure using OpenStack Yoga, thus suggesting improvements to cater to specific cloud instances like AWS Graviton or Azure NVMe.
What was our ROI?
In terms of return on investment from using AlmaLinux, I maintain that since we use the free version, we have saved significantly and have encountered fewer security risks. If the AlmaLinux team announces that the latest version complies with CIS benchmarks and security protocols, I will continue to endorse AlmaLinux.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Currently, we have not experienced pricing with AlmaLinux, as I have used the free version so far. However, when we move to the production environment, I am suggesting that we implement AlmaLinux to improve our performance metrics.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before settling on AlmaLinux, I evaluated other options while testing in a local environment, especially for students encountering financial constraints. Given its resemblance to Red Hat and CentOS, I recommended AlmaLinux as the best solution due to its free nature.
What other advice do I have?
On a scale of one to ten, I would rate AlmaLinux at 8.5 overall.
The reason I chose 8.5 out of 10 stems from my perspective as a user focused on OpenStack deployments. Despite being subscription-free and reliable, I find some complexities in the documentation and troubleshooting guides which are not as comprehensive as Red Hat's. There is also a lack of 24x7 support, leading to a reliance on community assistance, and while the migration tools are useful, they do raise warnings with legacy systems. Additionally, hardware support is occasionally slow for newer driver versions, which is why I score it as I do.
My advice for others considering AlmaLinux is that it is a fantastic product and a reliable alternative to Red Hat, matching its kernel. I recommend that students use AlmaLinux for local deployments and testing packages, as it is secure and dependable. I gave AlmaLinux an overall rating of 8.5 out of 10.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Long-term support has provided a reliable home server and desktop for daily use and learning
What is our primary use case?
Currently, I can see the installation date on my server. I mainly use AlmaLinux both at home and for testing purposes. I started using it because I wanted a stable Enterprise Linux distribution with long-term support, and AlmaLinux perfectly fits that use case for me.
For my home server, this is my main service. It is a small server for file sharing and to store my personal data, videos, photos, and other important files. If I have time, I upload my data to the server and use it as a central solid solution. I also use it as a Plex media server, which allows my family and me to easily watch downloaded videos and movies.
As a desktop system, I use AlmaLinux. Today, I reinstalled AlmaLinux 8 because sometimes, when I have spare time, I create minimal scripts for Wi-Fi checking or service testing. I appreciate the opportunity to experiment, try configurations, and understand how the operating system behaves in real-life scenarios.
Before I started using AlmaLinux, I was a distro-hopper, jumping from one system to another. One day I would use Ubuntu , the next time Oracle Linux , and after that Gentoo. Currently, I am focusing on Enterprise Linux , especially AlmaLinux.
What is most valuable?
What I especially appreciate about AlmaLinux is the long-term support, which I consider a top priority because many companies and other users need to focus on support, and I believe AlmaLinux is the best for it. AlmaLinux is also very stable and robust, which I find very useful.
What needs improvement?
I think AlmaLinux could improve by activating third-party repositories. Perhaps this was a policy decision, but I see the lack of these repositories as risky. If I suggest AlmaLinux to someone who wants to learn a Linux distribution but has no experience, it could become complicated. For example, on my laptop, the Wi-Fi is not working because AlmaLinux does not ship with acceptable drivers for it. This is fine for me because I understand that sometimes drivers are not available, but I believe it would be beneficial to have them.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using AlmaLinux for more than two years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Regarding stability, I think it is fine. Since I started using AlmaLinux, I have not encountered any issue with kernel crashes or upgrading. Whenever I receive an upgrade, I simply use 'sudo dnf upgrade', and everything works fine.
How are customer service and support?
I have never contacted any sort of technical support regarding AlmaLinux because I do not need it. As I mentioned, if I encounter any problem or find a bug or issue, I use AI or Google to resolve it.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I have used Rocky Linux , Oracle Linux , Ubuntu , Manjaro, Linux Mint, Fedora, and Red Hat. Red Hat can be used for community purposes, but there are some requirements.
How was the initial setup?
From my point of view, the deployment of AlmaLinux is absolutely easy. I download any ISO, create it on Ventoy or another tool, and possibly use Rufus for Windows. After plugging it into the laptop, I choose the boot system, and everything is fine. I receive a welcome message, then I need to choose the keyboard and language. Following that, I see the system requirements, the root user, and system settings such as date and time. After that, I choose whatever I want to install, click to install, and everything is fine. I find it very easy, at least for me.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Regarding pricing for AlmaLinux, I think it is good. As far as I know, when Linus Torvalds created the Linux kernel, he mentioned that everyone could use it and modify it under a GPL public license. Since AlmaLinux uses the Linux kernel and open-source applications alongside third-party applications, I am fine with this. In the open-source environment, I believe a Linux distribution is always free of cost.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
When I compare AlmaLinux to alternatives, I think it is somewhat different because I try to separate them. I believe Enterprise Linux distributions, including Red Hat, Oracle, AlmaLinux, and Rocky, are very fine systems. Others, such as Ubuntu, Arch Linux, and Manjaro, have fewer vendors in my opinion.
Regarding my experience today, I installed AlmaLinux 8, and everything is okay, but the significant problem is that AlmaLinux does not ship with Wi-Fi drivers. For me, this is not a problem because I grew up with Linux and open source, so I know that I need to research and troubleshoot this issue. I found many third-party repositories, and with these, I could use my Wi-Fi and install any other third-party applications. So in comparison with the others, this is a slight disadvantage.
What other advice do I have?
I do not think AlmaLinux requires any maintenance on my end to keep working. If I encounter any problem, I could use AI or Google. The open-source and Linux world is very interesting. If you have any problem, you cannot simply ask a neighbor to check your Linux system because they may not be familiar with it. For me, this is fine, and I do not think it needs maintenance. My overall rating for AlmaLinux is eight out of ten.