Overview

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This is a repackaged open source software product wherein additional charges apply for technical support and maintenance provided by ProComputers.
This is a ready to use minimal Oracle Linux 8 image having the 20 GiB default instance volume managed with LVM.
Login using 'ec2-user' and ssh public key authentication. Root login is disabled.
If this image does not suit your needs, please choose another one from our popular image list below:
Other LVM-partitioned images:
- CentOS 7 with LVM
- CentOS Stream 8 with LVM
- CentOS Stream 9 with LVM
- Rocky Linux 8 with LVM
- Rocky Linux 9 with LVM
- AlmaLinux 8 with LVM
- AlmaLinux 9 with LVM
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux RHEL 7 with LVM
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux RHEL 8 with LVM
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux RHEL 9 with LVM
Other Oracle Linux images:
- Oracle Linux 7
- Oracle Linux 8
- Oracle Linux 9
- Oracle Linux 7 with Latest Updates
- Oracle Linux 8 with Latest Updates
- Oracle Linux 9 with Latest Updates
- Oracle Linux 7 with LVM
- Oracle Linux 9 with LVM
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THIS PRODUCT IS PROVIDED AND LICENSED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, NON-INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Highlights
- This image is built using Oracle Linux 8 'Minimal Install' group of packages. It contains just enough packages to run within AWS, bring up an SSH Server and allow users to login. Cloud-init is included as well.
- In this OracleLinux 8 AMI, the default 20 GiB LVM managed instance volume is split like this: /boot 512 MiB, / (root) 4 GiB, /tmp 2 GiB, /usr 4 GiB, /opt 1.5 GiB, /home 2 GiB, /var rest of the free space (6 GiB). Using GPT (GUID Partition Table) that allows instance volumes bigger than 2 TiB.
- Within all our OracleLinux8 with LVM images, the Enhanced Networking using ENA (i.e., Elastic Network Adapter) is enabled. SELinux is enabled as well. All security updates available at the release date are included.
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Dimension | Cost/hour |
|---|---|
t3.small Recommended | $0.05 |
t2.micro | $0.05 |
t3.micro | $0.05 |
r8a.large | $0.10 |
r6idn.metal | $2.40 |
r5b.4xlarge | $0.80 |
r6id.4xlarge | $0.80 |
i7ie.12xlarge | $2.40 |
i2.xlarge | $0.20 |
r5n.24xlarge | $3.20 |
Vendor refund policy
The Oracle Linux 8 LVM 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 Oracle Linux 8 LVM VM and consider canceling your AMI marketplace subscription to prevent accidental restarts and extra charges.
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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 Oracle Linux 8 LVM security updates available at the release date.
- In this Oracle Linux 8 LVM image, the default 8 GiB LVM managed instance volume is split like this: /boot 512 MiB, / (root) 4 GiB, /tmp 1 GiB, /var rest of the free space (2.5 GiB).
Additional details
Usage instructions
Ssh to the Oracle Linux 8 LVM 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 Oracle Linux 8 LVM instance using an SSH client .
- Connect to your Oracle Linux 8 LVM instance from Windows using PuTTY .
- Transfer files to your Oracle Linux 8 LVM instance using SCP .
Monitor the health and proper function of the Oracle Linux 8 LVM 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 Oracle Linux 8 LVM launched virtual machine instance.
- Select Status and alarms tab at the bottom of the page to review if your Oracle Linux 8 LVM virtual machine status checks passed or failed.
- For more information visit the Status checks for Amazon EC2 instances page in AWS Documentation.
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Vendor support
For technical assistance, maintenance inquiries, or troubleshooting related to this Oracle Linux 8 LVM 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 Oracle Linux 8 LVM 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.

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Customer reviews
Reliable platform has supported secure AI document workflows and powers consistent automation
What is our primary use case?
My primary use case for Oracle Linux is hosting the backend infrastructure for AI-powered document processing, and a specific example would be our trial balance classification system we built using ChatGPT-4 to automatically categorize financial documents. That entire service ran on Oracle Linux where we deployed FastAPI endpoints using Docker containers. The OS handled the heavy lifting of managing those containerized services, handling concurrent requests from our OCR pipelines, and interfacing with a vector database such as Pinecone for semantic search. Oracle Linux gave us the stability and performance we needed to process thousands of financial documents reliably in production without worrying about OS-level issues.
What is most valuable?
What really stands out about Oracle Linux in my main use case is how well it handles scaling, and we had workflows that needed to process variable volumes of documents. Some days we would get hundreds of files, and other days thousands. Oracle Linux managed those fluctuations smoothly with Docker orchestration. It also integrated beautifully with our cloud infrastructure and self-hosted setups. We actually self-hosted N8N on Hostinger VPS using Docker, and Oracle Linux provided that rock-solid foundation for managing multiple containerized services simultaneously. Our document processing pipeline, API services, and background jobs all run together without stability issues.
I would highlight a few features that Oracle Linux offers, particularly the stability and enterprise-grade reliability, which were absolutely critical. Running AI pipelines that process financial data requires an OS you can trust. The Ksplice feature for zero-downtime kernel updates made a real difference because we could not afford downtime during business hours. SELinux security capabilities gave us confidence that our systems were properly hardened, especially when handling sensitive financial documents. Oracle Linux played a crucial role in our containerized architecture where Docker ran exceptionally well on it. When we needed to scale our FastAPI services to handle multiple concurrent document processing jobs, Oracle Linux's efficient resource management and kernel stability made that seamless. It integrated beautifully with our DevOps workflow.
Oracle Linux plays very well with automation and compatibility, seamlessly integrating with our entire tech stack. Docker, Python, FastAPI, and all our AI libraries run without friction. The package management system YUM is straightforward and reliable, which matters when we need to quickly deploy dependencies for our LLM-based processing systems. The automation angle truly shines with Oracle Linux. When we self-hosted N8N on our VPS, we automated deployment using Docker and shell scripts. Oracle Linux's consistent, predictable environment made that automation rock-solid, so we did not have to worry about OS-level surprises breaking our automated systems.
Oracle Linux has made a measurable positive impact in our operations, beginning with reliability. We see dramatically fewer infrastructure-related issues compared to other distributions. When you are running production AI pipelines processing thousands of financial documents daily, that stability translates directly to uptime and customer trust. Second, performance is another positive impact where the kernel optimization and efficient resource handling mean our FastAPI services and Docker containers run more efficiently, which reduces latency in our document processing workflows. That matters when clients are waiting for trial balance classification or IFRS disclosure automation. Third, security and compliance have improved thanks to Oracle Linux's built-in security features such as SELinux, which give us confidence that our systems handling sensitive financial data are properly hardened. That is critical when working with chartered accountants and regulated financial information. We could confidently meet compliance requirements without additional workarounds. Overall, Oracle Linux became the dependable foundation that lets our engineering team focus on building great AI features rather than fighting for infrastructure.
What needs improvement?
Oracle Linux is generally quite mature and solid, but if I had to identify something, it would be around the learning curve for developers transitioning from Ubuntu-based environments. The tooling and documentation are strong, but a slightly more streamlined onboarding experience would help teams adopt it faster, especially for AI and ML workloads where developers might be new to enterprise Linux distributions. Oracle Linux itself performed excellently. The gaps I encountered were more around broader ecosystem considerations rather than the OS itself, and it delivered everything we needed for our production use cases.
Oracle Linux has solid official documentation and enterprise backing, which is invaluable. That said, the community around Ubuntu is significantly larger, so finding quick answers to niche problems can sometimes take longer with Oracle Linux. If the community grew even more, that would only strengthen it. Regarding package availability, YUM handles most standard libraries well, but occasionally, we would need to compile packages from source or use Python virtual environments for bleeding-edge AI libraries. A bit more pre-packaged support for the latest machine learning frameworks and LLM tools would be helpful. This includes newer versions of TensorFlow , PyTorch , or specialized AI libraries. That is not really a shortcoming of Oracle Linux itself as much as it is the nature of rapid innovation in the AI space. Oracle Linux works fine with integration with newer AI tools, but having more out-of-the-box compatibility or optimized packages specifically tuned for AI workloads would be beneficial. Features such as GPU drivers, CUDA support, or pre-optimized containers for LLMs interface would make it even more attractive for AI teams looking to standardize their infrastructure.
For how long have I used the solution?
I do not have any exact metrics I can cite regarding uptime, latency reduction, or compliance improvements thanks to Oracle Linux. We did not formally track those numbers during my time at Radiant Services, but I can tell you from a practical standpoint that in a year and a half I was there, we had virtually zero infrastructure failures related to the OS itself. Our document processing pipelines ran continuously with scheduled maintenance windows rather than unexpected downtime, which is the gold standard for production AI systems. What mattered most was that we deployed confidently knowing the OS would not be a bottleneck. If you need specific performance data, that would be something the Ops team at Radiant Services could speak to more formally.
What other advice do I have?
Here is my honest advice for others looking into using Oracle Linux: If you are running production backend infrastructure, especially AI workloads or containerized services, Oracle Linux is absolutely worth considering. It is proven, stable, and enterprise-grade. My specific recommendations are three-fold. First, invest time upfront in learning Oracle Linux if you are coming from Ubuntu ; the learning curve is worth it for the stability you gain. Second, leverage Docker and containerization with it, as that is where Oracle Linux really shines and makes deployment and scaling seamless. Third, take advantage of security features such as SELinux from day one rather than bolting them on later. Do not be intimidated by it being an enterprise OS; it is quite accessible for development teams building serious applications. The documentation is there, the community support exists, and once your team gets comfortable with it, you will appreciate the reliability and performance. For anyone handling sensitive data or needing high uptime—financial services, AI pipelines, critical infrastructure—Oracle Linux is genuinely a solid choice that will not let you down.
Oracle Linux is a seriously underrated choice for teams building AI and backend infrastructure. It delivers everything we needed at Radiant Services without a fuss. I wish I would have stressed more strongly just how rock-solid it was for our document processing pipelines. We could deploy with confidence knowing the OS would not be a limiting factor, which is rare to find. Oracle Linux deserves more recognition in the AI and ML infrastructure space, and it is a genuinely excellent product that supported our production systems without complaint for an entire year and a half. I would rate this product an eight out of ten.
Cost-effective platform has supported large-scale load testing and reduced subscription expenses
What is our primary use case?
Oracle Linux serves as a cost-effective alternative to RHEL for my organization. My main use case is that Oracle Linux is freeware for RHEL , and where RHEL is required, we use Oracle Linux.
For our product-based company, we use load testing tools that require generators. All generators have RHEL-based VMs, so we use Oracle Linux because it is freeware, whereas RHEL is subscription-based and requires a number of subscriptions. We use it for testing purposes and in the production environment, where we spin up more than 50 VMs and sometimes require 100 VMs, making it significantly more cost-effective.
What is most valuable?
Oracle Linux offers the best features because it is designed for enterprise edition and is freeware, which means it does not require any subscription, making it highly cost-effective.
The cost savings from using Oracle Linux have positively impacted my projects. As I mentioned, in a product-based company that requires multiple servers to generate load, purchasing RHEL subscriptions would cost considerably more. Using Oracle Linux has saved us substantial money since it does not require any subscription.
Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization by making processes easier and helping reduce costs.
From a cost perspective, if I generate a load on 100 VMs, I would need 100 subscriptions for RHEL. Instead, we are using Oracle Linux, which is free. For stability, I am not facing any issues while using Oracle Linux.
What needs improvement?
Oracle Linux can be improved by making it more similar to RHEL. However, I do not have any specific suggestions for improvements.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been working in my current field for over six years. I have been using Oracle Linux for over five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The performance and stability of Oracle Linux are good, and I am not facing any issues while using it. Oracle Linux is stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
We use Oracle Linux for auto-scaling, and it works efficiently.
How are customer service and support?
There is no customer support for Oracle. I have not interacted with customer service.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
What was our ROI?
I have seen a return on investment with Oracle Linux through money saved.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before choosing Oracle Linux, I evaluated CentOS. I found Oracle Linux is better than CentOS.
What other advice do I have?
If others require RHEL or RHEL family Linux, they should use Oracle Linux as it is truly useful and more similar to RHEL. I would rate this product nine out of ten.
Hosting applications on secure servers has reduced costs and supports daily cloud operations
What is our primary use case?
My main use case for Oracle Linux is for hosting, deploying applications, and running servers.
A specific example of an application I have deployed using Oracle Linux is our currently deployed Kubernetes cluster.
In addition to my main use case, I also deploy daily applications on Oracle Linux that are utilized regularly.
What is most valuable?
Oracle Linux offers several best features in my experience, including regular updates for the operating system and patches, as well as providing the latest versions for applications and good support with other applications and software.
Regarding the regular updates and good support with other applications, Oracle Linux receives updates whenever Ubuntu updates come out, and concerning application upgrades, whenever new applications such as reference software like Netstat or Telnet become available, they also receive the latest updates on Oracle Linux.
Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization because before using it, we were using Windows Servers, and now we are currently saving money as Oracle Linux is cheaper than Windows.
I estimate that we are saving 50 to 60 percent after switching to Oracle Linux, as Windows is not as secure and is more costly. We also have to pay for licensing with Windows, but we do not have to pay for licensing with Oracle Linux.
What needs improvement?
Oracle Linux can be improved because it does not provide more applications and software compared to Amazon Linux or Ubuntu , and it can also be more stable and support more organizations.
I chose 8 out of 10 because it can be more secure, more scalable, more stable, and provide more applications and software in Oracle Linux.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Oracle Linux for the last six months.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Oracle Linux is stable in my experience, but it can be improved.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The scalability of Oracle Linux for my workloads has been good, as I have not experienced any downtime or problems.
How are customer service and support?
I have not reached out to customer support yet, but I think that customer support would be good.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Previously, I was using Windows, which was costlier, which is why I switched to Oracle Linux.
What was our ROI?
I have seen a return on investment since we switched from Windows to Oracle Linux, with approximately 50 to 60 percent savings.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
My experience with pricing and setup cost for Oracle Linux is that the setup is easy, and regarding pricing, it is cheaper than Windows.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before choosing Oracle Linux, I evaluated other options based on the reviews and ultimately chose Oracle Linux.
What other advice do I have?
My advice for others looking into using Oracle Linux is that if someone wants a cheaper solution to host and deploy applications on servers and use machines as servers at a lower cost while needing a stable and scalable solution, they can use Oracle Linux.
I rate Oracle Linux an eight 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?
Reliable platform has supported secure home lab workloads and personal cloud projects
What is our primary use case?
In my role, I mostly use Oracle Linux for the VMs where I run my workload. Outside work, I mostly use it to run my own personal workloads, primarily my home lab setup and my own personal applications. I am trying to do the same for my home lab data center as well.
Currently, I run small-scale agents and a few dashboards on Oracle Linux , and then a few of the open-source applications that I use for replacing other proprietary applications. Most of them are containerized. There are a few dashboards that monitor the electrical systems at my home and run the smart devices as well.
I use Oracle Linux mostly from Oracle Cloud . Whenever I spin up a VM for almost any sort of work, I just get Oracle Linux. I have been looking into machine learning recently. Whenever I get an autonomous data center, I usually spin up and run most of the workload, like the compute part or data processing part on Oracle Linux VMs. Recently, I have been trying to spin up my own Kubernetes clusters as well to self-host it along with the other applications.
What is most valuable?
The best features Oracle Linux offers in my experience are reliability, the latest updates, and I have never faced any attacks or vulnerabilities on Oracle Linux. It is pretty stable for most of my workloads.
On the reliability side, I have run my home lab on Oracle Linux. I have done it on Ubuntu , then I have tried it on Windows as well for some time, but as far as I know, I have never broken any of my applications after an update on Oracle Linux till now. I have done it on Windows multiple times and a few times on Ubuntu .
Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization with security, pretty much, because that is where I work on a lot. Oracle Linux is pretty secure and we have not gotten many vulnerabilities being reported from Oracle Linux workloads that we run. Oracle Linux's security has significantly reduced incidents and saved us time because every time a vulnerability shows up in one of our VMs, we would have to take measures to patch it before it can be used. Mostly, this is time-critical. We have SLAs and then we will have to patch it pretty fast, and not having vulnerabilities has saved us a lot of time.
What needs improvement?
I cannot think of anything as of now regarding improvements needed for Oracle Linux. Everything is pretty good.
A bit on the Oracle Linux user interface side could be improved, but I have not had much of an issue of my own. However, I did hear from a couple of my colleagues that they had certain difficulties on the user interface side.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Oracle Linux for close to five years now. I started around the middle of my college days, and I have been using it till now, for around five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Oracle Linux is pretty stable, really stable.
Oracle Linux has pretty much satisfied almost all our needs as our workloads have grown.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
I have tried scaling workloads up or down on Oracle Linux a lot of times, and it is pretty good as of now. It is pretty scalable. I have not found any issues as of now.
How are customer service and support?
Personally, I have not reached out to Oracle Linux customer support myself because there are colleagues who do that, but as far as I know, the customer support is really good.
I would give a rating of 10 for Oracle Linux customer support. However, this is not based on my own personal experience, but rather on that of colleagues.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
When I joined this particular company, I have seen Oracle Linux mostly being used. I am not aware of what was there before.
I was not part of the evaluation of Oracle Linux options before choosing it.
What was our ROI?
This would not come under my area because I am not responsible for measuring it, but I would say that there would definitely be ROI with Oracle Linux in terms of money saved.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
I can only comment from a personal point of view regarding Oracle Linux because I do not take care of pricing or the procurement for the company. From a personal point of view, I find it pretty reasonable. It is affordable for me to run my own workloads. Another point being that from Oracle Cloud , the generous free tier that I get there is really good, and then I do purchase certain services for my own purposes. However, I cannot comment for the company because I do not take care of that part.
What other advice do I have?
I would say a solid eight for Oracle Linux overall for now because I still feel there could be so much that can be better. But as of now, a solid eight. It is really good, and I would love to see it getting even better from here.
I would not say I did not give a 10 for Oracle Linux because it is not a 10. I just gave it an eight because I would like to see it way beyond that. If I were to give a 10, then I would want it to be a 12.
Others looking into using Oracle Linux should try it out first and get hands-on experience before making any decisions. Maybe what they read or what they hear might not fully explain what Oracle Linux can do. I suggest that they try it out themselves and then go for it. My overall rating for this review is 8.
Live patching has protected critical patient data and delivers consistent high availability
What is our primary use case?
We use Oracle Linux as a RDBMS . For non-RDBMS data sets, we use a different database, but for RDBMS , we use Oracle Linux.
A specific example of how I use Oracle Linux for my RDBMS workloads is saving patient data because we deal with US medical institutes and doctors. Saving patient data, other information, and PII-related information are some basic things that we store. I cannot give you complete context because some things cannot be revealed as we are also under HIPAA compliance.
In terms of my use case with Oracle Linux, performance-wise, it is better compared to other databases. That is why we use this solution.
What is most valuable?
Oracle Linux offers many excellent features. First of all, there is zero downtime patching, Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel, free to use with no mandatory license required, 100% RHEL binary compatibility, excellent cloud and container support, a strong security stack, and stable long-term support.
Out of those features, the biggest one that has made the most difference for my team and organization is zero downtime patching.
Oracle Linux has a clear positive impact on our organization, both operationally and from a security and compliance standpoint. In summary, Oracle Linux improves our uptime, reduces operational overhead, and allows us to respond faster to security risks without disrupting the business.
Specifically, Oracle Linux has reduced operational overhead and improved uptime significantly. Before Oracle Linux, monthly and quarterly kernel patches were required, typically two patches were necessary, and we needed two to three engineers, which took at least two to four hours per window to address any problem. With Oracle Linux, we have achieved a 60-70% reduction in OS level maintenance effort. What has improved on the uptime and reliability side is that before each kernel patch required a reboot, even with rolling restart. After implementation, kernel and critical CVEs can be patched without a reboot, allowing the system to stay online continuously and avoiding restart-related failures. Oracle Linux has significantly reduced operational overhead by eliminating reboot-based kernel patching. We cut our maintenance effort by over 60% and improved uptime from around 99.9% to near 99.99% with zero outages related to kernel updates after adoption.
What needs improvement?
Oracle Linux is extremely strong in stability, security, and uptime. However, it can improve in community visibility, cloud-native developer experience, and faster access to newer tooling, especially for teams building a modern Kubernetes-first platform.
While Oracle Linux excels in reliability and security, improving documentation clarity, developer experience, and community visibility would make it even more compelling for modern DevOps teams.
I have noticed that Oracle Linux is very strong operationally, but deeper native observability, Kubernetes-first defaults, and better automation examples would further reduce friction for modern platform teams.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Oracle Linux for more than five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Oracle Linux is highly stable; it is enterprise-tested, has long-term support, and avoids reboot-related instability through live kernel patching.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Oracle Linux scales very well, both vertically and horizontally. It supports large, high-impact systems, scales cleanly across large server fleets and Kubernetes clusters, and reduces operational friction through live patching and enterprise-grade features.
How are customer service and support?
Oracle Linux customer support is solid and enterprise-grade, especially for production and mission-critical workloads.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
How was the initial setup?
My experience with pricing, setup costs, and licensing is that Oracle Linux gave us enterprise-grade capabilities with a much simpler and more cost-effective licensing model while keeping setup and migration effort very low.
What was our ROI?
I have seen a return on investment as Oracle Linux reduced OS maintenance effort by over 60%, improved uptime to near four nines for infrastructure-related work, and allowed us to scale without increasing headcount, delivering a clear operational ROI.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
What other advice do I have?
My advice to others looking into using Oracle Linux is that if uptime, security, and predictable operations matter more than chasing the latest feature, Oracle Linux is a very solid choice. I would rate this solution a 9 out of 10.