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    reviewer2801103

Reliable platform has supported secure home lab workloads and personal cloud projects

  • February 05, 2026
  • Review from a verified AWS customer

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.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

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.


    reviewer2800737

Live patching has protected critical patient data and delivers consistent high availability

  • February 03, 2026
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

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.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We switched from CentOS and RHEL mainly to eliminate reboot-driven downtime and reduce operational overhead while keeping full RHEL compatibility and lowering overall costs.

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?

Before choosing Oracle Linux, we evaluated RHEL, Rocky, AlmaLinux, and Ubuntu, but chose Oracle Linux because it uniquely combined RHEL compatibility with zero downtime patching and lower operational costs.

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.


    Likhith M

Managed platform has reduced our operations workload and delivers faster cluster startups

  • January 22, 2026
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

We use Oracle Linux as the OS since we are into OKE, the Kubernetes engine of Oracle, and it's a managed AMI provided by Oracle. That's the default choice.

We use Oracle Linux in a solution which is in VDI, Virtual Desktop Infrastructure that we provide to our customers and that is the base image that we provide to our customers.

Since the use case for us is pretty much with OKE, Oracle Linux has been a good thing for us. Since it's optimized and managed, we wouldn't have to manage it as much; our workload reduces since it's a managed thing.

What is most valuable?

I wouldn't say it's specifically an Oracle Linux pro, but when using Oracle Linux with a Kubernetes engine, it provides you with all the necessary libraries that it needs for a startup. This means quicker startup time and quicker joining to the cluster. It's just fast when you use Oracle Linux because it's optimized for your OKE engine.

When I mention quicker startup time and easier joining to the cluster, it means you have a pretty good startup when you want to scale, you don't have to wait longer times just for your nodes to come up. When you have your traffic spiking, you don't want to wait that two to three minutes extra for a node to join the cluster, so that's where you have that advantage. And even for the customers when we give them access, it's a better startup since it's optimized and has all the necessary libraries.

When I mention our workload is reduced because it's managed and optimized, it is approximately 80 to 90 percent of our workload is reduced because Kubernetes also releases frequent updates. You don't have to migrate to a new one; when you're migrating, it's pretty quick. All the security patches are handled by Oracle. The newer updates are provided by Oracle, and you don't have to test it. You will need to do some rounds of testing, but way less than managing your own Linux.

What needs improvement?

From the performance perspective, Oracle Linux could be improved. I have even worked in Amazon Linux, and I do tend to feel that when running on the same instance, other Linux distros tend to perform better than Oracle Linux, even if you do a side-by-side comparison of Amazon Linux and Oracle Linux. I would definitely lean into Amazon Linux.

I don't have insights on the exact specification where Oracle Linux lacks, but when you're SSHed in connected to your machine, you just feel that it's a bit slower. It's kind of laggy compared to your other experience in Amazon.

For how long have I used the solution?

It's been around one year that we use Oracle Linux in our Kubernetes environment.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

We haven't seen any issues with Oracle Linux that have caused downtime or any significant performance issue as of now.

Oracle Linux is stable for our workloads. We haven't faced any major issue.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Oracle Linux is pretty much scalable. We run a thousand-node cluster with around 8,000 to 9,000 pods running in a cluster, and we have 10 to 15 clusters that we are already running. We are planning to scale it to 40 or 50 clusters as and when customers get onboarded, and till now, it's been kind of stable; we haven't seen any issues with the scale.

How are customer service and support?

The customer support for Oracle Linux, coming from an AWS perspective, is absolute garbage. They have free support and paid enterprise support, but both of them haven't been that great for us. It's not that supportive because AWS support was way better than what we are experiencing from OCI.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Negative

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We were using Amazon Web Services (AWS) before switching to Oracle Linux. It was majorly from a cost perspective that we wanted to switch to Oracle because the compute is a lot cheaper in OCI when compared to AWS.

What was our ROI?

Since we have migrated our workload to Oracle, we do see significant savings in our cost. We measure it from per user cost since we have a virtual desktop infrastructure that we provide to our customers. We had in AWS around 415 per user, so that would be around 400 INR per user in AWS, and post using Oracle, we have reduced it to around 300 INR. So it's a significant drop in the cost.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

We do find Oracle Linux cost-effective because we have been integrated into their OKE ecosystem, so we feel we're getting good value.

The experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is pretty straightforward and it's low cost compared to any other cloud providers out there. Oracle is way too cheap compared to them.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We pretty much stick to Oracle Linux because it was a managed service, so we stuck to that. We didn't explore much on other distros.

What other advice do I have?

There's nothing specific about our use case with Oracle Linux.

It's pretty much in terms of any other Linux, so there's nothing too great that Oracle Linux can flex on. It's just a typical Linux.

Other than that, I don't see any other positive impacts from a sole purpose of Linux. Something out of the box that other Linux providers are not providing, I don't see any such thing in Oracle Linux.

When I mention our workload is reduced because it's managed and optimized, it is approximately 80 to 90 percent of our workload is reduced because Kubernetes also releases frequent updates. You don't have to migrate to a new one; when you're migrating, it's pretty quick. All the security patches are handled by Oracle. The newer updates are provided by Oracle, and you don't have to test it. You will need to do some rounds of testing, but way less than managing your own Linux.

It's pretty much optimized for their Kubernetes engine. That's the whole point. So it's pretty good when you are in their ecosystem and you're using their own Linux. But when it comes to Linux, I do feel there are way better options to choose from instead of Oracle Linux.

I don't have much info on the security perspective because I don't handle that. But whatever I have seen, there's not much work that my organization does from a security standpoint for managed Oracle Linux.

We are in the Oracle ecosystem, so I haven't felt any hiccups integrating Oracle Linux with their services because they own the environment. I haven't seen such hiccups where their own service is not able to integrate smoothly.

I haven't gone through Oracle Linux documentation specifically, but Oracle docs are a little bit messy and a bit difficult to find, sometimes even ambiguous.

The same command line system prompts that you would give to Amazon Linux are applicable, so the migration was pretty smooth when we went from Amazon Linux to Oracle Linux since we were changing the cloud providers.

Specifically for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, if you want cheap compute and you want to run some non-impacting workloads and batch workloads, I think that is where OCI would shine where you would be reducing costs significantly.

I would rate this review as an 8 out of 10.


    Juan Jimenez

Secure workflows have improved daily data engineering tasks and support faster file processing

  • January 19, 2026
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

I use Oracle Linux for system operation, where I create files and utilize scripts as part of my everyday work with this operating system. I use the virtual machine with Oracle Linux as my everyday solution, as the virtual machine's typical uses include navigating and having a machine because it is faster, and Oracle Linux is more secure than Windows. For that reason, I use Oracle Linux server in my job at the bank.

What is most valuable?

The best features Oracle Linux offers include security, which is vital because we have important files that we cannot share with others, and performance, as it is faster. The bank uses it because the performance is better than Windows; it is faster to create files, move them, and retrieve files from Cobol, which are just some examples.

I cannot download some files from any website because the antivirus detects them, and I also cannot upload certain things in my virtual machine due to restrictions; that is an example of the security feature that it has.

The efficient security is a positive impact Oracle Linux has had on my organization, as that is the main aspect I notice. I do not work in the security sector at the bank, but I use it for my operating system.

What needs improvement?

I think the majority of the things that Oracle Linux provides for my job are good. I also want to mention that Oracle Linux interface is very well-designed because it is similar to Windows, but that is not a feature; it is just a good recommendation.

I choose a nine instead of a ten because I do not think it is the perfect operating system; I consider that there are a lot of better options. In my personal case, I prefer Linux Mint because I appreciate the interface, and it is lighter than Oracle Linux. Additionally, Oracle Linux is sometimes complex to install, and when I use it for my personal needs, I encounter some conflicts, so that is a small thing that I have to share.

For how long have I used the solution?

In the bank, I use Oracle Linux server as my virtual machine, and I have been working with this for about two years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Oracle Linux is stable in my experience, and I do not have any complaints during the time that I have used it.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

I think Oracle Linux can handle growth as it depends on all your necessities, but its scalability is easily managed.

How are customer service and support?

I do not know about the customer support for Oracle Linux since I work with on-premises services, so the people working in the bank provide the support.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

I think Oracle Linux is the main option that the bank evaluated before choosing it.

How was the initial setup?

That is the principle for the bank regarding how we use Oracle Linux, and we do not have a preference because that is the rule in the bank.

Oracle Linux is deployed as on-premises services in my organization because I have to log in with the virtual machine from Windows.

The environment for Oracle Linux is installed on-premises services instead of being hosted in a cloud environment like Google Cloud, AWS, or something else.

What about the implementation team?

I think that there is not a business relationship with the vendor other than being a customer.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

In my personal case, I prefer using Linux Mint and other lighter operating systems because I do not have good performance on my computer, but I think Oracle Linux is the main solution the bank chose for work.

What other advice do I have?

When I say efficiency, I mean that Oracle Linux helps me work faster, especially in developments; I work as a data engineer, and I need a faster operating system, which Oracle Linux provides me as I have to upload a lot of big data, and that is very useful.

I think Oracle Linux is a good option for organizations; in personal cases, there are a lot of better options, but for organizational companies, it is good for scalability, performance, and security.

I gave this product a rating of nine out of ten.


    Jewals Ubel

Streamlined administration has supported users efficiently and saved organizational costs

  • December 11, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

My main use case for Oracle Linux is as a system administrator. A specific example of how I use Oracle Linux in my day-to-day work is supporting users and solving their issues.

What is most valuable?

The best features Oracle Linux offers are that it is easy to use. Once you have learned Oracle Linux, it is easy to teach others, and any other system has a help button. Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization because it is a great tool and great software. It is efficient, for sure, and definitely provides cost savings, which are specific outcomes I have noticed in my organization since using Oracle Linux.

What needs improvement?

Oracle Linux improves every quarter with their enhancements. Fixing bugs quicker is something I wish they would focus on next. Getting their bugs resolved quicker is my primary concern regarding needed improvements.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using Oracle Linux for 10 years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

I find Oracle Linux very stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Oracle Linux's scalability is very, very good.

How are customer service and support?

Oracle Linux's customer support system is very good. Getting their bugs resolved quicker is an issue I have.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We had an in-house system before and switched to Oracle Linux.

What was our ROI?

I have seen a return on investment because definitely fewer employees were needed, time was saved, and we spent considerable money.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is that the pricing was high.

What other advice do I have?

Oracle Linux is a great tool, and I would give this advice to others looking into using it. I would rate this product an 8 out of 10.


    reviewer2780502

Running enterprise services has reduced security incidents and now needs better virtualization options

  • December 03, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

My main use case for Oracle Linux is to provision a VM and run applications or services.

A specific example of an application I run on Oracle Linux is revenue assurance and fraud management systems. Oracle Linux serves as the OS, while the application sits on the OS. We make use of some of the Linux packages that are residing on Oracle Linux to work with the application or the service. Oracle Linux also provides us with NFS and CIFS because we needed to have a central storage.

What is most valuable?

The best features Oracle Linux offers include being a Linux system designed for enterprise environments, and it is based off of Red Hat Linux, which makes it much more stable and also improves security.

The features of Oracle Linux have helped my organization because we have noticed fewer security incidents since it is a downstream of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. We get updates regularly, and we run our updates regularly, which leads to much fewer security incidents. Because it is a Linux system, we are able to get better uptime with our security patches.

Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization by making it easier to manage and also being much cheaper than Red Hat because you do not have to pay for subscription licenses, leading to improvements and cost savings.

What needs improvement?

I wish Oracle Linux could improve its OVM because I want it to run HCI solutions where I can aggregate my local disks using technology such as vSAN, especially since Red Hat has discontinued RHEV for OpenShift.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using Oracle Linux for eight years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Oracle Linux is stable in my experience, as it is a downstream for Red Hat, making it much more stable and secure.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Oracle Linux's scalability is good because it can handle growth, as we use it in our services, and one of the services has grown from 20 to 30 servers.

How are customer service and support?

My experience with customer support for Oracle Linux has been acceptable; I have had one or two opportunities to reach out to them, and the experience has not been bad.

I rate the customer support for Oracle Linux a six out of ten.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

In addition to Oracle Linux, I also use Red Hat, Ubuntu, and Debian, so I have not stopped using other solutions.

What was our ROI?

I do not have any numbers or examples regarding a return on investment to share because I do not conduct any tests to be able to decide this, but I know for a fact that I do not have to pay for subscription or licensing, and because it is Red Hat-based, most people know how to use it.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Oracle Linux has been very positive because when it comes to licensing and the likes, as I said, it is a downstream of Red Hat, so you do not have to pay much for licensing or subscription. The only thing you have to pay for is support.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

I did not evaluate any other option before choosing Oracle Linux; I just went for it.

What other advice do I have?

I do not manage the system, but I manage the OS, so that is what I can provide.

The cost savings from using Oracle Linux come from the fact that since it is a downstream of Red Hat, you do not have to pay for subscription, while you enjoy most of the benefits of Red Hat, so we use it.

I would advise others looking into using Oracle Linux to try it, and if they are comfortable with it, then they can go ahead.

I gave this review an overall rating of seven out of ten.


    Clovis-Vieira

Experienced delays with support but have consistently managed robust deployments across complex environments

  • November 24, 2025
  • Review from a verified AWS customer

What is our primary use case?

My use cases with Oracle Linux recently include the government of Goiás state in the Secretary of Economy, a GM concessionary of vehicles named Jorlan in Goiás, and Alnutri Alimentos, a rice and chili factory. Additionally, I have worked with the Ministry of Exterior of Brazil and many others.

What is most valuable?

In my opinion, the best features of Oracle Linux are its strong stability for running databases, particularly Oracle databases, and its use of DNF for package management. I believe DNF is a strong and modern way to manage Linux packages, more effective than yum and Zypper. Moreover, the memory usage and management in Oracle Linux are very robust, and the kernel is well-adapted for database users, making it one of the best options for running databases like MySQL and MariaDB as well.

What needs improvement?

I do not understand the licensing for Oracle Linux.

For how long have I used the solution?

My first use of Oracle Linux began in 2013, marking the start of my experience with this operating system.

How are customer service and support?

I find Oracle's support to be deficient in response time; it is often low, and the call options for small price forms are difficult. However, the knowledge base is very good and fair, and I believe the main feature of Oracle support, formerly known as Metalink, is an extremely useful resource.

I would rate the support as a six or seven, concluding that my score is about seven.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Currently, my company is not an Oracle customer, although it was a partner before 2010 and was involved in third-party colocation in Brazilian sales markets in 2006. After 2010, my company and I have utilized other databases too. While we still use Oracle for consulting on Oracle Linux and its databases, the market primarily uses other databases, shifting our Linux support from SUSE to Oracle Linux.

What other advice do I have?

Regarding Matillion data in ETL, I do not have experience with materialized views.

I have experience with other products besides Snowflake, including AWS RDS in the on-premise world, an OCI Oracle database, SQL Server in an on-premises environment, SQL in Azure, Big Data from GCP, and a bit of experience with Databricks and Oracle HeatWave too.

I have experience with Oracle database versions from six to 24 AI.

Oracle Linux is the Oracle operating system, specifically Oracle Enterprise Linux.

I have experience with Oracle Linux from the sixth version to the eighth version, with a small experience using the ninth version as well.

My use of Oracle Linux does not include Ksplice for zero downtime updates; I am unclear on that feature.

Regarding SE Linux security, many customers disable this feature; however, in some use cases within the Secretary of Economy and the Ministry of Exterior Commerce of Brazil, this feature is enabled. Although I don't have extensive experience with this feature, I find that SE Linux offers impressive security strength within the Linux environment, and it also restricts inappropriate access for databases.

Oracle Linux has good integration and usability with Red Hat Linux because it is based on Red Hat. Moreover, it is normally compatible with SUSE and other Linux distributions and supports standard communication protocols like SSH. Additionally, it maintains compatibility with Windows servers.

In my opinion, I don't currently see potential improvements for Oracle Linux because I believe its features are sufficient for database environments and more, particularly in the Red stack. Overall, I believe Oracle Linux is good as it is.

In my opinion, the price for Oracle Linux is fair and acceptable for companies in the market that utilize it.

My overall score for Oracle Linux as a product is ten.

Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

On-premises

If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?


    reviewer2774253

Has improved server administration with secure configuration and stable repositories

  • November 01, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

My main use case for Oracle Linux is for administration, specifically full administration for Unix servers, such as hosting applications, monitoring the server health, and all the administration tasks I have been using it for.

I am hosting applications on those servers and monitoring the servers that are operating on Oracle Linux with full monitoring.

What is most valuable?

The best features Oracle Linux offers include security, as I have found it to be more secure than Ubuntu, Red Hat, and other Linux distributions. Additionally, it is easier to use than the other Linux operating systems.

What makes Oracle Linux more secure and easier to use than other Linux operating systems I have tried is the configuration of the firewall, SSH, and a few other configurations. These are easy to follow and set up.

I remember that the repositories for Oracle Linux are more stable than those of others. For instance, with Ubuntu, I have faced some issues related to the repository for the NFC files. The repositories of Oracle Linux are working smoothly more than others.

Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization as most servers we are using are Oracle Linux. We prefer using it. The reason my organization prefers Oracle Linux is for its performance and reliability. In general, the operating system is cleaner and easy to use and follow.

What needs improvement?

I have no suggestions for improvements regarding Oracle Linux. Everything is going well.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using Oracle Linux for three years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Oracle Linux is stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

The scalability of Oracle Linux is working fine, and there are no issues we have faced regarding scalability.

How are customer service and support?

I have not interacted with Oracle's support team. All the cases we were solving were done by ourselves in the team.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Neutral

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Before Oracle Linux, we were using Red Hat, but it was an old version.

What was our ROI?

I have not seen a return on investment with Oracle Linux.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

Our experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing involved using VMware Cloud, and I have no idea about the cost.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

I did not evaluate other options before choosing Oracle Linux. This is the first time I am evaluating an operating system.

What other advice do I have?

I recommend using Oracle Linux as your first choice for Linux distributions. I have rated this review a 10.


    Behal Karun

Has reduced costs and simplified testing through open access to tools

  • October 15, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

I am using Oracle Linux on a daily basis.

My main use case for Oracle Linux is that we have lots of applications.

A specific example of how I'm using Oracle Linux is for the server and application server for company applications.

My company uses Oracle Linux for application and monitoring purposes.

What is most valuable?

The best features Oracle Linux offers are that it's simple and easy to understand.

The usefulness of these features comes from the fact that it is an open tool, allowing for free access to all applications on the web, enabling easy testing and checking of any new application features for testing purposes. This is the main feature in Oracle Linux.

Oracle Linux features, such as being very easy to understand, allow for easy access to all repositories and packages available online, making it very helpful with no need to purchase any other packages or related subscriptions since it's totally free and easy to adopt.

Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization through cost saving.

What needs improvement?

Oracle Linux can be improved by adding more features related to Oracle Linux and including an AI assistant.

They should provide Oracle Linux-related training videos free of cost so everyone can easily learn.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been working in my current field for the last 18 years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Oracle Linux is stable in my experience and has been reliable for my organization.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

The scalability of Oracle Linux is good and can handle growth and increased demand.

How are customer service and support?

When we have encountered issues, we have interacted with the support team and received solutions from them, indicating the customer support for Oracle Linux is satisfactory.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Neutral

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Previously, we were using HP-UX before switching to Oracle Linux.

What was our ROI?

I have seen a return on investment with Oracle Linux in terms of time saved.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

I am not properly informed about the pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Oracle Linux because I'm not involved in that aspect of operations.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

It is understandable and very easy to use Oracle Linux compared to other options I considered before choosing it.

My advice to others looking into using Oracle Linux is that it is very easy and easily adaptable to any hardware. If you are choosing open-source applications, moving to the Linux environment makes Oracle Linux the best compared to Red Hat because Red Hat charges for satellite patching management while Oracle Linux offers a totally free repository to download and upgrade your Oracle without any cost.

What other advice do I have?

We use Azure and OCI as our cloud provider with Oracle Linux.

Oracle Linux is deployed in my organization on-premises.

My company has a business relationship with Oracle as a partner.

I rate Oracle Linux 8 out of 10.


    Badhon Islam

Has improved security and reduced downtime through built-in tools and a reliable kernel

  • September 22, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

My main use case for Oracle Linux at Deep System is that we are using it for big data.

In my main use case for Oracle Linux, it's based on Red Hat, and it's secure, reliable, and open source.

What is most valuable?

In my experience, the best features Oracle Linux offers include its unbreakable kernel system and security, along with reliability and stability.

The unbreakable kernel and the security features stand out for me because, in big data, anyone from outside cannot break my kernel, and we have a lot of inbuilt security, which has helped me with different things.

Oracle Linux provides many more features that I need to consider further.

Oracle Linux has positively impacted my organization because of its numerous features. It's a stable version that I use in an inter-cloud network, so I don't need to regularly update anything, and I don't need to expose my OS to the outside world, making this very positive.

What needs improvement?

Documentation for Oracle Linux is okay, and while user experience is good enough, it sometimes lags, so they can improve some areas there.

Oracle Linux has many features, but it is sometimes heavy, and the response from my Oracle Linux is a little bit laggy. This may be because my kernel is lower at 5.14, which is why it's not so fast and sometimes creates lag or has a longer response time.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using Oracle Linux from the beginning of my job, which has been before 2024.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

In my experience, Oracle Linux is approximately 95% stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Oracle Linux's scalability is designed for big data, so it may be scalable, but it takes a lot of resources and has many big data issues.

How are customer service and support?

I actually don't need customer support for Oracle Linux at this time, but if I needed it, I would ask and share that experience.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Neutral

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

From the first day, we have been using Oracle Linux, but before that, we were using AlmaLinux for our cPanel hosting and CentOS for other uses. We are not using CentOS anymore because it is not updated.

What was our ROI?

Having used Oracle Linux, I can say money is saved because our server is working efficiently, and time is saved due to many inbuilt tools that help us since we are in the cloud network.

In terms of outcomes or benefits I've seen over the last year, we have more than 30 servers, and we only need to reboot one server while all other servers continue working fine, resulting in very low downtime, which is very helpful.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Before choosing Oracle Linux, I evaluated options such as AlmaLinux and Rocky Linux.

What other advice do I have?

My advice for others looking into using Oracle Linux is that it's good for Oracle Database, and it has its own open-source model along with a few things that are different from others. I rate Oracle Linux 8 out of 10.