Will CERN/Fermilab provide the same level of support to AlmaLinux that currently is provided for Scientific Linux? Will this list transition into an AlmaLinux list?

I have looked at the non-vendor lists for non-vendor ports of production RHEL current (CentOS basically is a vendor port). Very few of these have the general professionalism that was present on the SL list. I personally have transitioned to Ubuntu LTS current production; one thing I sorely miss is straightforward answers that the SL list provided. However, unlike RHEL, Ubuntu LTS does support a larger selection of recent laptop hardware platforms and allow for the most recent production versions of particular end-user applications. Nonetheless, there are situations in which a RHEL current tested production clone would be of use

On 12/7/22 11:53, Glenn Cooper wrote:
CERN and Fermilab jointly plan to provide AlmaLinux as the standard distribution for experiments at our facilities, reflecting recent experience and discussions with experiments and other stakeholders. AlmaLinux has recently been gaining traction among the community due to its long life cycle for each major version, extended architecture support, rapid release cycle, upstream community contributions, and support for security advisory metadata. In testing, it has demonstrated to be perfectly compatible with the other rebuilds and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

CERN and, to a lesser extent, Fermilab, will also use Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) for some services and applications within the respective laboratories. Scientific Linux 7, at Fermilab, and CERN CentOS 7, at CERN, will continue to be supported for their remaining life, until June 2024.

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