One Laptop per Child Red Hat engineers worked with the
One Laptop per Child initiative (a
non-profit organization established by members of the
MIT Media Lab) to design and produce an inexpensive laptop and try to provide every child in the world with access to open communication, open knowledge, and
open learning. The
XO-4 laptop, the last machine the project produced (in 2012), runs a slimmed-down version of
Fedora 17 as its operating system. ===
KVM ===
Avi Kivity began the development of KVM in mid-2006 at
Qumranet, a technology
startup company that was acquired by Red Hat in 2008.
GNOME Red Hat is the largest contributor to the
GNOME desktop environment. It has several employees working full-time on
Evolution, the official
personal information manager for GNOME. ===
systemd === Init system and system/service manager for Linux systems. ===
PulseAudio === Network-capable
sound server program distributed via the
freedesktop.org project.
Dogtail Dogtail, an open-source automated
graphical user interface (GUI) test framework initially developed by Red Hat, consists of free software released under the
GNU General Public License (GPL) and is written in
Python. It allows developers to build and test their applications. Red Hat announced the release of Dogtail at the 2006 Red Hat Summit.
MRG Red Hat MRG is a
clustering product intended for integrated
high-performance computing (HPC). The
acronym MRG stands for "Messaging Realtime Grid". Red Hat Enterprise MRG replaces the kernel of Red Hat Enterprise Linux
RHEL, a
Linux distribution developed by Red Hat, to provide extra support for
real-time computing, together with middleware support for
message brokerage and scheduling workload to local or remote
virtual machines,
grid computing, and
cloud computing. , Red Hat works with the
Condor High-Throughput Computing System community and also provides support for the software. The Tuna performance-monitoring tool runs in the MRG environment.
Opensource.com Red Hat produced the online publication Opensource.com since January 20, 2010. The site highlights ways
open-source principles apply in domains other than software development. The site tracks the application of open-source philosophy to business, education, government, law, health, and life. The company originally produced a newsletter called Under the Brim. Wide Open magazine first appeared in March 2004, as a means for Red Hat to share technical content with subscribers regularly. The Under the Brim newsletter and Wide Open magazine merged in November 2004, to become
Red Hat Magazine. In January 2010,
Red Hat Magazine became Opensource.com. In April 2023 Red Hat went through company layoffs and laid off the team maintaining Opensource.com.
Red Hat Exchange In 2007, Red Hat announced that it had reached an agreement with some
free software and
open-source (FOSS) companies that allowed it to make a distribution portal called Red Hat Exchange, reselling FOSS software with the original branding intact. However, by 2010, Red Hat had abandoned the Exchange program to focus their efforts more on their Open Source Channel Alliance which began in April 2009.
Red Hat build of Keycloak Red Hat build of Keycloak (formerly known as Red Hat Single Sign-On) is a software product to allow single sign-on with Identity Management and Access Management aimed at modern applications and services. It is based on the open-source project
Keycloak, which acts as an
upstream project.
Red Hat Subscription Management Red Hat Subscription Management (RHSM) combines content delivery with
subscription management.
Ceph Storage Red Hat is the largest contributor to the
Ceph Storage SDS project : Block, File & Object Storage which runs on industry-standard x86 servers and Ethernet IP as well as ARM, InfiniBand, and other technologies. Ceph aims primarily for completely distributed operation without a single point of failure, scalable to the exabyte level. Ceph replicates data and makes it fault-tolerant, using commodity hardware and requiring no specific hardware support. Ceph's system offers disaster recovery and data redundancy through techniques such as replication, erasure coding, snapshots and storage cloning. As a result of its design, the system is both self-healing and self-managing, aiming to minimize administration time and other costs. In this way, administrators have a single, consolidated system that avoids silos and collects the storage within a common management framework. Ceph consolidates several storage use cases and improves resource utilization. It also lets an organization deploy servers where needed.
OpenShift Red Hat operates
OpenShift, a
cloud computing platform as a service, supporting applications written in
Node.js,
PHP,
Perl,
Python,
Ruby,
JavaEE and more. On July 31, 2018, Red Hat announced the release of Istio 1.0, a microservices management program used in tandem with the
Kubernetes platform. The software purports to provide "traffic management, service identity and security, policy enforcement and telemetry" services in order to streamline Kubernetes use under the various
Fedora-based operating systems. Red Hat's Brian Redbeard Harring described Istio as "aiming to be a control plane, similar to the Kubernetes control plane, for configuring a series of proxy servers that get injected between application components". Also Red Hat is the second largest contributor to Kubernetes code itself, after Google.
OpenStack Red Hat markets a version of
OpenStack which helps manage a
data center in the manner of cloud computing.
CloudForms Red Hat CloudForms provides management of
virtual machines, instances and
containers based on VMware vSphere, Red Hat Virtualization, Microsoft Hyper-V, OpenStack, Amazon EC2, Google Cloud Platform, Microsoft Azure, and
Red Hat OpenShift. CloudForms is based on the
ManageIQ project that Red Hat open sourced. Code in ManageIQ is from the over acquisition of ManageIQ in 2012.
CoreOS Container Linux (formerly CoreOS Linux) is a discontinued open-source lightweight operating system based on the Linux kernel and designed for providing infrastructure to clustered deployments. As an operating system, Container Linux provided only the minimal functionality required for deploying applications inside software containers, together with built-in mechanisms for service discovery and configuration sharing.
LibreOffice Red Hat contributed, with several software developers, to
LibreOffice, a
free and open-source office suite. However, in 2023, Red Hat announced they were not going to include LibreOffice in RHEL 10, citing the ability to download LibreOffice from
Flatpak on RHEL desktops.
Other FOSS projects Red Hat also organises "Open Source Day" events where multiple partners show their open-source technologies. ===
Xorg === Red Hat was one of the largest contributors to the
X Window System. ====
Wayland/Weston==== Started in 2008, by Red Hat developer Kristian Høgsberg, with the aim of replacing the X Windows System.
Utilities and tools Subscribers have access to: • Red Hat Developer Toolset (DTS) – performance analysis and development tools • Red Hat Software Collections (RHSCL) Over and above Red Hat's major products and acquisitions, Red Hat programmers have produced software programming-tools and
utilities to supplement standard Unix and Linux software. Some of these Red Hat "products" have found their way from specifically Red Hat operating environments via open-source channels to a wider community. Such utilities include: • Disk Druid – for disk partitioning •
rpm – for package management • sos (son of sysreport) – tools for collecting information on system hardware and configuration. • sosreport – reports system hardware and configuration details •
SystemTap – tracing tool for Linux kernels, developed with IBM, Hitachi, Oracle and Intel •
NetworkManager The Red Hat website lists the organization's major involvements in free and open-source software projects. Community projects under the aegis of Red Hat include: • the Pulp application for
software repository management. ==Subsidiaries==