Hello everyone,

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 is now available

On February 21st 2013, Red Hat announced the general availability of the next 
minor release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4.
This release includes a broad set of updates to the existing feature set and 
provides rich new functionality in the areas of identity management, file 
system, resource management, networks, storage, security, and end-user 
productivity tools.
We continue to work with our customers and partners as well as the open source 
community to deliver technology that is innovative yet stable. Red Hat 
Enterprise Linux 6.4 has been designed for optimized performance, stability, 
and scalability to cater to today's diverse workloads running in physical, 
virtual, and cloud environments.

System z Specific Features:

FCP end-to-end data checking 
s390utils enhancements
Storage Class Memory
Support for the Transactional-Execution Facility in zEC12
Crypto Express 4th generation adapter card support in z90crypt 
libica enhancements  
improved compression performance for zlib

General Features:
The kernel level is now kernel-2.6.32-358.el6, for the main bug fixes see the 
kernel update description. 

Identity Management
System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) enhancements extend the interoperability 
experience with Microsoft Active Directory by providing centralized identity 
access control for Linux/Unix clients in a heterogeneous environment.
Administrators can now manage Secure Shell (SSH) keys across multiple systems 
from a single server.
It is now possible to map user records to their associated SELinux records, 
making it easier to manage user access across platforms.
Administrators can assign priorities to servers so that identity lookup occurs 
in the defined order which can reduce network traffic. This provides IT with 
another tool to help meet Quality of Service (QoS) commitments or performance 
expectations.
File System
Red Hat has taken a lead role with its partners and the upstream community on 
the parallel Network File System (pNFS) industry standard, driving the addition 
of capabilities that allow database workloads to benefit from the advantages of 
pNFS. This functionality offers performance gains for I/O intensive workloads 
like database access. Using the first-to-market, fully supported pNFS (file 
layout) client -- delivered in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 -- customers can 
begin to plan and design next-generation, scalable file system solutions based 
on pNFS.
Resource Management
Enhancement to control groups (cgroups) delivers the ability to migrate 
multi-threaded applications without errors.
An optimized version of perf, the performance monitoring tool, is now available 
for the newer Intel processors.

Networking
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 introduces the Precision Time Protocol (PTP) as a 
feature in Technology Preview. This feature is hardware dependent and applies 
to a set of new devices. PTP is known for CPU efficiency, network bandwidth, 
and low administration effort. It provides clock synchronization across the 
network in the sub-microsecond range by eliminating network and equipment 
timing variability or “jitter.”
The Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) provides support for 
multi-homing communication. Multi-homing allows a single SCTP endpoint to 
support multiple IP addresses, which means that a session is more likely to 
survive a network failure. Red Hat Enterprise 6.4 implements the protocol’s 
“Quick Failover Algorithm” to reduce the amount of time it takes to migrate 
from a failed connection to an active connection.
NetworkManager now has a standard, easy-to-use graphical user interface (GUI) 
for configuring and managing network interface controller (NIC) bonding and 
network bridges.
Storage
New system log features identify the mapping from logical block device name to 
physical device identifier – allowing an administrator to easily identify 
specific physical devices as needed.
New support for scalable snapshots and thinly-provisioned volumes in the 
Logical Volume Manager (LVM) allows storage pool capacity to be used as 
efficiently as possible. Thinly provisioned volumes consume storage space only 
when data has been written to them - and only as long as that data is still in 
use. Thin snapshot volumes allow many virtual devices to share the data blocks 
they hold in common.
The number of supported virtual tape drives has increased from 100 to 512.
Security
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 complies with Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.1. 
The 1.1 version of TLS increases communication security and integrity. It has 
the ability to protect against cipher block chaining (CBC) attacks. Other 
enhancements to TLS include improved error handling and operations between 
networked nodes.
The Security Content Automation Protocol (SCAP) is a standardized suite of 
specifications used in facilitating security auditing for enterprise-class 
systems. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 now supports SCAP 1.2.
System administrators can now define the amount of time that must lapse before 
an account is considered inactive. This automates locking inactive accounts and 
closes the gap during which these accounts can be exploited.

Productivity Tools
Evolution now interoperates better with Microsoft Exchange. Productivity 
functions such as calendar support with alarm notification and meeting 
scheduling are improved.
Customers such as animation studios and graphic design houses now have support 
for the newer Wacom Intuos tablets.
We greatly appreciate the dedication and collaboration within the company and 
with our partners and community to develop and deliver the highest quality open 
source enterprise platform available today.

Also please review the Updated documentation on IBM DevelopeWorks: 
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/linux390/documentation_red_hat.html#rhel64
Reference: http://linuxmain.blogspot.com - Great Mainframe Blog
To read the Red Hat press release, please visit: 
www.redhat.com/about/news/press-archive/2013/2/red-hat-announces-general-availability-of-next-minor-release-of-red-hat-enterprise-linux-6
To access and download an evaluation copy for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4, 
please visit: https://access.redhat.com/downloads/
Please note that this requires an active account on the Red Hat customer 
portal, and the user must filter and navigate to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and 
the architecture of interest (e.g. IBM System z).
For access to the documentation for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 including the 
release notes, please 
visit:https://access.redhat.com/knowledge/docs/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/
For access to other supporting collateral within the Red Hat internal Products 
and Technologies portal, please visit (requires 
login):https://engineering.redhat.com/pnt/b-5887/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux_6


--
Filipe Miranda

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