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What is Linux?

Published January 3, 20234-minute read

Jump to section What is Linux? What's an OS? How does Linux work? GUI vs. CLI What does Linux include? Linux and open source Benefits of Linux Why choose Red Hat?

What is Linux?

Linux® is an open source operating system (OS) created by Linus Torvalds in 1991. Today, it has a massive user base, and is used in the world’s 500 most powerful supercomputers. Users gravitate toward it for its versatility and security capabilities, among other reasons. The Linux kernel is maintained by a worldwide community of open source enthusiasts and has hundreds of unique distros.

Why your OS still matters

What is an operating system?

An OS is the software that directly manages a system’s hardware and resources, like the CPU, memory, and storage. The OS sits between applications and hardware and makes the connections between all your software and the physical resources that do the work.

Humans can interact with computers in many ways. Most people’s primary interaction with their hardware happens through an OS, which helps them access a computer’s core functions. There are lots of OS options, from proprietary software made by large companies to open source projects created and supported by volunteers.

Think about an OS like a car engine. An engine can run on its own, but it becomes part of a functional car when it’s connected with a transmission, axles, and wheels. Without the engine running properly, the car won’t work.

Learn how to improve IT efficiency with a standardized OS

How does Linux work?

Linux was designed to be similar to UNIX, but has evolved to run on a wide variety of hardware from phones to supercomputers. Every Linux-based OS includes the Linux kernel—which manages hardware resources—and a set of software packages that make up the rest of the operating system. Organizations can also choose to run their Linux OS on a Linux server.

Linux includes some common core components, like GNU tools, among others. These tools give the user a way to manage the resources provided by the kernel, install additional software, configure performance and security settings, and more. All these tools bundled together make up the functional operating system. Because Linux is an open source OS, combinations of software can vary between Linux distributions.

What's the best Linux distro for you?

What's the difference between a GUI and the command line?

When you use an OS, you mainly give the computer commands in 1 of 2 ways: using a graphical user interface (GUI) or the command line (CLI). A GUI refers to everything you can see and interact with when you boot up your OS, like the menus, windows, and desktop icons. If you can point at it and click on it with a mouse, it's probably part of the GUI. This is the most straightforward way to use an OS, because the most common user actions are represented as part of the GUI. 

More complex tasks typically employ the command line, which gives you direct access to the computer. It's where you tell software to perform complicated or specific hardware actions that GUIs can't handle.

Command lines are available on many operating systems―proprietary and open source. But they're usually associated with Linux, because together command lines and open source software give users unrestricted access to their computers.
 

What does Linux include?

Linux and open source

Linux is a free, open source operating system released under the GNU General Public License (GPL). Anyone can run, study, modify, and redistribute the source code, or even sell copies of their modified code, as long as they do so under the same license.

According to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, Linux has become the largest open source software project in the world. Professional and hobbyist programmers and developers from around the world contribute to the Linux kernel, adding features, finding and fixing bugs and security flaws, live patching, and providing new ideas—all while sharing their contributions back to the community.

Learn more about open source

Benefits of Linux

Reasons to run Linux are as varied as the people and enterprises using it. A few major themes motivate people to choose Linux over another OS:

Why choose Red Hat?

Linux is the foundation for the modern IT stack, and Red Hat is one of the leading contributors to the Linux kernel and associated technologies in open source communities. Red Hat® engineers help improve features, reliability, and security to make sure your infrastructure performs optimally and remains stable—no matter your use case and workload.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux provides a standard operating environment for everything your enterprise does in every environment—powering the applications that run your business across bare-metal, virtual, and containerized environments, and in private and public clouds. 

Explore Red Hat Enterprise Linux

Keep reading

Why run Linux on AWS?

For organizations using Amazon Web Services (AWS), Linux shortens time to market, reduces complexity, provides on-demand scalability, and lowers costs.

What is high availability?

High availability determines if a system is meeting its operational performance level, is available almost 100% of the time, and is performant for an established time period.

What is ERP?

Enterprise resource planning (ERP) unifies the massive amounts of data within an organization, and enables information flow between different teams.


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