Q1. Who Is Eligible To Participate In The Public Beta?
All Red Hat customers are eligible (though customers without active Satellite subscriptions will need to contact support rather than using the self-service enrollment form, and we encourage Beta users to open tickets through Red Hat support.
Q2. How Does Red Hat Satellite Compare To Cloudforms And Rhci?
Satellite executes what would traditionally be called “systems management” work related to Red Hat infrastructure on bare metal, virtualized or on in the cloud. Many organizations leverage both Satellite and CloudForms to provide end-to-end management of their infrastructure. CloudForms provides a centralized view and centralized control/orchestration of all workloads across private and public cloud infrastructures. Satellite performs software management, configuration management, subscription management & provisioning for Red Hat infrastructure. Both are offered as components of Red Hat Cloud Infrastructure (RHCI), an integrated set of Red Hat technologies.
Q3. Is Red Hat Satellite 5 Still Supported?
Red Hat Satellite 5.5 and earlier versions are no longer supported. Red Hat Satellite and Proxy 5.6 and 5.7 support ends in January 201@Extended Lifecycle Support (ELS) for Satellite/Proxy 5.8 can be purchased to extend support until the end of May 2020.
Q4. What Happened To Red Hat Satellite Proxy Server?
Red Hat Satellite Proxy Server as a federation device for Red Hat Satellite has been replaced by Red Hat Satellite Capsule Server. The capsule server is similar to the proxy server, but uses a different architecture. If you are transitioning from Red Hat Satellite 5 to Red Hat Satellite 6, any deployed proxy servers must also be transitioned to capsule servers.
Q5. Does Red Hat Satellite 6.2 Feature High Availability?
Yes, high availability is documented and supported through a certified Red Hat reference architecture. This reference architecture provides step-by-step instructions for deploying a Red Hat Enterprise Linux cluster for Red Hat Satellite Server, as well as a combination of Red Hat Enterprise Linux cluster and load balancing to support an active/active and highly available capsule.
Q6. When Is Red Hat Satellite 6.2 Public Beta 2 Available?
June 15, 2016.
Q7. Can I Use The Beta In Production?
Beta releases are made available only for testing purposes. Red Hat provides Beta releases and revisions from Beta repositories. This Beta is not an officially supported repository, and these releases cannot be considered for a production environment.
Q8. What Open Source Projects Serve As The Upstream For Red Hat Satellite 6?
Key projects include: Foreman, Puppet, Katello, Pulp, and Candlepin.
Q9. How Does Red Hat Satellite Compare To Red Hat Cloudforms And Red Hat Cloud Infrastructure?
Red Hat Satellite executes what would traditionally be called system management work—related to Red Hat infrastructure—on bare metal, virtualized servers, or in the cloud. Many organizations use both to provide end-to-end infrastructure management. Red Hat CloudForms provides a centralized view and control or orchestration of all workloads across private and public cloud infrastructures while Red Hat Satellite performs software, configuration, and subscription management, as well as provisioning for Red Hat infrastructure. Both products are offered in Red Hat Cloud Infrastructure, an integrated set of Red Hat technologies.
Q10. I Am Running Beta 1, But Want To Run Beta
Yes. There is no direct upgrade available from Beta 1 to Beta @Some improvements and enhancements have been made related directly to installation, so the customer experience related to Beta 2 install should be improved from Beta @For customers who want the best experience, we highly recommend Beta @The entire community of Satellite users can also benefit from the feedback.
Q11. What Is The Upgrade Path For Beta Participants?
1) Supported upgrade paths for Satellite 6.2 GA:
- Satellite 6.1 -> Satellite 6.2 (GA to GA)
- customers will need to first update to Satellite 6.1.9 errata level before upgrading to 6.2.0
2) Unsupported upgrade paths:
- from 6.1.8 or earlier versions, from GA to Beta, from Beta to GA, or from Beta 1 to Beta 2
- from either Beta 1 or Beta 2 to Production GA versions.
3) Capsule needs to be the same version as Satellite i.e. cannot run Capsule 6.1 with Satellite 6.2 or vice versa.
Q12. When Did Red Hat Satellite 6 Become Generally Available?
Red Hat Satellite 6.2 GA: July 27, 2016
- Blog Post
- Red Hat Satellite 6 Data Sheet
- Release Notes
Red Hat Satellite 6.1 GA: August 12, 2015
- Press Release
- Blog Post
Red Hat Satellite 6.0 GA: September 10, 2014
- Press Release
- Blog Post
Q13. Can I Upgrade From Public Beta 1 To Public Beta 2?
No, Beta 2 must be a new installation.
Q14. What Infrastructures Are Supported By Red Hat Satellite 6?
Bare metal, Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization, Red Hat OpenStack® Platform, and VMWare.
Q15. What Are The Supported Usage For These Components In Red Hat Satellite 6?
All Red Hat Satellite components (such as Foreman, Puppet, Katello, Pulp, and Candlepin) and their usage are supported within the context of Red Hat Satellite only. Third party usage of any components falls beyond supported usage.
Q16. What Are Some Of The New Features In Red Hat Satellite 6?
Red Hat Satellite 6 includes a redesigned product architecture to manage new types of content on a wide variety of platforms, including bare-metal, private, and public clouds. Red Hat Satellite 6.2 builds on that release with the following features:
- Automated workflows. Capabilities include remote execution and scheduling for remote execution jobs, as well as expanded bootstrap and provisioning options.
- Air-gapped security and federation. Users can now sync to export RPM content from one Satellite to another.
- Software management improvements. Simplified smart variable management is now available.
- Capsule improvements. Users now have extended insight into capsule health and overall performance. Capsules are more lightweight and can be configured to only store content requested by clients. In addition, capsules have a new reference architecture that includes the ability to deploy a highly available Red Hat Satellite capsule.
- Atomic OSTree and containers — Mirror, provision, and manage Red Hat Enterprise Linux® (RHEL) Atomic hosts and content with Satellite. Also, mirror container repositories, such as Red Hat Registry, DockerHub™ and other third-party sources. Satellite provides a secure, curated point of entry for container content.
- Enhanced documentation. New and updated documentation is available at site.
New documentation:
@Virtual instance guide: How to configure virt-who
@Hammer command-line interface (CLI) guide: How to use Red Hat Satellite’s CLI
@Content management guide
@Quick start guideUpdated documentation:
@User guide divided into topics for easier use: Server administration and host configuration
@Cheat sheets available for specific topics, such as Hammer
@Updated feature overviews - Lazy Sync — Satellite 6.2.3 introduces the “Lazy Sync” functionality, which provides users additional flexibility when downloading content. Lazy sync provides a series of new download policies, which govern how content is downloaded. See Satellite 6.2 Feature Overview: Lazy Sync
Support Status:
@Lazy Sync was/is included in earlier Satellite 6.2 releases (6.2.0 through 6.2.2) as a Technology Preview
@With Satellite 6.2.3, Lazy Sync will transition to a Fully Supported.
Q17. How Do I Enroll In The Public Beta?
For customers with active Satellite subscriptions, enrollment in the public Beta is self-service via Customer Portal : just log in as an Org Admin user, and click on the “Enroll” button on the Public Beta Landing Page and complete the form.
Once successfully enrolled, participants will be have the following subscriptions added to their account:
The public Beta release will add the following entitlements to the customer’s account:
- 2 Red Hat Satellite Server Subscription with Red Hat Enterprise Linux (2 subscriptions to be able to test the Inter-Satellite-Sync (ISS) feature)
- 5 Red Hat Satellite Capsules Subscriptions, no Red Hat Enterprise Linux public Beta subscriptions are issued with a 90-day expiration.
Q18. When Was Red Hat Satellite 6.2 Public Beta 1 Available?
April 27, 2016.
Q19. How Is The Public Beta Supported By Red Hat?
The Satellite 6.2 public Beta is supported in non-production settings at a Severity 4 level.
Q20. I Am Running Beta
Yes. You can continue the original Satellite 6.2 Beta (released April 28). Per standard guidelines with Red Hat Beta programs, those subscriptions will expire 90 days after being deployed. We do encourage you to instead download Beta 2, which can be deployed for the remainder of the 90 day Beta subscription.
Please note: Beta 2 bits will be published to the same Beta repository, but are not compatible with the initial Beta. If you wish to remain on the initial Beta, you will need to disable further updates from this repository. Once you decide to try Beta 2, you can re-install (see: Can I upgrade from Public Beta 1 to Public Beta 2?
Q21. What Is The Difference Between Beta 1 And The Beta 2, Which Will Be Available June 15?
Beta 2 includes numerous fixes and enhancements, including the following:
- UI and API performance improvements
- Interactive-shell performance improvements (Hammer)
- Improved disconnected workflow
- Installer branding, with scenarios for capsules and satellite server
- Backup and restore script bug fixes and improvements
- Improved database performance for certain content management scenarios — i.e., EL7 installs come with newer, faster mongo
- Provisioning bug fixes
Q22. Can Satellite 6 Manage Rhel 7 Client Systems?
Yes. Red Hat Satellite versions 5.6 and above are capable of RHEL 7 content and systems management.
Q23. How Can I Upgrade From Red Hat Satellite 5 To Satellite 6, And Can I Upgrade In Place?
The product architectures differ between Red Hat Satellite 5 and Red Hat Satellite @Red Hat Satellite 6.x releases requires a fresh install. As a result, upgrading in place from Red Hat Satellite 5.x to Red Hat Satellite 6.x is not possible. Current Red Hat Satellite 5 customers will have many options to manage their Red Hat Enterprise Linux environment with Red Hat Satellite 6.