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SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6

Release Notes

Abstract

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is a modern, modular operating system for both multimodal and traditional IT. This document provides a high-level overview of features, capabilities, and limitations of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 and highlights important product updates.

These release notes are updated periodically. The latest version of these release notes is always available at https://www.suse.com/releasenotes. General documentation can be found at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6.

Publication Date: 2024-05-15, Version: 15.6.20240515
1 About the release notes
2 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
2.1 Interoperability and hardware support
2.2 What is new?
2.3 Important sections of this document
2.4 Security, standards, and certification
2.5 Documentation and other information
2.6 Support and life cycle
2.7 Support statement for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
2.8 Technology previews
3 Modules, extensions, and related products
3.1 Modules in the SLE 15 SP6 product line
3.2 SLE extensions
3.3 Derived and related products
4 Installation and upgrade
4.1 Installation
4.2 Upgrade-related notes
4.3 Minimal VM and Minimal Image
4.4 JeOS renamed Minimal VM and Minimal Image
4.5 For more information
5 Changes affecting all architectures
5.1 Containers
5.2 Databases
5.3 Development
5.4 Kernel
5.5 Miscellaneous
5.6 Networking
5.7 Security
5.8 Storage and file systems
5.9 SUSE Package Hub
5.10 System management
5.11 Virtualization
6 POWER-specific changes (ppc64le)
6.1 Storage
6.2 Miscellaneous
7 IBM Z-specific changes (s390x)
7.1 Security
8 Arm 64-bit-specific changes (AArch64)
8.1 System-on-Chip driver enablement
8.2 New features
8.3 Changed kernel CONFIG_HZ value
8.4 Changed kernel I/O MMU default
8.5 64K page size kernel flavor is supported
8.6 Known limitations
9 Removed and deprecated features and packages
9.1 Removed features and packages
9.2 Deprecated features and packages
9.3 ceph client packages deprecation
9.4 intel-opencl and intel-graphics-compiler packages deprecation
10 Obtaining source code
11 Legal notices
A Changelog for 15 SP6
A.1 2024-05-15
A.1.1 New
A.1.2 Updated
A.2 2024-04-17
A.2.1 New
A.2.2 Updated
A.3 2024-03-11
A.3.1 New
A.4 2024-02-21
A.4.1 New
A.4.2 Updated
A.5 2023-10-19
A.5.1 New
B Kernel parameter changes
B.1 Changes from SP5 to SP6

1 About the release notes

These Release Notes are identical across all architectures, and the most recent version is always available online at https://www.suse.com/releasenotes.

Entries are only listed once but they can be referenced in several places if they are important and belong to more than one section.

Release notes usually only list changes that happened between two subsequent releases. Certain important entries from the release notes of previous product versions are repeated. To make these entries easier to identify, they contain a note to that effect.

However, repeated entries are provided as a courtesy only. Therefore, if you are skipping one or more service packs, check the release notes of the skipped service packs as well. If you are only reading the release notes of the current release, you could miss important changes.

2 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 is a multimodal operating system that paves the way for IT transformation in the software-defined era. It is a modern and modular OS that helps simplify multimodal IT, makes traditional IT infrastructure efficient and provides an engaging platform for developers. As a result, you can easily deploy and transition business-critical workloads across on-premises and public cloud environments.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6, with its multimodal design, helps organizations transform their IT landscape by bridging traditional and software-defined infrastructure.

2.1 Interoperability and hardware support

Designed for interoperability, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server integrates into classical Unix and Windows environments, supports open standard interfaces for systems management, and has been certified for IPv6 compatibility.

This modular, general-purpose operating system runs on four processor architectures and is available with optional extensions that provide advanced capabilities for tasks such as real-time computing and high-availability clustering.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is optimized to run as a high-performance guest on leading hypervisors. This makes SUSE Linux Enterprise Server the perfect guest operating system for virtual computing.

2.2 What is new?

2.2.1 General changes in SLE 15

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 introduces many innovative changes compared to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12. The most important changes are listed below.

Migration from openSUSE Leap to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

SLE 15 SP2 and later support migrating from openSUSE Leap 15 to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15. Even if you decide to start out with the free community distribution, you can later easily upgrade to a distribution with enterprise-class support. For more information, see the Upgrade Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/cha-upgrade-online.html#sec-upgrade-online-opensuse-to-sle.

Extended package search

Use the new Zypper command zypper search-packages to search across all SUSE repositories available for your product, even if they are not yet enabled. For more information see Section 5.10.2, “Searching packages across all SLE modules”.

Software Development Kit

In SLE 15, packages formerly shipped as part of the Software Development Kit are now integrated into the products. Development packages are packaged alongside other packages. In addition, the Development Tools module contains tools for development.

RMT replaces SMT

SMT (Subscription Management Tool) has been removed. Instead, RMT (Repository Mirroring Tool) now allows mirroring SUSE repositories and custom repositories. You can then register systems directly with RMT. In environments with tightened security, RMT can also proxy other RMT servers. If you are planning to migrate SLE 12 clients to version 15, RMT is the supported product to handle such migrations. If you still need to use SMT for these migrations, beware that the migrated clients will have all installation modules enabled. For more information see Section 4.2.3, “SMT has been replaced by RMT”.

Media changes

The Unified Installer and Packages media known from SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1 have been replaced by the following media:

  • Online Installation Medium: Allows installing all SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 products. Packages are fetched from online repositories. This type of installation requires a registration key. Available SLE modules are listed in Section 3.1, “Modules in the SLE 15 SP6 product line”.

  • Full Installation Medium: Allows installing all SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 products without a network connection. This medium contains all packages from all SLE modules. SLE modules need to be enabled manually during installation. RMT (Repository Mirroring Tool) and SUSE Manager provide additional options for disconnected or managed installations.

SLE for HPC product removal

Instead of a separate product, HPC is now available as a module in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. For more information see Section 2.2.4, “SLE for HPC HPC no longer a separate product”.

Major updates to the software selection:
Salt

SLE 15 SP6 can be managed via Salt, making it integrate better with modern management solutions such as SUSE Manager.

Python 3

As the first enterprise distribution, SLE 15 offers full support for Python 3 development in addition to Python 2.

Directory Server

389 Directory Server replaces OpenLDAP as the LDAP directory service.

2.2.2 Changes in 15 SP6

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 introduces changes compared to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5. The most important changes are listed below:

2.2.3 Package and module changes in 15 SP6

The full list of changed packages compared to 15 SP5 can be seen at this URL:

The full list of changed modules compared to 15 SP5 can be seen at this URL:

2.2.4 SLE for HPC HPC no longer a separate product

As of 15 SP6, SUSE Linux Enterprise for High-Performance Computing is no longer a separate product. As a result:

  • the HPC Module can now be enabled in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

  • when migrating from SUSE Linux Enterprise for High-Performance Computing 15 SP3, SP4, and SP5, only SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 will be available as migration target. The result of such a migration will be an installation of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server with all the previously enabled modules.

Modules

For an HPC installation the user should enable the following modules:

  • Development Tools Module

  • HPC Module

On SUSE Linux Enterprise Server system, make sure the following modules are all enabled:

  • Server Application Module

  • Web and Scripting Module

  • HPC Module

  • Desktop Applications Module

  • Development Tools Module

Roles

The HPC system roles are no longer available:

  • HPC Management Server (Head Node)

  • HPC Compute Node

  • HPC Login and Development Node

It is recommended to start with a Text Mode or Minimal System istallation. The admin should make sure that the system is partitioned to the respective requirements and the firewall is configured appropriately. Also, the admin should select the software components required. This may include slurm for the management server, slurm-node for the compute nodes. For login and compute nodes the pattern HPC Modularized Libraries (patterns-hpc-libraries) is available.

2.3 Important sections of this document

If you are upgrading from a previous SUSE Linux Enterprise Server release, you should review at least the following sections:

2.4 Security, standards, and certification

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 will be submitted for certification to both the Common Criteria and NIST FIPS 140-3. As a practice, SUSE only submits even-numbered Service Packs (for example: SLES 15, SP2, SP4, etc.) for certification.

For more information about certification, see https://www.suse.com/support/security/certifications/.

2.5 Documentation and other information

2.5.1 Available on the product media

  • Read the READMEs on the media.

  • Get the detailed change log information about a particular package from the RPM (where FILENAME.rpm is the name of the RPM):

    rpm --changelog -qp FILENAME.rpm
  • Check the ChangeLog file in the top level of the installation medium for a chronological log of all changes made to the updated packages.

  • Find more information in the docu directory of the installation medium of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6. This directory includes PDF versions of the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 Installation Quick Start Guide.

2.5.2 Online documentation

2.6 Support and life cycle

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is backed by award-winning support from SUSE, an established technology leader with a proven history of delivering enterprise-quality support services.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 has a 13-year life cycle, with 10 years of General Support and three years of Extended Support. The current version (SP6) will be fully maintained and supported until six months after the release of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP7.

If you need additional time to design, validate and test your upgrade plans, Long Term Service Pack Support can extend the support duration. You can buy an additional 12 to 36 months in twelve month increments. This means that you receive a total of three to five years of support per Service Pack.

For more information, see the pages Support Policy and Long Term Service Pack Support.

2.7 Support statement for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

To receive support, you need an appropriate subscription with SUSE. For more information, see https://www.suse.com/support/?id=SUSE_Linux_Enterprise_Server.

The following definitions apply:

L1

Problem determination, which means technical support designed to provide compatibility information, usage support, ongoing maintenance, information gathering, and basic troubleshooting using the documentation.

L2

Problem isolation, which means technical support designed to analyze data, reproduce customer problems, isolate the problem area, and provide a resolution for problems not resolved by Level 1 or prepare for Level 3.

L3

Problem resolution, which means technical support designed to resolve problems by engaging engineering to resolve product defects which have been identified by Level 2 Support.

For contracted customers and partners, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is delivered with L3 support for all packages, except for the following:

SUSE will only support the usage of original packages. That is, packages that are unchanged and not recompiled.

2.7.1 General support

To learn about supported features and limitations, refer to the following sections in this document:

2.7.2 Software requiring specific contracts

Certain software delivered as part of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server may require an external contract. Check the support status of individual packages using the RPM metadata that can be viewed with rpm, zypper, or YaST.

Major packages and groups of packages affected by this are:

  • PostgreSQL (all versions, including all subpackages)

2.7.3 Software under GNU AGPL

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 (and the SUSE Linux Enterprise modules) includes the following software that is shipped only under a GNU AGPL software license:

  • Ghostscript (including subpackages)

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 (and the SUSE Linux Enterprise modules) includes the following software that is shipped under multiple licenses that include a GNU AGPL software license:

  • MySpell dictionaries and LightProof

  • ArgyllCMS

2.8 Technology previews

Technology previews are packages, stacks, or features delivered by SUSE to provide glimpses into upcoming innovations. Technology previews are included for your convenience to give you a chance to test new technologies within your environment. We would appreciate your feedback! If you test a technology preview, contact your SUSE representative and let them know about your experience and use cases. Your input is helpful for future development.

Technology previews come with the following limitations:

  • Technology previews are still in development. Therefore, they may be functionally incomplete, unstable, or in other ways not suitable for production use.

  • Technology previews are not supported.

  • Technology previews may only be available for specific hardware architectures. Details and functionality of technology previews are subject to change. As a result, upgrading to subsequent releases of a technology preview may be impossible and require a fresh installation.

  • Technology previews can be removed from a product at any time. This may be the case, for example, if SUSE discovers that a preview does not meet the customer or market needs, or does not comply with enterprise standards.

2.8.1 Technology previews for Arm 64-Bit (AArch64)

2.8.1.1 KVM virtualization with 64K page size kernel flavor

As a technology preview, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP3 added a kernel flavor 64kb. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP5 introduced support for this 64kb kernel flavor (Section 8.5, “64K page size kernel flavor is supported”).

KVM virtualization with this 64kb kernel flavor remains a technology preview. Use the default kernel flavor for virtualization support.

2.8.1.2 Driver enablement for NVIDIA BlueField-2 DPU as host platform

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP1 and later kernels include drivers for installing on NVIDIA* BlueField* Data Processing Unit (DPU) based server platforms and SmartNIC (Network Interface Controller) cards.

As a technology preview, the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP5 and SP6 kernels include drivers for running on NVIDIA BlueField-2 DPU.

Should you wish to use SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm on NVIDIA BlueField-2 or BlueField-2X (or BlueField-3) in production, contact your SUSE representative.

Note
Note: Host drivers and tools for NVIDIA BlueField-2 SmartNICs

This Technology Preview status applies only to installing SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 on NVIDIA BlueField-2 DPUs.

For an NVIDIA BlueField-2 DPU PCIe card inserted as SmartNIC into a SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 or SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 based server, check Section 2.8, “Technology previews” and Section 5.4, “Kernel” for support status or known limitations of NVIDIA ConnectX* network drivers for BlueField-2 DPUs (mlx5_core and others).

The rshim tool is available from SUSE Package Hub (Section 5.9, “SUSE Package Hub”).

2.8.1.3 etnaviv drivers for Vivante GPUs are available

The NXP* Layerscape* LS1028A/LS1018A System-on-Chip (SoC) contains a Vivante GC7000UL Graphics Processor Unit (GPU), and the NXP i.MX 8M SoC contains a Vivante GC7000L GPU.

As a technology preview, the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 kernel includes etnaviv, a Display Rendering Infrastructure (DRI) driver for Vivante GPUs, and the Mesa-dri package contains a matching etnaviv_dri graphics driver library. Together they can avoid the need for third-party drivers and libraries.

Note
Note

To use them, the Device Tree passed by the bootloader to the kernel needs to include a description of the Vivante GPU for the kernel driver to get loaded. You may need to contact your hardware vendor for a bootloader firmware upgrade.

2.8.1.4 lima driver for Arm Mali Utgard GPUs available

The Xilinx* Zynq* UltraScale*+ MPSoC contains an Arm* Mali*-400 Graphics Processor Unit (GPU).

Prior to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP2, this GPU needed third-party drivers and libraries from your hardware vendor.

As a technology preview, the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP2 kernel added lima, a Display Rendering Infrastructure (DRI) driver for Mali Utgard microarchitecture GPUs, such as Mali-400, and the Mesa-dri package contains a matching lima_dri graphics driver library.

Note
Note

To use them, the Device Tree passed by the bootloader to the kernel needs to include a description of the Mali GPU for the kernel driver to get loaded. You may need to contact your hardware vendor for a bootloader firmware upgrade.

Note
Note

The panfrost driver for Mali Midgard microarchitecture GPUs is supported since SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP2.

2.8.1.5 mali-dp driver for Arm Mali Display Processors available

The NXP* Layerscape* LS1028A/LS1018 System-on-Chip contains an Arm* Mali*-DP500 Display Processor.

As a technology preview, the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP2 kernel added mali-dp, a Display Rendering Manager (DRM) driver for Mali Display Processors. It has undergone only limited testing because it requires an accompanying physical-layer driver for DisplayPort* output (see Section 8.6.3, “No DisplayPort graphics output on NXP LS1028A and LS1018A”).

2.8.1.6 Btrfs file system is enabled in U-Boot bootloader

For Raspberry Pi* devices, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 12 SP3 and later include Das U-Boot as bootloader, in order to align the boot process with other platforms. By default, it loads GRUB as UEFI application from a FAT-formatted partition, and GRUB then loads Linux kernel and ramdisk from a file system such as Btrfs.

As a technology preview, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP2 added a Btrfs driver to U-Boot for the Raspberry Pi (package u-boot-rpiarm64). This allows its commands ls and load to access files on Btrfs-formatted partitions on supported boot media, such as microSD and USB.

The U-Boot command btrsubvol lists Btrfs subvolumes.

2.8.2 Technology previews for Intel 64/AMD64 (x86-64)

2.8.2.1 Support for AMD Wheat Nas GPU

SLES 15 SP6 includes the kernel driver support for AMD Wheat Nas GPU (Navi32 dGPU). However because the corresponding firmware is still not publicly released yet, this feature is considered a technology preview.

2.8.2.2 Add IAA Crypto Driver

SLES 15 SP6 includes the Intel Analytics Accelerators (IAA) crypto compression kernel driver. Since this is a new upstream feature, is is considered a technology preview.

4 Installation and upgrade

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server can be deployed in several ways:

  • Physical machine

  • Virtual host

  • Virtual machine

  • System containers

  • Application containers

4.1 Installation

This section includes information related to the initial installation of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6.

Important
Important: Installation documentation

The following release notes contain additional notes regarding the installation of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. However, they do not document the installation procedure itself.

For installation documentation, see the Deployment Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/book-deployment.html.

4.1.1 New media layout

The set of media has changed with 15 SP2. There still are two different installation media, but the way they can be used has changed:

  • You can install with registration using either the online-installation medium (as with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1) or the full medium.

  • You can install without registration using the full medium. The installer has been added to the full medium and the full medium can now be used universally for all types of installations.

  • You can install without registration using the online-installation medium. Point the installer at the required SLE repositories, combining the install= and instsys= boot parameters:

    • With the install= parameter, select a path that contains either just the product repository or the full content of the media.

    • With the inst-sys= parameter, point at the installer itself, that is, /boot/ARCHITECTURE/root on the medium.

    For more information about the parameters, see https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Linuxrc#p_install.

4.2 Upgrade-related notes

This section includes upgrade-related information for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6.

Important
Important: Upgrade documentation

The following release notes contain additional notes regarding the upgrade of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. However, they do not document the upgrade procedure itself.

For upgrade documentation, see the Upgrade Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/cha-upgrade-online.html.

4.2.1 Make sure the current system is up-to-date before upgrading

Upgrading the system is only supported from the most recent patch level. Make sure the latest system updates are installed by either running zypper patch or by starting the YaST module Online Update. An upgrade on a system that is not fully patched may fail.

4.2.2 Skipping service packs requires LTSS

Skipping service packs during an upgrade is only supported if you have a Long Term Service Pack Support contract. Otherwise, you need to first upgrade to SLE 15 SP5 before upgrading to SLE 15 SP6.

4.2.3 SMT has been replaced by RMT

SLE 12 is the last codestream that SMT (Subscription Management Tool) is available for.

When upgrading your OS installation to SLE 15, we recommend also upgrading from SMT to its replacement RMT (Repository Mirroring Tool). RMT provides the following functionality:

  • Mirroring of SUSE-originated repositories for the SLE 12-based and SLE 15-based products your organization has valid subscriptions for.

  • Synchronization of subscriptions from SUSE Customer Center using your organization’s mirroring credentials. (These credentials can be found in SCC under Select Organization, Organization, Organization Credentials)

  • Selecting repositories to be mirrored locally via rmt-cli tool.

  • Registering systems directly to RMT to get required updates.

  • Adding custom repositories from external sources and distributing them via RMT to target systems.

  • Improved security with proxying: If you have strict security requirements, an RMT instance with direct Internet access can proxy to another RMT instance without direct Internet access.

  • Nginx as Web server: The default Web server of RMT is Nginx which has a smaller memory footprint and comparable performance than that used for SMT.

Note that unlike SMT, RMT does not support installations of SLE 11 and earlier.

For more feature comparison between RMT and SMT, see https://github.com/SUSE/rmt/blob/master/docs/smt_and_rmt.md.

For more information about RMT, also see the new RMT Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP3/html/SLES-all/book-rmt.html.

4.3 Minimal VM and Minimal Image

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Minimal VM and Minimal Image is a slimmed-down form factor of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server that is ready to run in virtualization environments and the cloud. With SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Minimal VM and Minimal Image, you can choose the right-sized SUSE Linux Enterprise Server option to fit your needs.

SUSE provides virtual disk images for Minimal VM and Minimal Image in the file formats .qcow2, .vhdx, and .vmdk, compatible with KVM, Xen, OpenStack, Hyper-V, and VMware environments. All Minimal VM and Minimal Image images set up the same disk size (24 GB) for the system. Due to the properties of different file formats, the size of Minimal VM and Minimal Image image downloads differs between formats.

4.4 JeOS renamed Minimal VM and Minimal Image

We have received feedback from users confused by the name JeOS, as a matter of fact the acronym JeOS, which meant Just enough Operating System, was not well understood and could be confused with other images provided by SUSE or openSUSE.

We have decided to go with simplicity and rename JeOS by "Minimal VM" for all our Virtual Machine Images and "Minimal Image" for the Raspberry Pi Image. We have also removed a few other characters, in the full images name to make it more simple and clear:

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-VM.x86_64-kvm-and-xen-GM.qcow2

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-VM.x86_64-OpenStack-Cloud-GM.qcow2

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-VM.x86_64-MS-HyperV-GM.vhdx.xz

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-VM.x86_64-VMware-GM.vmdk.xz

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-VM.aarch64-kvm-GM.qcow2

  • SLES15-SP4-Minimal-Image.aarch64-RaspberryPi-GM.raw.xz

4.5 For more information

For more information, see Section 5, “Changes affecting all architectures” and the sections relating to your respective hardware architecture.

5 Changes affecting all architectures

Information in this section applies to all architectures supported by SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6.

5.1 Containers

5.1.1 Default container registries

The container registry entries for Docker Hub and openSUSE Registry, which were previously included by default, have now been removed. If you want to pull container images from either of them, add them to the /etc/containers/registries.conf file.

5.1.2 suse/sle15 container uses NDB as the database back-end for RPM

Starting with SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP3, the rpm package in the suse/sle15 container image no longer supports the BDB back-end (based on Berkeley DB) and switches to the NDB back-end. Tools for scanning, diffing, and building container image using the rpm binary of the host for introspection can fail or return incorrect results if the host’s version of rpm does not recognize the NDB format.

To use such tools, make sure that the host supports reading NDB databases, such as hosts with SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP2 and later.

5.2 Databases

5.2.1 pgAdmin has been updated

The pgadmin4 package has been updated to version 8.5. It is now part of the Python 3 Module.

5.3 Development

5.3.1 glibc 2.38

The glibc package has been updated to version 2.38.

  • A couple of internal glibc interfaces has changed; if an application uses these internal interfaces, the application needs fixing (note that internal interfaces should never be used)

  • Split deprecated library libnsl1 into separate package

5.3.2 Supported Java versions

The following Java implementations are available in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6:

Warning
Warning

IBM Java will be removed in 15 SP7.

Name (Package Name)VersionModuleSupport

IBM Java
(java-1_8_0-ibm)

1.8.0

Legacy

External, until 2025-04-30

OpenJDK
(java-1_8_0-openjdk)

1.8.0

Legacy

SUSE, L3, until 2026-12-31

OpenJDK
(java-11-openjdk)

11

Legacy

SUSE, L3, until 2026-12-31

OpenJDK
(java-17-openjdk)

17

Legacy

SUSE, L3, until 2027-12-31

OpenJDK
(java-21-openjdk)

21

Base System

SUSE, L3, until 2031-06-30, pending upstream release

5.4 Kernel

5.4.1 CONFIG_HZ value changes

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5 kernels diverged from latest CONFIG_HZ default settings for multiple architectures.

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 kernel changed the CONFIG_HZ value (Section 8.3, “Changed kernel CONFIG_HZ value”): x86-64 and Arm* architectures now use the same value of 250 Hz.

PowerPC and IBM Z architectures continue to share a value of 100 Hz.

These configuration values cannot be overridden from the kernel command line. If your applications run into issues, contact your SUSE representative.

5.4.2 Kernel limits

This table summarizes the various limits which exist in our recent kernels and utilities (if related) for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6.

SLES 15 SP6 (Linux 6.4)AMD64/Intel 64 (x86_64)IBM Z (s390x)POWER (ppc64le)Armv8 (AArch64)

CPU bits

64

64

64

64

Maximum number of logical CPUs

8192

256

2048

768

Maximum amount of RAM (theoretical/certified)

>1 PiB/​64 TiB

10 TiB/​256 GiB

1 PiB/​64 TiB

256 TiB/​n.a.

Maximum amount of user space/kernel space

128 TiB/​128 TiB

n.a.

512 TiB1/​2 EiB

256 TiB/​256 TiB

Maximum amount of swap space

Up to 29 * 64 GB

Up to 30 * 64 GB

Maximum number of processes

1,048,576

Maximum number of threads per process

Upper limit depends on memory and other parameters (tested with more than 120,000)2.

Maximum size per block device

Up to 8 EiB on all 64-bit architectures

FD_SETSIZE

1024

1 By default, the user space memory limit on the POWER architecture is 128 TiB. However, you can explicitly request mmaps up to 512 TiB.

2 The total number of all processes and all threads on a system may not be higher than the "maximum number of processes".

5.4.3 Restoring default Btrfs file compression

Previously in kernel 5.14, it was possible to disable compression by passing an empty string instead of explicitly mentioning none or no.

In SLES 15 SP6, this behavior is changed to the more expected one. From kernel 5.14 onwards, empty string will reset the default setting instead of disabling compression.

5.5 Miscellaneous

5.5.1 xorriso split

The xorriso package has been split into xorriso (command-line only) and xorriso-tcltk (a GUI frontend).

5.5.2 sysctl monitoring tool

The sysctl-logger package has been added. It is a sysctl monitoring tool that tracks changes to sysctl value based on BPF.

5.5.3 IMA EVM signing plugin

A RPM plugin for IMA (Integrity Measurement Architecture)/EVM (Linux Extended Verification Module) signing has been added. The plugin is installed as part of the following package:

  • rpm-imaevmsign

5.5.4 Installer update URL changed

Previously, the self-updater URL on the installation media was pointing to updates.suse.com. In SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 it now points to installer-updates.suse.com. If you are behind a firewall you might need to update your system as per the support article at https://www.suse.com/support/kb/doc/?id=000021034.

5.5.5 kdump output directory format changed

The kdump output directory format has been changed. The format has changed from YYYY-MM-DD-HH:MN to YYYY-MM-DD-HH-MN. That is, the separator between hours and minutes has changed from ":" to "-".

For more information see the full changelog.

5.5.6 SSH between different architectures

By default, recent versions of the X.org and Xwayland servers do not accept connections from clients on different architectures.

For more information see https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/single-html/SLES-deployment/#adm-ssh-x-byte-swapping.

5.5.7 systemd updated to 254

systemd has been updated from 249 to version 254.

Some of the changes in this version include:

New

  • Support for encrypted and authenticated credentials has been added. (v250)

  • The default maximum numbers of inodes have been raised from 64k to 1M for /dev, and from 400k to 1M for /tmp. (v250)

Breaking changes

  • The minimum kernel version required has been bumped from 3.13 to 4.15, and CLOCK_BOOTTIME is now assumed to always exist. (v251)

  • busctl capture now writes output in the newer pcapng format instead of pcap. (v251)

  • systemctl will now warn when invoked without /proc/ mounted (for example, when invoked after chroot() into an directory tree without the API mount points like /proc/ being set up). Operation in such an environment is not fully supported. (v252)

  • 'udevadm hwdb' subcommand is deprecated and will emit a warning. systemd-hwdb (added in 2014) should be used instead.

  • udev rules in 60-evdev.rules have been changed to load hwdb properties for all modalias patterns. Previously only the first matching pattern was used. This could change what properties are assigned if the user has more and less specific patterns that could match the same device, but it is expected that the change will have no effect for most users. (v253)

  • after-local SysV init script has been removed. However for existing systems backward compatibility is kept by creating the relevant symlink/file in /etc during upgrades.

See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/releases/tag/v254 for the full changelog.

5.5.8 systemd uses cgroup v2 by default

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 changes default cgroup mode to unified (cgroup v2). Hybrid mode can be enabled using a boot parameter for workloads that depend on cgroup v1, see https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/cha-tuning-cgroups.html#sec-cgroups-hybrid-hierarchy.

5.6 Networking

5.6.1 bind version 9.18

The bind package has been updated from version 9.16 to version 9.18. This is a major update that removes several options but also adds, among others, the following features:

  • DoT and DoH (DNS over TLS and DNS over HTTPS) support

  • OpenSSL version 3.0.0

See the full changelog for more information.

5.6.2 Samba

The version of Samba shipped with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 delivers integration with Windows Active Directory domains. In addition, we provide the clustered version of Samba as part of SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability 15 SP6.

5.6.3 NFS

5.6.3.1 NFSv4

NFSv4 with IPv6 is only supported for the client side. An NFSv4 server with IPv6 is not supported.

5.7 Security

5.7.1 OpenSSH and crypto policies update

The openssh package has been updated to version 9.6p1, aligning with system crypto policies from the crypto-policies package. This update excludes insecure cryptographic algorithms, notably disallowing RSA keys under 2048 bits. This change may affect users with RSA host keys under 2048 bits for server connections.

To check for affected keys:

grep ssh-rsa ~/.ssh/known_hosts | ssh-keygen -lf -

The output lists key sizes and associated hostnames/IPs. After upgrade, connections to hosts with 1024 bit keys will fail if no alternative valid key exists.

Note
Note: Troubleshooting

Before upgrade

  1. Either update openssh to version 8.4p1, which enables UpdateHostkeys by default, allowing ssh to update known_hosts with all server’s host keys. Users must connect to the host with a 1024-bit RSA key after updating to this version and before upgrading to SP6.

  2. Or, manually add host keys:

    ssh-keyscan hostname >> ~/.ssh/known_hosts

    Note that this method adds keys without verification; use only if manual host verification is possible.

After upgrade

  1. Either temporarily use insecure algorithms by setting the crypto policy to LEGACY:

    sudo update-crypto-policies --set LEGACY

    Then, revert to the default secure policy after connecting:

    sudo update-crypto-policies --set DEFAULT
  2. Or, remove the invalid host key from known_hosts and reconnect, manually verifying the new host key.

5.7.2 Automatic CPU mitigations and how to change them

By default, the CPU mitigations setting to prevent CPU side-channel attacks is set to Auto. However, the kernel boot parameters included in the Auto option may change from one Service Pack to the next due to the necessity of applying new security patches. This may result in performance loss in some scenarios. You might want to change these to achieve a different tradeoff between performance and security.

For more information on how to configure these settings, see https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/single-html/SLES-administration/#vle-grub2-yast2-cpu-mitigations.

5.7.3 OpenSSL 3.1.4 is now default

In SLES 15 SP6, OpenSSL has been updated to version 3.1.4, replacing OpenSSL 1.1.1.

Because the development packages of different versions are mutually exclusive and automatic conflict resolution is not performed during updates, libopenssl1_1-devel should be manually selected for de-installation.

5.7.4 TLS 1.1 and 1.0 are no longer recommended for use

The TLS 1.0 and 1.1 standards have been superseded by TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3. TLS 1.2 has been available for considerable time now.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server packages using OpenSSL, GnuTLS, or Mozilla NSS already support TLS 1.3. We recommend no longer using TLS 1.0 and TLS 1.1, as SUSE plans to disable these protocols in a future service pack. However, not all packages, for example, Python, are TLS 1.3-enabled yet as this is an ongoing process.

5.8 Storage and file systems

5.8.1 Reusing LVM no longer default

The installer no longer tries to re-use existing LVM configurations. See the Deployment Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/single-html/SLES-deployment/#yast-installer-reuse-lvm for more information.

5.8.2 LUKS2 support in the installer

LUKS2 is no longer technical preview but is now fully supported in YaST Partitioner.

For more information see the Partioning section of the AutoYaST Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/single-html/SLES-autoyast/#CreateProfile-Partitioning

5.8.3 Comparison of supported file systems

SUSE Linux Enterprise was the first enterprise Linux distribution to support journaling file systems and logical volume managers in 2000. Later, we introduced XFS to Linux, which allows for reliable large-scale file systems, systems with heavy load, and multiple parallel reading and writing operations. With SUSE Linux Enterprise 12, we started using the copy-on-write file system Btrfs as the default for the operating system, to support system snapshots and rollback.

The following table lists the file systems supported by SUSE Linux Enterprise.

Support status: + supported / ‒ unsupported

FeatureBtrfsXFSExt4OCFS 21

Supported in product

SLE

SLE

SLE

SLE HA

Data/metadata journaling

N/A2

‒ / +

+ / +

‒ / +

Journal internal/external

N/A2

+ / +

+ / +

+ / ‒

Journal checksumming

N/A2

+

+

+

Subvolumes

+

Offline extend/shrink

+ / +

‒ / ‒

+ / +

+ / ‒3

Inode allocation map

B-tree

B+-tree

Table

B-tree

Sparse files

+

+

+

+

Tail packing

Small files stored inline

+ (in metadata)

+ (in inode)

+ (in inode)

Defragmentation

+

+

+

Extended file attributes/ACLs

+ / +

+ / +

+ / +

+ / +

User/group quotas

‒ / ‒

+ / +

+ / +

+ / +

Project quotas

+

+

Subvolume quotas

+

N/A

N/A

N/A

Data dump/restore

+

Block size default

4 KiB4

Maximum file system size

16 EiB

8 EiB

1 EiB

4 PiB

Maximum file size

16 EiB

8 EiB

1 EiB

4 PiB

1 OCFS 2 is fully supported as part of the SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability.

2 Btrfs is a copy-on-write file system. Instead of journaling changes before writing them in-place, it writes them to a new location and then links the new location in. Until the last write, the changes are not "committed". Because of the nature of the file system, quotas are implemented based on subvolumes (qgroups).

3 To extend an OCFS 2 file system, the cluster must be online but the file system itself must be unmounted.

4 The block size default varies with different host architectures. 64 KiB is used on POWER, 4 KiB on other systems. The actual size used can be checked with the command getconf PAGE_SIZE.

Additional notes

Maximum file size above can be larger than the file system’s actual size because of the use of sparse blocks. All standard file systems on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server have LFS, which gives a maximum file size of 263 bytes in theory.

The numbers in the table above assume that the file systems are using a 4 KiB block size which is the most common standard. When using different block sizes, the results are different.

In this document:

  • 1024 Bytes = 1 KiB

  • 1024 KiB = 1 MiB;

  • 1024 MiB = 1 GiB

  • 1024 GiB = 1 TiB

  • 1024 TiB = 1 PiB

  • 1024 PiB = 1 EiB.

See also http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html.

Some file system features are available in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 but are not supported by SUSE. By default, the file system drivers in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 will refuse mounting file systems that use unsupported features (in particular, in read-write mode). To enable unsupported features, set the module parameter allow_unsupported=1 in /etc/modprobe.d or write the value 1 to /sys/module/MODULE_NAME/parameters/allow_unsupported. However, note that setting this option will render your kernel and thus your system unsupported.

5.8.4 Supported Btrfs features

The following table lists supported and unsupported Btrfs features across multiple SLES versions.

Support status: + supported / ‒ unsupported

FeatureSLES 11 SP4SLES 12 SP5SLES 15 GASLES 15 SP1SLES 15 SP2SLES 15 SP3

Copy on write

+

+

+

+

+

+

Free space tree (Free Space Cache v2)

+

+

+

Snapshots/subvolumes

+

+

+

+

+

+

Swap files

+

+

+

Metadata integrity

+

+

+

+

+

+

Data integrity

+

+

+

+

+

+

Online metadata scrubbing

+

+

+

+

+

+

Automatic defragmentation

Manual defragmentation

+

+

+

+

+

+

In-band deduplication

Out-of-band deduplication

+

+

+

+

+

+

Quota groups

+

+

+

+

+

+

Metadata duplication

+

+

+

+

+

+

Changing metadata UUID

+

+

+

Multiple devices

+

+

+

+

+

RAID 0

+

+

+

+

+

RAID 1

+

+

+

+

+

RAID 5

RAID 6

RAID 10

+

+

+

+

+

Hot add/remove

+

+

+

+

+

Device replace

Seeding devices

Compression

+

+

+

+

+

Big metadata blocks

+

+

+

+

+

Skinny metadata

+

+

+

+

+

Send without file data

+

+

+

+

+

Send/receive

+

+

+

+

+

Inode cache

Fallocate with hole punch

+

+

+

+

+

5.9 SUSE Package Hub

SUSE Package Hub brings open-source software packages from openSUSE to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop.

Usage of software from SUSE Package Hub is not covered by SUSE support agreements. At the same time, usage of software from SUSE Package Hub does not affect the support status of your SUSE Linux Enterprise systems. SUSE Package Hub is available at no additional cost and without an extra registration key.

5.10 System management

5.10.1 Effective user limits in systemd setup

Before, the lookup of the effective session limit in a systemd setup was not trivial. Now these new properties have been added:

  • EffectiveMemoryMax

  • EffectiveMemoryHigh

  • EffectiveTasksMax

5.10.2 Searching packages across all SLE modules

In SLE 15 SP6 you can search for packages both within and outside of currently enabled SLE modules using the following command:

zypper search-packages SEARCH_TERM

This command contacts the SCC and searches all modules for matching packages. This functionality makes it easier for administrators and system architects to find the software packages needed. This feature is now also available when a system is registered against RMT.

5.11 Virtualization

For more information about acronyms used below, see https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/book-virtualization.html.

Important
Important: Virtualization limits and supported hosts/guests

These release notes only document changes in virtualization support compared to the immediate previous service pack of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. Full information regarding virtualization limits for KVM and Xen as well as supported guest and host systems is now available as part of the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server documentation.

See the Virtualization Guide at https://documentation.suse.com/sles/15-SP6/html/SLES-all/cha-virt-support.html.

5.11.1 Xen

Xen has been updated to version 4.18, for more information: https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Xen_Project_4.18_Release_Notes

5.11.2 QEMU

QEMU has been updated to version 8.2, full list of changes are available at https://wiki.qemu.org/ChangeLog/8.2

Highlights include:

5.11.3 libvirt

libvirt has been updated to version 10.0.0, this include many incremental improvements and bug fixes, see https://libvirt.org/news.html#v10-0-0-2024-01-15

libvirt provides two daemon deployment options: monolithic or modular daemons. Modular daemons are now enabled by default, but a deployment can be switched to the traditional monolithic daemon by disabling the individual daemons and enabling libvirtd.

5.11.4 VMware

5.11.4.1 open-vm-tools

open-vm-tools has been updated to version 12.3.5 that addresses a few critical problems and bug fixes. See https://github.com/vmware/open-vm-tools/blob/stable-12.3.5/ReleaseNotes.md

5.11.5 Others

5.11.5.1 NVIDIA GRID

Support for NVIDIA Virtual GPU (vGPU) v16.2 has been added, including migration under some specific scenarios.

5.11.5.2 sanlock

sanlock has been updated to version 3.8.5 which contains several bug fixes.

5.11.5.3 libguestfs

libguestfs has been updated to version 1.52.0:

  • Add support for lzma and zstd compression methods in tar APIs (like guestfs_tar_in)

  • The guestfish(1) --key option now recognizes LVM names like /dev/mapper/rhel_bootp—​73—​75—​123-root

  • guestfish --key option also supports a new --key all:…​ selector to try the same key on all devices.

  • Dropped the virt-dib tool

  • Add --chown option for virt-customize

  • Add new virt-customize --tar-in operation

  • Various bug fixes and language translations

5.11.5.4 virt-v2v

Update to version 2.4.0, see main changes at: https://libguestfs.org/virt-v2v-release-notes-2.4.1.html

5.11.5.5 sevctl

The sevctl package has been updated to version 0.4.3.

6 POWER-specific changes (ppc64le)

Information in this section applies to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for POWER 15 SP6.

6.1 Storage

6.1.1 DLPAR remove operation fails with Emulex FC adapters

Broadcom Emulex Fibre Channel (FC) adapters might fail to be properly removed with DLPAR operations in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6. All POWER 9 and Power10 systems with any Emulex FC adapter are affected.

When you perform DLPAR remove operations on Emulex FC adapters, there is a possibility that the adapter is not properly removed from the system. This operation can cause future DLPAR operations to fail. A future DLPAR add operation on the same FC adapter might cause symptoms including an EEH error followed by a kernel oops and system crash. The following messages might be seen on a failing system:

LTC Bug 205755 LinuxAlert screenshot
Figure 1: Screenshot of an error on a failing system

There is currently no workaround nor fix available for this issue. Instead of using the DLPAR operation, you can shutdown the logical partition before you remove or add Emulex FC adapters to the configuration.

6.2 Miscellaneous

6.2.1 Out of memory during installation

There is a limit on the memory available to the GRUB bootloader. The installer ramdisk is particularly large because it includes kernel drivers for all possible installation scenarios as well as tools for loading the installer from different types of media. Enabling secure boot and vTPM on the LPAR further increases memory requirements.

When loading the OS from the installation medium the following message might appear:

Loading kernel ...
Loading initial ramdisk ...
error: ../../grub-core/kern/mm.c:548:out of memory.

Press any key to continue...

The recommended workaround is to disable vTPM support during installation.

7 IBM Z-specific changes (s390x)

Information in this section applies to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for IBM Z and LinuxONE 15 SP6. For more information, see https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/linux-on-systems?topic=distributions-suse-linux-enterprise-server

7.1 Security

7.1.1 Secure boot IPL requirements

Secure boot IPL has the following minimum system requirements, depending on the boot device to be IPLed:

  • NVMe disk: IBM LinuxONE III or newer.

  • FC-attached SCSI disk: IBM LinuxONE III, IBM z15 or newer.

  • ECKD DASD with CDL layout: IBM z16, LinuxONE 4 or newer.

If these requirements are not met, the system can be IPLed in non-secure mode only.

8 Arm 64-bit-specific changes (AArch64)

Information in this section applies to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6.

8.1 System-on-Chip driver enablement

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 includes driver enablement for the following System-on-Chip (SoC) chipsets:

  • AMD* Opteron* A1100

  • Ampere* X-Gene*, eMAG*, Altra*, Altra Max, AmpereOne*

  • AWS* Graviton, Graviton2, Graviton3

  • Broadcom* BCM2837/BCM2710, BCM2711

  • Fujitsu* A64FX

  • Huawei* Kunpeng* 916, Kunpeng 920

  • Marvell* ThunderX*, ThunderX2*; OCTEON TX*; Armada* 7040, Armada 8040

  • NVIDIA* Grace; Tegra* X1, Tegra X2, Xavier*, Orin; BlueField*, BlueField-2

  • NXP* i.MX 8M, 8M Mini; Layerscape* LS1012A, LS1027A/LS1017A, LS1028A/LS1018A, LS1043A, LS1046A, LS1088A, LS2080A/LS2040A, LS2088A, LX2160A

  • Qualcomm* Centriq* 2400

  • Rockchip RK3399

  • Socionext* SynQuacer* SC2A11

  • Xilinx* Zynq* UltraScale*+ MPSoC

Note
Note

Driver enablement is done as far as available and requested. Refer to the following sections for any known limitations.

Some systems might need additional drivers for external chips, such as a Power Management Integrated Chip (PMIC), which may differ between systems with the same SoC chipset.

For booting, systems need to fulfill either the Server Base Boot Requirements (SBBR) or the Embedded Base Boot Requirements (EBBR), that is, the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) either implementing the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) or providing a Flat Device Tree (FDT) table. If both are implemented, the kernel will default to the Device Tree; the kernel command line argument acpi=force can override this default behavior.

Check for SUSE YES! certified systems, which have undergone compatibility testing.

8.2 New features

8.2.1 Memory Tagging in GNU C Library

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP4 and SP5 prepared their kernels for the Armv8.5 Memory Tagging Extension (FEAT_MTE). Their glibc packages were based on version 2.31 and did not yet support Memory Tagging.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 updates glibc base version to 2.38 and enables Memory Tagging in the GNU C Library as well.

8.3 Changed kernel CONFIG_HZ value

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP5 and earlier kernels have used a CONFIG_HZ value of 100 Hz.

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 kernel instead uses a value of 250 Hz. This matches the latest default and the value for x86-64 architecture (Section 5.4.1, “CONFIG_HZ value changes”).

8.4 Changed kernel I/O MMU default

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP5 and earlier kernels have defaulted the I/O MMU (Input/Output Memory Management Unit) to passthrough mode. This was the most performant setting, but did not work on all machines. It then required the user to override the default via iommu.passthrough=0 kernel command line option.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 kernel instead defaults to translated mode. This achieves a greater hardware compatibility.

To force the previous behavior, use the kernel command line option iommu.passthrough=1.

8.5 64K page size kernel flavor is supported

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 12 SP2 and later kernels have used a page size of 4K. This offers the widest compatibility also for small systems with little RAM, allowing to use Transparent Huge Pages (THP) where large pages make sense.

As a technology preview, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP3 added a kernel flavor 64kb, offering a page size of 64 KiB and physical/virtual address size of 52 bits. Same as the default kernel flavor, it does not use preemption.

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP5 largely removed this technology preview status, offering support for kernel-64kb on select platforms, such as NVIDIA Grace*. KVM virtualization remains a technology preview on this 64kb kernel flavor (Section 2.8.1.1, “KVM virtualization with 64K page size kernel flavor”).

Note
Note: Default file system no longer needs to be changed

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 SP4 and later allow the use of Btrfs based file systems with 4 KiB block size also with 64 KiB page size kernels.

Important
Important: Swap needs to be re-initialized

After booting the 64K kernel, any swap partitions need to re-initialized to be usable. To do this, run the swapon command with the --fixpgsz parameter on the swap partition. Note that this process deletes data present in the swap partition (for example, suspend data). In this example, the swap partition is on /dev/sdc1:

swapon --fixpgsz /dev/sdc1
Warning
Warning: RAID 5 uses page size as stripe size

It is currently possible to configure stripe size by setting the following kernel parameter:

echo 16384 > /sys/block/md1/md/stripe_size

Keep in mind that stripe_size must be in multiples of 4KB and not bigger than PAGE_SIZE. Also, it is only supported on systems where PAGE_SIZE is not 4096, such as arm64.

Avoid RAID 5 volumes when benchmarking 64K vs. 4K page size kernels.

See the Storage Guide for more information on software RAID.

Note
Note: Cross-architecture compatibility considerations

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 kernels on x86-64 use 4K page size.

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for POWER 15 SP6 kernel uses 64K page size.

8.6 Known limitations

8.6.1 No graphics drivers on NVIDIA Grace Hopper

The NVIDIA Grace Hopper* System-on-Chip contains an integrated, Hopper microarchitecture-based Graphics Processor Unit (GPU).

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 maintenance updates currently provide packages nvidia-open-driver-G06-signed-kmp-default and kernel-firmware-nvidia-gspx-G06 in version 535.104.05, which does not yet enable NVIDIA Grace Hopper GH200.

Check for maintenance updates of those packages with version 545.29.02 or later, or contact the system vendor or chip vendor NVIDIA for whether third-party graphics drivers are available for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6.

Note
Note: PCIe GPUs not affected

Discrete GPU cards with Hopper microarchitecture, such as NVIDIA H100, are already enabled in shipping package versions.

8.6.2 No graphics drivers on NVIDIA Jetson

The NVIDIA* Tegra* System-on-Chip chipsets include an integrated Graphics Processor Unit (GPU).

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6 does not include graphics drivers for any of the NVIDIA Jetson*, NVIDIA IGX or NVIDIA DRIVE* platforms.

Contact the chip vendor NVIDIA for whether third-party graphics drivers are available for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6.

8.6.3 No DisplayPort graphics output on NXP LS1028A and LS1018A

The NXP* Layerscape* LS1028A/LS1018A System-on-Chip contains an Arm* Mali*-DP500 Display Processor, whose output is connected to a DisplayPort* TX Controller (HDP-TX) based on Cadence* High Definition (HD) Display Intellectual Property (IP).

A Display Rendering Manager (DRM) driver for the Arm Mali-DP500 Display Processor is available as technology preview (Section 2.8.1.5, “mali-dp driver for Arm Mali Display Processors available”).

However, there was no HDP-TX physical-layer (PHY) controller driver ready yet. Therefore no graphics output will be available, for example, on the DisplayPort* connector of the NXP LS1028A Reference Design Board (RDB).

Contact the chip vendor NXP for whether third-party graphics drivers are available for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6.

Alternatively, contact your hardware vendor for whether a bootloader update is available that implements graphics output, allowing to instead use efifb framebuffer graphics in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Arm 15 SP6.

Note
Note

The Vivante GC7000UL GPU driver (etnaviv) is available as a technology preview (Section 2.8.1.3, “etnaviv drivers for Vivante GPUs are available”).

9 Removed and deprecated features and packages

This section lists features and packages that were removed from SUSE Linux Enterprise Server or will be removed in upcoming versions.

Note
Note: Package and module changes in 15 SP6

For more information about all package and module changes since the last version, see Section 2.2.3, “Package and module changes in 15 SP6”.

9.1 Removed features and packages

The following features and packages have been removed in this release.

  • timezone-java has been removed.

  • numad has been removed.

  • Adaptec’s I2O based RAID controllers (dpt_i2o) has been removed due to security issues.

9.1.1 Public Cloud module removals

The following packages in the Public Cloud module have been removed:

  • azure-cli-acr

  • azure-cli-acs

  • azure-cli-advisor

  • azure-cli-ams

  • azure-cli-appservice

  • azure-cli-backup

  • azure-cli-batch

  • azure-cli-batchai

  • azure-cli-billing

  • azure-cli-cdn

  • azure-cli-cloud

  • azure-cli-cognitiveservices

  • azure-cli-component

  • azure-cli-configure

  • azure-cli-consumption

  • azure-cli-container

  • azure-cli-cosmosdb

  • azure-cli-dla

  • azure-cli-dls

  • azure-cli-dms

  • azure-cli-eventgrid

  • azure-cli-eventhubs

  • azure-cli-extension

  • azure-cli-feedback

  • azure-cli-find

  • azure-cli-interactive

  • azure-cli-iot

  • azure-cli-keyvault

  • azure-cli-lab

  • azure-cli-monitor

  • azure-cli-network

  • azure-cli-profile

  • azure-cli-rdbms

  • azure-cli-redis

  • azure-cli-reservations

  • azure-cli-resource

  • azure-cli-role

  • azure-cli-search

  • azure-cli-servicebus

  • azure-cli-servicefabric

  • azure-cli-sql

  • azure-cli-storage

  • azure-cli-taskhelp

  • azure-cli-vm

  • blue-horizon-config-deploy-cap-eks

  • cfn-lint

  • gcimagebundle

  • google-cloud-sdk

  • google-compute-engine

  • google-daemon

  • google-startup-scripts

  • python-azure-storage

  • python-ravello-sdk

  • python-vsts-cd-manager

  • python-vsts

  • regionServiceClientConfigHP

  • regionServiceClientConfigSAPAzure

  • regionServiceClientConfigSAPEC2

  • regionServiceClientConfigSAPGCE

  • terraform-provider-aws

  • terraform-provider-azurerm

  • terraform-provider-external

  • terraform-provider-google

  • terraform-provider-helm

  • terraform-provider-kubernetes

  • terraform-provider-local

  • terraform-provider-null

  • terraform-provider-openstack

  • terraform-provider-random

  • terraform-provider-susepubliccloud

  • terraform-provider-template

  • terraform-provider-tls

  • WALinuxAgent

9.1.2 Miscellaneous

  • openmpi2 and openmpi3 have been removed.

9.2 Deprecated features and packages

The following features and packages are deprecated and will be removed in a future version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.

9.3 ceph client packages deprecation

The following ceph client packages have been deprecated and will be removed in 15 SP7:

  • ceph-common

  • libcephfs-devel

  • python3-ceph-common

  • python3-rbd

  • python3-rgw

9.4 intel-opencl and intel-graphics-compiler packages deprecation

Since SLE15 SP5, Intel stopped requesting updates intel-opencl and intel-graphics-compiler packages, the packages have been deprecated. They will be removed in 15 SP7, and moved to Package Hub.

10 Obtaining source code

This SUSE product includes materials licensed to SUSE under the GNU General Public License (GPL). The GPL requires SUSE to provide the source code that corresponds to the GPL-licensed material. The source code is available for download at https://www.suse.com/products/server/download/ on Medium 2. For up to three years after distribution of the SUSE product, upon request, SUSE will mail a copy of the source code. Send requests by e-mail to sle_source_request@suse.com. SUSE may charge a reasonable fee to recover distribution costs.

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