CentOS 8 Released: New Features, Changes, & How to Download

October 2, 2019

Introduction

CentOS 8 was finally released on September 24th, 2019. As this is a Linux distribution derived from Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), the CentOS team had to build an infrastructure to support the newly introduced RHEL 8. Also, don’t forget the fact that CentOS 6 reaches its end of life in November 2020.

NOTE: The CentOS 8 life cycle has been cut short with the news of its EOL in December 2021. RHEL revealed it would be shifting focus from CentOS Linux to CentOS Stream. Find out more in our article about CentOS 8 EOL.

CentOS is widely used among developers and system administrators as it offers full control over its highly customizable open-source software packages. It is stable and has a large and active support community behind it. Due to its reliability, it has become a popular choice among operating systems for servers.

Let’s take a look at all the new features and updates CentOS 8 has to offer.

CentOS 8 features, highlights and requirements.

How to Download CentOS 8

To download CentOS 8 and try it out for yourself you can navigate to the official CentOS Download webpage.

There you will find the CentOS Linux DVD ISO as well as the CentOS Stream DVD ISO. We have created a full tutorial on how to install CentOS 8.

CentOS 8 Updated Features

Desktop Environment

Unlike previous CentOS versions where the default installation did not include a GUI, the CentOS 8 default desktop environment is GNOME 3.28. What’s more, the GNOME Display Manager now uses Wayland as the default display server (as opposed to the X.org server).

The newest GNOME (nicknamed Chongqing) includes a number of useful features including:

  • Extended Device Support. GNOME is now integrated with Thunderbolt 3 connection support. Whenever Thunderbolt 3 establishes a connection and becomes active, you will get notified. This feature allows you to monitor all connections closely and detect any security breaches or attempts at data breach or theft.
  • New Boxes Feature. There are a couple of new features included in GNOME’s application for managing remote and virtual machines. The updated version simplifies the process of creating virtual environments with its automatic downloading of operating systems. Also, its drag-and-drop feature lets you easily transfer files between machines.
  • New On-Screen Keyboard. The GNOME team rewrote the on-screen keyboard for the newest release in an attempt to resolve the pressing UI issues. Now, the feature has a variety of layouts supported for different locales, automatic keyboard activation, and view-shift, so the user has a clear view of the text when writing.
  • Upgraded UI. The new desktop environment also has several additional features added to improve UI, as well as UX. This includes multi-monitor handling, direct window handling, improved scaling, to list a few.

Networking

As far as networking features, there are two major updates:

  • CentOS now comes with the TCP Networking Stack version 4.16.
  • The default packet filtering framework used is nftables.

Most of all, these changes ensure better stability, scaling, and performance.

nftables replaces iptables, iptablesip6table, arptables, and ebtables, serving as a single framework for IPv4 and IPv6 protocols. In addition, the firewalld deamon will also use the same subsystem for filtering network transactions as its default backend.

Cockpit Web Console

The open web-based interface, Cockpit, now comes as part of the new CentOS release. Use this platform to easily manage your servers through a web console interface. Perform system tasks, create and manage virtual machines, configure networks, start containers, and inspect logs all via web browser.

Cockpit is highly integrated. Not only does it have an embedded terminal allowing you to switch from terminal to browser at any time, but it also works on mobile devices.

Therefore, when you install CentOS 8 it will automatically set up the Cockpit web console, along with opening the required firewall ports. However, you do not worry about it burdening the system. The software is quite efficient as it uses memory and CPU only when active.

Content Distribution

Content is distributed in two main repositories:

  1. BaseOS repository
  2. AppStream Repository

While BaseOS includes all the underlying OS packages, AppStream has the application related packages, developer tools, databases, and others.

In other words, the BaseOS repository has the traditional RPM packages that make up the core of the OS. Once you update the system, it will automatically download and install any new versions of these packages.

However, sometimes you may not want to bulk-upgrade software as it can cause compatibility issues in environments you want to keep stable (when testing code, for example). That is why the new CentOS 8 comes with the additional AppStream repository, providing more features, functionality, customization.

This repository has a different way of managing software, classifying it into several subcategories:

  • Packages: handled as regular packages.
  • Modules: groups of packages that are related or share dependencies.
  • Module streams: different versions of the software modules.
  • Module profiles: different configurations of packages that construct the modules.

Software Management

CentOS 8 comes with the YUM package manager version v4.0.4, which now uses DNF (Dandified YUM) technology as its backend. DNF is the next generation of YUM and the new OS version lets you use both for managing packages.

Integrated with DNF technology, the latest release has a much-improved software management system. It’s increased performance, has well-defined APIs, and support for modular content, software AppStreams for cloud, container workloads, and CI/CD.

Virtualization

CentOS version 8 comes with KVM (qemu-kvm 2.12) that supports:

  • A 5-level paging feature, extending the size of virtual addresses and increasing the addressable virtual memory.
  • User-Mode Instruction Prevention (UMIP), a security feature restricting access to user-space applications to system-wide settings.
  • Ceph storage, providing block storage capabilities on all RHEL CPU architectures.
  • Q35 machine type to which all the virtual machines are pre-set (the machine type includes a native PCIe hotplug, IOMMU, Secure Boot and many other newly integrated features).
  • Compatibility between NVIDIA vGPU and the VNC console.
  • A sandboxing feature, introduced by the QEMU emulator, to ensure secure code testing.

Upgraded Security

The CentOS team has improved security features to ensure data protection and prevent breaches. The latest release will now have OpenSSL 1.1.1 which by default includes TLS 1.3. This ensures that all your data, as well as your clients’ data, will be cryptographically protected.

Also, the OS comes with a system-wide cryptographic policy which means you will not have to modify security configurations for individual applications.

CentOS Stream

CentOS Stream is a project combining the Fedora Project and RHEL. The CentOS team created the Stream version as a rolling-release distro in an attempt to eliminate delays and compatibility problems after significant updates.

The basic ideas behind this project are to:

  • have streams of development updates by changing a few packages at a time.
  • get user feedback and address any issues raised by the CentOS community.
  • allow layering projects (like Ansible, oVirt, and RDO) built on top of CentOS Stream.

Conclusion

The release of CentOS 8 includes many new features that has raised the bar for future RHEL-based operating systems and should improve overall UX.

This article has outlined the most significant changes and updates included in CentOS 8.

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Sofija Simic
Sofija Simic is an experienced Technical Writer. Alongside her educational background in teaching and writing, she has had a lifelong passion for information technology. She is committed to unscrambling confusing IT concepts and streamlining intricate software installations.
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