Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 FCoE Support.
FCoE Support in the Kickstart File
When using a kickstart file to install Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4, with the new fcoe kickstart option you can specify which Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) devices should be activated automatically in addition to those discovered by Enhanced Disk Drive (EDD) services.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 Installation Guide has more Kickstart Options.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 64-Bit Support
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 supports 64-bit processors; these processors can theoretically use up to 18 exabytes of memory. As of general availability (GA), Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is tested and certified to support up to 8TB of physical memory.
The size of memory supported by Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is expected to grow over several minor updates, as Red Hat continues to introduce and improve more features that enable the use of larger memory blocks. Examples of such improvements (as of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 GA) are:
Huge pages and transparent huge pages
Non-Uniform Memory Access improvements
virtualization with Red Hat Enterprise Linux - System requirements.
This chapter lists system requirements for successfully running virtualization with Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Virtualization is available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 Server.
The requirements for virtualization vary depending on the type of hypervisor. The Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) and Xen hypervisors are provided with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5. Both the KVM and Xen hypervisors support Full virtualization. The Xen hypervisor also supports Para-virtualization.
Minimum system requirements
6GB free disk space
2GB of RAM.
Recommended system requirements
6GB plus the required disk space recommended by the guest operating system per guest. For most operating systems more than 6GB of disk space is recommended.
One processor core or hyper-thread for each virtualized CPU and one for the hypervisor.
2GB of RAM plus additional RAM for virtualized guests.
Support for partitions larger than 2.2 TB with BIOS
Installations can now be configured to boot from hard drive partitions larger than 2.2 TB using select BIOS models that support the newer GUID Partition Table (GPT). Legacy BIOS implementations previously limited ability to use large partitions on systems that were not using the newer Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI).
The initial ramdisk file on 64-bit PowerPC and 64-bit IBM POWER Series systems is now named initrd.img. In previous releases, it was named ramdisk.image.gz.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.4 Virtualization Updates
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.4 now includes full support for the Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) hypervisor on x86_64 based architectures. KVM is integrated into the Linux kernel, providing a virtualization platform that takes advantage of the stability, features, and hardware support inherent in Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Virtualization using the KVM hypervisor is supported on wide variety of guest operating systems, including:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5
Windows XP
Windows Server 2003
Windows Server 2008