CloudLinux Rescues CentOS 8 From Vanishing Support
CentOS 8 users were pretty much cast aside when Red Hat shifted the focus of the operating system into a rolling release structure. This had the effect of tossing many users and companies to the wolves. For instance, cPanel is no longer supporting CentOS, which means admins of that platform have been forced to look elsewhere.
The problem is, there are a lot of CentOS 8 deployments running smoothly in the wild. What are those admins to do when the EOL comes for that server operating system? Clearly, they could migrate over to CloudLinux's own AlmaLinux or Rocky Linux (which was created by the original CentOS developer). Both of these options have simple-to-use commands to handle the migration from CentOS 8. But if you don't want to risk that migration, you now have another option. Said option is via TuxCare Extended Lifecycle Support, which covers out-of-date Linux distributions, such as Ubuntu 16.04, CentOS 8 and 6, and Oracle 6.
This Extended Lifecycle support will cover updates, including security patches, and general support for CentOS 8 until the close of 2025.
The cost of the TuxCare support for CentOS 6 is $4.25 per instance per month, so you should expect the cost for supporting CentOS 8 to be about the same.