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    ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI (ecs) | Support by SupportedImages

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    Deployed on AWS
    AWS Free Tier
    This product has charges associated with it for seller support. The Amazon ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI is designed specifically for running containerized applications on the Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS). With this AMI, you benefit from a lightweight, secure, and high-performance environment tailored for Docker workloads. It includes essential packages and optimizations, ensuring faster startup times and optimal resource utilization. This AMI is ideal for developers and IT teams aiming to deploy scalable microservices with minimal management overhead. Additionally, it seamlessly integrates with AWS services, providing enhanced logging, monitoring, and security features. Leverage this powerful AMI to accelerate your cloud-native applications and simplify your CI/CD pipelines within the AWS ecosystem.
    4.2

    Overview

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    This is a repackaged open source software wherein additional charges apply for extended support with a 24 hour response time.

    The ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI is engineered specifically for running containerized applications efficiently in Amazon EC2 with the AWS Elastic Container Service (ECS). This optimized version of Amazon Linux 2023 is preconfigured with a collection of tools and packages that enhance performance, security, and compatibility for development and deployment in a ecs optimized al 2023 environment.

    Amazon Linux 2023 Key Features:

    • Integration with ECS: Seamless integration with the Amazon Elastic Container Service allows you to easily manage and scale containerized applications.
    • Performance Optimization: Featuring a lightweight footprint and tuned kernel settings to maximize resource utilization and reduce latency for container workloads.
    • Enhanced Security: Regularly updated with the latest security patches and a secure base image, ensuring your applications run in a reliable environment.
    • Docker Support: Comes with Docker support pre-installed, simplifying the installation and management of containers.
    • Extensive Package Repository: Access to a rich set of AWS and community-supported packages, enabling developers to customize their deployment to specific needs.

    Amazon Linux 2023 Benefits:

    • Reduced Overhead: The optimized setup requires less configuration and maintenance, allowing developers to focus on building applications instead of managing infrastructure.
    • Scalability: Easily scale your application to meet demand with the ability to quickly spin up new instances.
    • Cost-Effective: Designed for heavy workloads without unnecessary bloat, leading to potential cost savings on resource consumption.

    Amazon Linux 2023 Use Cases:

    • Microservices Architecture: Perfect for deploying microservices rapidly in a managed environment.
    • Batch Processing: Efficiently run batch processing jobs leveraging the power of middleware and container orchestration.
    • Development and Testing: Ideal for creating development environments or testing platforms for containerized applications prior to production rollout.

    Leverage the power of AWS with Amazon ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 to accelerate your application deployment while maintaining robust performance and security.

    Try our most popular AMIs on AWS EC2

    Highlights

    • The Amazon ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI is designed specifically for running containers in Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS). Leveraging the latest updates from Amazon Linux, this AMI ensures compatibility with modern applications and containerized workloads. With enhanced security features and streamlined performance, users can deploy applications quickly and efficiently, enhancing productivity and reducing time to market.
    • This Amazon Linux 2023 AMI offers built-in integration with AWS services, enabling seamless interaction with EC2, ECR, and CloudWatch. Users benefit from automatic updates and optimizations tailored for container management, ensuring that infrastructure supports both scalability and reliability. This makes it an excellent choice for organizations looking to modernize their applications and adopt DevOps methodologies.
    • By utilizing the ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI, organizations can fully leverage container orchestration capabilities with minimal overhead. It simplifies clustering and load balancing for containerized applications, making it suitable for microservices architectures. With its robust performance and cloud-native features, this AMI serves as a solid foundation for building and deploying applications in a dynamic cloud environment.

    Details

    Delivery method

    Delivery option
    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Latest version

    Operating system
    AmazonLinux 2023

    Deployed on AWS
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    Pricing

    ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2023 AMI (ecs) | Support by SupportedImages

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    Pricing is based on actual usage, with charges varying according to how much you consume. Subscriptions have no end date and may be canceled any time. Alternatively, you can pay upfront for a contract, which typically covers your anticipated usage for the contract duration. Any usage beyond contract will incur additional usage-based costs.
    Additional AWS infrastructure costs may apply. Use the AWS Pricing Calculator  to estimate your infrastructure costs.
    If you are an AWS Free Tier customer with a free plan, you are eligible to subscribe to this offer. You can use free credits to cover the cost of eligible AWS infrastructure. See AWS Free Tier  for more details. If you created an AWS account before July 15th, 2025, and qualify for the Legacy AWS Free Tier, Amazon EC2 charges for Micro instances are free for up to 750 hours per month. See Legacy AWS Free Tier  for more details.

    Usage costs (587)

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    • ...
    Dimension
    Cost/hour
    r6i.4xlarge
    Recommended
    $1.12
    t3.micro
    $0.07
    t2.micro
    $0.21
    g4ad.8xlarge
    $2.24
    c6i.2xlarge
    $0.56
    c5ad.12xlarge
    $3.36
    x2idn.16xlarge
    $4.48
    m6id.metal
    $3.36
    m3.medium
    $0.14
    c3.8xlarge
    $2.24

    Vendor refund policy

    The instance can be terminated at anytime to stop incurring charges

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    Usage information

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    Delivery details

    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.

    Version release notes

    System updates

    Additional details

    Usage instructions

    Follow the Setting Up with Amazon ECS if you have not done so already https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/get-set-up-for-amazon-ecs.html 

    The use the following instructions to add this AMI to the ECS cluster: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/launch_container_instance.html 

    SSH to the instance and login as 'ec2-user' using the key specified at launch.

    OS commands via SSH: SSH as user 'ec2-user' to the running instance and use sudo to run commands requiring root access.

    Support

    Vendor support

    Email support for this AMI is available through the following: https://supportedimages.com/support/  OR support@supportedimages.com 

    AWS infrastructure support

    AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.

    Product comparison

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    Accolades

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    Top
    10
    In Infrastructure as Code
    Top
    100
    In High Performance Computing
    Top
    25
    In Operating Systems

    Customer reviews

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    Sentiment is AI generated from actual customer reviews on AWS and G2
    Reviews
    Functionality
    Ease of use
    Customer service
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    5 reviews
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    Overview

     Info
    AI generated from product descriptions
    Container Orchestration Integration
    Seamless integration with Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) for managing and scaling containerized applications with built-in support for EC2, ECR, and CloudWatch.
    Pre-installed Container Runtime
    Docker support pre-installed and preconfigured for simplified container installation and management without additional setup requirements.
    Performance Optimization
    Lightweight footprint with tuned kernel settings designed to maximize resource utilization and reduce latency for container workloads.
    Security Patching
    Regularly updated with latest security patches and secure base image configuration to ensure reliable and protected application runtime environment.
    Package Repository Access
    Extensive collection of AWS and community-supported packages available for customization and deployment of specific application requirements.
    SELinux Security Enforcement
    SELinux enforcement enabled by default for mandatory access control and security policy enforcement
    Cloud-Init Automation Integration
    Built-in cloud-init support for automated provisioning workflows and instance configuration during deployment
    ENA Networking Support
    Enhanced Networking Adapter (ENA) support optimized for AWS EC2 high-performance networking capabilities
    Automatic Security Updates at Boot
    System synchronizes with upstream repositories during first boot to install newest security updates and package revisions
    Forward-Looking Development Platform
    Continuously delivered Linux distribution that tracks development path leading to future Red Hat Enterprise Linux releases
    In-Place Linux Distribution Conversion
    Convert2RHEL tooling enables in-place conversion of instances running on rpm-based Linux distributions to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 while preserving existing customizations, configurations, and preferences.
    Extended Security Support
    Extended Life Cycle Support (ELS) provides access to security patches and updates until June 2029, extending support five years beyond the CentOS Linux 7 end-of-life date.
    High Availability Support
    High Availability tooling and capabilities included for configuring and managing highly available infrastructure and applications.
    System Observability and Management
    Red Hat Insights integration provides monitoring, analysis, and remediation capabilities for security, stability, and performance issues across workloads, applications, and platforms.
    Cross-Infrastructure Consistency
    Unified operating foundation supporting consistent management and deployment across physical, virtual, private cloud, public cloud, and edge environments using standardized tools.

    Contract

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    Standard contract
    No

    Customer reviews

    Ratings and reviews

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    4.2
    35 ratings
    5 star
    4 star
    3 star
    2 star
    1 star
    49%
    49%
    3%
    0%
    0%
    35 AWS reviews
    AnilKumar13

    Using a free, lightweight platform has enabled cost‑effective load generation at scale

    Reviewed on Apr 11, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Amazon Linux  is that it serves as a replacement and a free version for a Red Hat-based OS for Amazon users. I use it in environments where a RHEL-based environment is required because a number of applications are pre-installed on Amazon Linux .

    My main use case for Amazon Linux involves using these Linux machines as load generators. With Amazon Linux, you are not required to install a number of applications which are helpful for other applications. We have a CR controller and generators setup, where the generators are virtual machines on Amazon on an auto-scaling basis. For this, we use Amazon Linux as a base.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features Amazon Linux offers include that it is designed for Amazon users. The first one is that it is freeware. Red Hat has a subscription model. Another one is that a number of applications are pre-installed on Amazon Linux, which are helpful. It is easy to use Amazon services, and it integrates easily with Amazon services.

    For example, the Amazon services I find it integrates best with are those requiring connection to Session Manager on any Ubuntu  or RHEL  machine, where you have to install it first, but on Amazon Linux, it is pre-installed.

    In terms of features, it is freeware for Amazon. It is more similar to CentOS  and OEL, Oracle Linux , but it is a lighter version for RHEL .

    Amazon Linux has impacted my organization positively because in any organization, the first priority is cost. For Amazon Linux, it is not required to have any subscription, unlike a RHEL-based OS. If you are going for RHEL, it is a subscription model, and we have to purchase a subscription as per our requirements. We use it as a load generation tool, so we require a number of generators, sometimes more than 100. For 100 generators, the subscription costs too much. Amazon Linux is freeware, so it is very helpful for us.

    What needs improvement?

    I do not think Amazon Linux can be improved. It already has a lightweight freeware and is easily integrated with all the AWS  services. I am not finding any room for improvement.

    Specifically on Amazon Linux, I do not think there are any needed improvements.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Amazon Linux for around five plus years.

    What other advice do I have?

    I did not purchase Amazon Linux through the AWS Marketplace .

    If anyone is using the AWS  platform and they require a RHEL-based OS, they must use Amazon Linux. It easily integrates with any services in AWS, and it is pre-installed with a few required tools, so it is very helpful.

    I have no additional thoughts about Amazon Linux before we wrap up.

    I found this interview fine, and I do not think there is anything I should change for the future.

    I give this product a review rating of 8.

    Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

    Public Cloud

    If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

    Amazon Web Services (AWS)
    Priyanka Halder

    Cloud platform has reduced hosting costs and supports secure, high-performance web applications

    Reviewed on Apr 11, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    Amazon Linux  is used to host websites and back-end systems. Running a website on Amazon Web Services  EC2  instance with Amazon Linux  has proven effective. Amazon Linux is designed for cloud apps on EC2  and provides a secure, stable, and high-performance environment. It is used to run applications on cloud services, to host websites and back-end systems.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features Amazon Linux offers include tight integration with AWS  tools such as CLI and Cloud-init. It provides a free OS with a pay-only-for-infrastructure option. The integration with AWS tools like CLI and Cloud-init is quite easy to use.

    Amazon Linux has helped the organization reduce cost. Security compliances have improved. Better performance and scalability have been noticed.

    What needs improvement?

    Amazon Linux currently has limited software packages and a dependency on the AWS ecosystem, which are areas for improvement.

    There are a couple of areas where Amazon Linux can improve. For example, slower updates for some modern tools and less direct support sometimes, usually for documentation-heavy items, are concerns.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    Amazon Linux has been used for three months.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Amazon Linux is stable.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Amazon Linux's scalability is good.

    How are customer service and support?

    Customer support for Amazon Linux comes under AWS support plans. Free users rely mostly on documentation and community resources, but AWS provides strong security patching and maintenance.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Before getting into Amazon Linux, a couple of other options were evaluated, including Oracle Linux , Google Container-Optimized OS, and Azure  Linux.

    What was our ROI?

    Money and time have definitely been saved.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    Amazon Linux itself is free, so there are no license costs. Only Amazon Web Services EC2 infrastructure costs were incurred, and they offer a pay-as-you-go model based on per-second or per-hour usage. It can be very cost-effective compared to paid operating systems like RHEL . Costs can increase with storage, bandwidth, and scaling. Overall, it is flexible and cost-efficient, but monitoring is necessary.

    What other advice do I have?

    Amazon Linux should only be used if AWS is the primary platform, as it is the best fit for that environment. Costs should be monitored using AWS billing tools. Amazon Linux is good and best for cloud-based teams, and it can be kept simple at the start with optimization as scaling occurs.

    Amazon Linux is a smart and cost-efficient choice if AWS is the main platform. It is best for startups and enterprises who are already on AWS. It should be avoided if full independence from cloud vendors is desired.

    The overall review rating for this product is 8 out of 10.

    Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

    On-premises

    If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

    Amazon Web Services (AWS)
    Vibin Thomas

    Optimized cloud workloads have improved security, monitoring, and automated maintenance

    Reviewed on Apr 01, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Amazon Linux  is to host and manage applications in AWS  environments. I primarily use it for deploying web servers like NGINX  and Apache, running application workloads, and integrating security layers such as WAF . I also use it for configuring back-end services that are protected behind platforms like Cloudflare . In addition, I use Amazon Linux  for system tasks such as patch management, log analysis, performance tuning, and ensuring secure configurations align with enterprise standards.

    In one of my recent projects, I used Amazon Linux on an EC2  instance to host a web application that was protected by Cloudflare . I was responsible for configuring the server by setting up NGINX , managing SSL/TLS certificates, and ensuring secure communication between Cloudflare and the application. I also work on optimizing the server performance and monitoring the logs to identify and troubleshoot issues. During one incident, we observed high traffic causing performance degradation, so I analyzed system and application logs on the Amazon Linux instance. We tuned the configurations and implemented rate-limiting security controls, which helped stabilize the application.

    What is most valuable?

    Some of the best features of Amazon Linux are strong integration with AWS , high performance, and built-in security. It is especially optimized for AWS environments, which ensures better performance and stability in EC2  instances. It also integrates seamlessly with services like CloudWatch and Systems Manager, making monitoring and automation much easier. Another key feature is security. Amazon Linux provides regular updates, supports SELinux, and allows easy patch management, which is very important for enterprise environments. Overall, it offers a reliable, secure, and efficient platform for running production workloads in the cloud.

    Amazon Linux has positively impacted our organization by improving performance, security, and operational efficiency in our AWS environments. Since it is optimized, we have seen better stability and performance for our application workloads running on EC2 instances. It also simplifies integration with AWS services like CloudWatch, which helps us with monitoring, automation, and patch management. From a security perspective, regular updates and built-in features like SELinux have helped us maintain a strong security posture, especially for enterprise and banking clients. Overall, it has reduced operational overhead, improved system reliability, and enabled us to manage our infrastructure more efficiently at scale.

    We have seen several positive outcomes after using Amazon Linux in our environment. From a performance perspective, we observe improved system stability and uptime with fewer incidents related to OS-level issues. This helps us maintain high availability for our applications. In terms of operational efficiency, the integration with AWS services like Systems Manager has reduced manual effort in patching and maintenance, saving a significant amount of time for our team. Additionally, since Amazon Linux optimized for AWS comes at no additional licensing cost, it has helped us reduce the overall infrastructure cost compared to other operating systems. We also reduced the manual effort for patching and maintenance by around 35 to 45 percent using AWS Systems Manager  automation.

    What needs improvement?

    Amazon Linux is a strong platform, but there are a few areas where it can be improved. One key improvement would be expanding the package repository. Compared to other distributions like Ubuntu , sometimes fewer packages are readily available, which can require manual installation. Another area is documentation and community support, which could be enhanced to make troubleshooting and learning easier, especially for new users. Additionally, improving flexibility for non-AWS environments would make it more versatile for hybrid or multi-cloud use cases.

    Improving the package availability and expanding the repository would make Amazon Linux more flexible for different use cases. Enhancing the documentation and community support would help users troubleshoot issues more efficiently, especially for new adopters. Overall, these improvements can make Amazon Linux even more user-friendly and adaptable while maintaining its strong performance and security.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Amazon Linux for around two to three years as part of my work with AWS-based environments.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Amazon Linux scales very well, especially within AWS environments. Since it is tightly integrated with AWS services, I can easily scale instances up or down based on demand using EC2 auto-scaling and load balancing. In our experience, it handles increasing traffic efficiently without performance degradation, making it suitable for production and high-traffic applications. Overall, it provides a reliable and seamless scaling experience as part of the AWS ecosystem.

    How are customer service and support?

    I have interacted with the AWS support team for issues related to Amazon Linux, and the experience has been generally positive. The support team is knowledgeable and responsive, especially for critical issues. They provide detailed guidance and help in troubleshooting complex problems efficiently. In most of our cases, we are able to resolve issues quickly with their assistance. The documentation they share is also very helpful. Overall, the support experience has been reliable and professional.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Compared to other Linux distributions like Ubuntu  or CentOS , Amazon Linux is more optimized for AWS environments, which gives better performance and seamless integration with AWS services. For example, it works very well with services like Systems Manager, making monitoring, automation, and patching much easier compared to other distributions. However, distributions like Ubuntu have a larger package repository and stronger community support, which makes them more flexible for general-purpose or non-cloud environments. Overall, I would say Amazon Linux is the best for AWS-native workloads, while Ubuntu or CentOS  may be better for broader or multi-cloud use cases.

    What other advice do I have?

    Overall, Amazon Linux has been a reliable and efficient operating system for our cloud environments. Its tight integration with AWS services, strong security posture, and consistent performance make it a solid choice for enterprise workloads. With some improvements in the depth of documentation and package flexibility, it can become even better.

    Maintaining and updating Amazon Linux is relatively easy in our environment, mainly due to the integration with AWS services. We use tools like AWS Systems Manager  to automate the patch management and updates across multiple instances, which significantly reduces the manual effort. Additionally, the package management using YUM or DNF is straightforward and efficient. Overall, the combination of automation and simple package management makes it easy to maintain and secure an up-to-date environment.

    Amazon Linux provides strong security and compliance support, which makes it suitable for regulated environments. It offers regular security updates and integrates well with AWS security services like IAM  and CloudWatch. This helps with monitoring, access control, and patch management. Additionally, features like SELinux and secure default configurations help strengthen the overall security posture. In our experience, this has helped us align with enterprise security standards and compliance requirements, especially when working with banking and financial sector clients.

    The documentation and learning resources for Amazon Linux are generally good, especially when combined with AWS documentation. There are detailed guides for installation, configuration, and integration with AWS services, which make it easier for new team members to get started. However, compared to distributions like Ubuntu, the community support sometimes requires additional effort during troubleshooting. Overall, the documentation is helpful for onboarding, particularly for teams already familiar with AWS environments.

    Amazon Linux provides very good performance and efficient resource usage, especially in an AWS environment. It is lightweight and optimized for EC2 instances, consuming fewer system resources compared to some other operating systems, which helps in improving performance. In our experience, applications run more efficiently, ensuring better stability and lower overhead, particularly for production workloads. Compared to others, the difference may not always be significant, but Amazon Linux performs better when tightly integrated with AWS services.

    My advice would be to choose Amazon Linux if you are primarily working in AWS environments, as it is highly optimized for performance, security, and seamless integration with AWS services. I would also recommend leveraging AWS tools like Systems Manager for automation and patching and CloudWatch for monitoring to get the full benefit of the platform. At the same time, it is important to evaluate your use case. If you need a broader package ecosystem or multi-cloud capabilities, you may want to compare it with other distributions like Ubuntu. Overall, for AWS-native workloads, Amazon Linux is a very reliable and efficient choice.

    The reason I would not give a full ten out of ten is mainly due to areas like package availability and community support, which can still be improved. I gave this review a rating of eight because overall, it is a very solid and dependable platform.

    reviewer2813271

    Migration to secure, cost-optimized servers has improved monitoring and Kubernetes deployments

    Reviewed on Apr 01, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Amazon Linux  is setting up Linux servers, monitoring servers, Kubernetes  servers, testing, and setting up customer servers. I have used Amazon Linux  for setting up customer monitoring solutions, such as Prometheus, Grafana , and ELK stack. I also used it for setting up a Kubernetes  cluster.

    What is most valuable?

    Amazon Linux offers excellent support, which is better than other Linux distributions. The platform provides stable versions, quality packages, and reliable commands. The stability is a key attribute I appreciate about Amazon Linux.

    What stands out to me is the regular updates, patches, and package support that Amazon Linux provides.

    Amazon Linux has positively impacted my organization significantly. We were using Windows, but after switching to Amazon Linux, it is cost-optimized and very secure.

    I do not measure cost optimization or security improvements in a formal way, but we compare our current Windows server costs with the projected costs if we switched to Amazon Linux. Windows is not very secure to use, whereas Amazon Linux is very secure.

    What needs improvement?

    Amazon Linux can be improved by providing more session time. When connecting using EC2  Connect, the session time is limited. If you are away from the window for more than five or ten minutes, you must restart your entire session. This is an area that could be enhanced.

    Although Amazon Linux is stable, there is room for improvement.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Amazon Linux for more than four years through both my professional experience and learning experience.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    I rate Amazon Linux eight out of ten because it provides everything we need, but it still requires improvements in stability.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Amazon Linux has good scalability.

    How are customer service and support?

    Amazon Linux provides good customer support.

    I rate the customer support for Amazon Linux as an eight out of ten.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I was using Windows servers before transitioning to Amazon Linux.

    How was the initial setup?

    I purchased Amazon Linux through the AWS Marketplace .

    I had a good experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    I had a good experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    We were confident we wanted to use Amazon Linux and did not evaluate other options.

    What other advice do I have?

    Amazon Linux is better than other Linux distributions such as Ubuntu  and other standard Linux options. I recommend using Amazon Linux because it is managed by Amazon and has excellent support and stability. I would rate this solution an eight out of ten.

    Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

    Public Cloud

    If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

    Janindra Janekumaradi

    Automation has improved proactive monitoring and currently supports efficient cloud operations

    Reviewed on Mar 30, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    In my day-to-day work, the main use cases for Amazon Linux  involve a wide variety of tasks with a common theme of optimization for Amazon Cloud. Since recently updating my project, I have been using it for automation to monitor CPU utilizations and hosting backend services including REST APIs and web applications on EC2  instances, running production microservices that integrate with services including Amazon ECS  and AWS Lambda , and as the defaulting operating system for EC2  instances in a SaaS platform. Additionally, I use Amazon Linux  as base images for Dockerfile, node groups for Amazon EKS  Kubernetes  clusters, and powering CI/CD pipelines acting as Jenkins  agents or building servers, using it with infrastructure as code to spin up consistent environments for development, staging, and production.

    The most valuable use case involving my work is the scripting that runs automatically via cron, which is a time-based scheduler on Amazon Linux EC2 instances. The script accomplishes mainly two groups: resource dashboarding and proactive monitoring. In resource dashboarding, I utilize the command line interface, specifically AWS  CLI, to list all running resources including EC2 instances, S3  buckets, Lambda functions, and configurations to implement in the daily dashboard sent to management. Additionally, I check logs and help prevent unexpected storage issues, and these are the activities I have been using in my daily work.

    In my organization, Amazon Linux is deployed using a multi-cloud hybrid approach, supporting all four environments we have mentioned. Public cloud is the most common deployment, where I use Amazon Linux directly on Amazon EC2 to scale from small web servers to massive machine learning clusters. I also deploy it on private premises for added security.

    I primarily use AWS  for my Amazon Linux deployments.

    What is most valuable?

    In my experience, the best features Amazon Linux offers are the resource dashboarding and proactive monitoring systems that I have been utilizing in day-to-day work. Most cases are centered around using a Linux base image for containerizing applications, particularly in production on ECS or by deploying on ECS, and I am deploying my servers in EKS. Currently, I also manage automation scripting and container-based images to find EC2 instances and what servers are running in the background as part of my day-to-day activities using Amazon Linux.

    Since using Amazon Linux, I have noticed a positive impact on my organization as it has become an industry standard for AWS native development. The benefits include much better resource isolation and more accurate monitoring for memory, CPU, and input-output. It makes running Docker  or Kubernetes  yield more predictable container performance with fewer out-of-memory kills that are hard to diagnose. Using Amazon Linux smooths the application running on Docker  and Kubernetes, making it very efficient for deploying applications on cloud platforms including Amazon, Azure , and GCP.

    What needs improvement?

    I see definite areas where Amazon Linux could improve because it is not a one-size-fits-all solution. The single biggest pain point for long-time users is the lack of direct in-place upgrades from Amazon Linux to AL2, as moving to a new version requires launching new instances and manually migrating applications instead of simply running a command similar to some DNF system update. A migration tool that could handle the heavy lifting and configurations would save thousands of engineering hours. I have noticed that since 2023 does not support EPEL directly, AWS has introduced supplementary packages for Amazon Linux, which has been an adjustment.

    I chose eight out of ten because, while there are many positives, some issues arise at the end of the line for Amazon Linux. I have faced some challenges when deploying clusters in AWS, particularly with some recent updates that have changed since version twenty-three, leading me to believe there is room for improvement.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Amazon Linux is stable and more flexible, allowing easy scalability at no cost. It is designed by the same engineers who created the underlying hardware, EC2, as well as the orchestration services, ECS and EKS, effectively removing many traditional bottlenecks associated with scaling large fleets.

    In terms of container scalability, I find it to have deterministic reliability, no broken scale-outs, and it boosts speed and safety in container orchestrations with dynamic scaling. It provides resource control and consistency, contributing to Amazon Linux's reputation for stability.

    How are customer service and support?

    The customer support for Amazon Linux is good, as they quickly guide me through issues whenever I contact them, resolving problems within a short time.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Before switching to Amazon Linux two thousand twenty-three, I typically used Amazon Linux two, Ubuntu , CentOS , and Red Hat. The end of life for those older distributions was a primary reason for switching, as security updates for Amazon Linux are ending in June two thousand twenty-six. Amazon Linux two thousand twenty-three provides modern features such as cgroup v2 and systemd-timers that older versions lack, and while Ubuntu  is good for development, it is not tuned for AWS hardware out of the box. Amazon Linux two thousand twenty-three offers better performance under Graviton  chips and significantly faster operations.

    How was the initial setup?

    My experience with pricing, setup costs, and licensing for Amazon Linux is very straightforward and completely free. I simply select it from the quick start tab when launching an EC2 instance with no additional cost or complex licensing terms to manage. The operating system is free, and I only pay for infrastructure, such as approximately zero cost for a T3 small instance, where the EC2 instances charge about zero point zero two one per hour.

    What was our ROI?

    I see that return on investment is usually measured in efficiency gains rather than in a simple monetary form. Since the operating system itself is free and by using Amazon Linux two thousand twenty-three, many organizations have been qualifying this transaction through a mix of cloud-based operations.

    Since switching to Amazon Linux, I have seen improvements clearly shown in infrastructure metrics. Some wins commonly seen after switching, particularly when moving from general-purpose distributions such as Ubuntu, include approximately twenty to forty percent better price-performance ratio. The outcomes combine massive savings of over one million in under a year by migrating workloads to Graviton-based instances running Amazon Linux, as AL two thousand twenty-three is optimized for ARM at the compiler level, allowing applications to run more effectively and function on smaller instances. I have also noted faster deployments, including a forty to sixty percent reduction in AMI size, significantly faster boot times, and a boost in faster auto-scaling to reduce cold start latencies, with zero downtime regarding patching for critical vulnerabilities.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    I evaluated several options, including Ubuntu and CentOS . As previously mentioned, Ubuntu is great for development but not optimized for AWS, and CentOS's move to a streamed model is less stable for production. Many organizations moved to Amazon Linux for a more flexible long-term support cycle.

    What other advice do I have?

    The biggest advantage I find in using Amazon Linux is the ability to determine updates throughout the version repositories. In older versions, I ran a yum update, but now I can pin different packages based on commands I run. This advantage allows me to test updates in a staging environment and be one hundred percent certain that the exact same packages will be applied in production, eliminating issues where something worked on one machine or worked yesterday. It is also beneficial as it boosts faster boot times, supports Amazon Graviton  ARM processors, and optimizes the operating system for those processors. Moreover, it efficiently uses fewer resources including CPU and RAM, allowing my applications to run on smaller, cheaper instance types with secure by default configurations.

    I recommend Amazon Linux for its free use, stable performance, faster control, and scalability, making it suitable for everyone.

    To clarify, I did not purchase Amazon Linux through the AWS Marketplace  because it is directly provided by AWS at no additional cost, so a purchase or subscription is not required. Unlike many other enterprise Linux distributions, such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux  that require a paid subscription, Amazon Linux is offered by AWS as a free operating system for use on EC2 instances. There is no need to visit the marketplace to buy it.

    Overall, I would rate Amazon Linux at an eight out of ten.

    Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

    Hybrid Cloud

    If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

    Amazon Web Services (AWS)
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