Prepared by: Security & Infrastructure Team Approved for distribution: CISO End of Report
Report ID: TCH-LNX-EOL-2026-04 Date: April 16, 2026 Subject: Security, maintenance, and operational risks associated with 3.x Linux kernels on 64-bit architectures (excluding mainstream distributions like RHEL/CentOS 7). 1. Executive Summary All production-ready Linux kernels in the 3.x series (3.0 through 3.19) have reached End of Life (EOL) status. While Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 (kernel 3.10) received extended lifecycle support, “other” 3.x 64-bit distributions—such as older versions of Arch Linux, Debian, openSUSE, Slackware, and custom-built embedded systems—no longer receive security patches, bug fixes, or hardware enablement. Running these kernels on 64-bit systems exposes organizations to unpatched vulnerabilities, compliance violations, and stability risks. 2. Background The Linux kernel 3.x series was introduced in 2011 and succeeded by the 4.x series in 2015. Key milestones: other 3.x linux -64-bit- end of life
Other 3.x Linux -64-bit- End Of Life -
Other 3.x Linux -64-bit- End Of Life -
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Released December 24, 2025
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Version Information
Version
1.3.6
File Size
95.9 KB
Released
12/24/2025
Latest Version
v1.3.6 (this version)
Changelog
No changelog available for this version.
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Prepared by: Security & Infrastructure Team Approved for distribution: CISO End of Report
Report ID: TCH-LNX-EOL-2026-04 Date: April 16, 2026 Subject: Security, maintenance, and operational risks associated with 3.x Linux kernels on 64-bit architectures (excluding mainstream distributions like RHEL/CentOS 7). 1. Executive Summary All production-ready Linux kernels in the 3.x series (3.0 through 3.19) have reached End of Life (EOL) status. While Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 (kernel 3.10) received extended lifecycle support, “other” 3.x 64-bit distributions—such as older versions of Arch Linux, Debian, openSUSE, Slackware, and custom-built embedded systems—no longer receive security patches, bug fixes, or hardware enablement. Running these kernels on 64-bit systems exposes organizations to unpatched vulnerabilities, compliance violations, and stability risks. 2. Background The Linux kernel 3.x series was introduced in 2011 and succeeded by the 4.x series in 2015. Key milestones: