en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SUSE_Linux_Enterprise#SUSE_Linux_Enterprise_Server
2 corrections found
Hewlett Packard Enterprise's Frontier, world's first and fastest exascale supercomputer runs on SUSE's SLES 15 (HPE Cray OS).
Frontier was the first exascale supercomputer, but it is no longer the world's fastest. Official TOP500 rankings now place El Capitan at No. 1 and Frontier at No. 2.
Full reasoning
This sentence is outdated in its claim that Frontier is the world's fastest exascale supercomputer.
Official TOP500 results for the 65th TOP500 list (November 2025) say El Capitan "retains the No. 1 position" and that Frontier is the No. 2 system on the TOP500. That directly contradicts calling Frontier the world's fastest today.
At the same time, Frontier was the first exascale machine: TOP500's June 2022 highlights say Frontier was "the first true exascale machine". So the problem is not the "first exascale" part; it's the present-tense claim that Frontier is still the fastest.
2 sources
- El Capitan Retains Top Spot in 65th TOP500 List as Exascale Era Expands | TOP500
The 65th edition of the TOP500 showed that the El Capitan system retains the No. 1 position... The Frontier system at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee, is the No. 2 system on the TOP500.
- Highlights - June 2022 | TOP500
The 59th edition of the TOP500 revealed the Frontier system to be the first true exascale machine with an HPL score of 1.102 Exaflop/s.
SUSE Package Hub is unofficial
SUSE's own Package Hub site describes Package Hub as an official extension to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, not an unofficial repository.
Full reasoning
This is directly contradicted by SUSE's own Package Hub documentation.
The official About SUSE Package Hub page says "SUSE Package Hub is an official 'extension' to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server". So while Package Hub packages are community-maintained and not officially supported as Package Hub packages, the repository itself is not "unofficial" in the way this sentence says.
In other words: the lack of commercial support for individual Package Hub packages is real, but calling SUSE Package Hub itself "unofficial" is incorrect.
2 sources
- SUSE Package Hub - About SUSE Package Hub
SUSE Package Hub is an official "extension" to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server that is based on the packages built in the openSUSE:Backports project.
- SUSE Package Hub - SUSE Package Hub
SUSE Approved: While the packages from the SUSE Package Hub are not officially supported by SUSE, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server remains supported and supportable when using these packages.