AI-native layer
Agent-ready automation, local model workflows, policy controls, and system-aware tooling.
A secure Fedora-like Linux platform built for the next generation of automation, agents, containers, developer workstations, servers, and edge infrastructure.
FabricOS starts with proven Linux distribution structure and adds the layer that modern teams actually need: secure automation, infrastructure awareness, and AI-ready workflows.
Agent-ready automation, local model workflows, policy controls, and system-aware tooling.
RPM packages, DNF, Kickstart, SELinux, systemd, Podman, and enterprise Linux familiarity.
Enforcing SELinux, firewalld, signed packages, least-privilege services, and auditable actions.
Designed to weave together workstations, servers, edge nodes, containers, and AI services.
Modern tooling for Python, containers, Git, automation, APIs, and Linux-native workflows.
Clear editions, release channels, documentation, lifecycle, and support structure.
FabricOS should win because it is useful, disciplined, and trustworthy. The brand can look futuristic, but the product has to behave like serious infrastructure.
Start focused. Ship useful profiles first. FabricOS should launch where it makes sense: desktop builders, servers, and lightweight edge deployments.
A premium AI-native desktop for builders, developers, and operators.
A hardened Linux foundation for automation, services, and AI infrastructure.
A lightweight profile for secure edge compute, kiosks, gateways, and field systems.
FabricOS should not reinvent Linux just to look different. The smart path is a Fedora-like foundation with a sharper product layer: release RPMs, config packages, Kickstart profiles, AI services, signed repositories, and clean lifecycle policy.
$ cat /etc/os-release
NAME="FabricOS"
ID=fabricos
ID_LIKE="fedora rhel"
PRETTY_NAME="FabricOS 1"
$ sudo dnf groupinstall fabricos-ai
Installed:
fabricos-ai-agent
fabricos-context-service
fabricos-policy-engine
$ fabricos-ai-agent status
mode: observe
policy: approval-required
selinux: enforcing
firewall: active
The right path is not hype. It is documentation, packages, repositories, installer profiles, a test ISO, validation, and then real users.
Join the FabricOS early access list for pilot builds, contributor updates, technical previews, and launch announcements. This is the path from concept to real ISO.