Microsoft has just announced the general availability of Microsoft Defender ATP for Linux a few months after the release previews.
“The addition of Linux to Microsoft Defender ATP's natively supported platforms marks an important moment for all of our customers. It makes Microsoft Defender Security Center a truly unified application to monitor and manage all desktop and server platforms shared in corporate environments (Windows, Windows Server, macOS and Linux) ”, he says Microsoft in a post today.
Microsoft Defender ATP for Linux supports a total of six different ones distributions servers, including the following:
- RHEL 7.2+
- CentOS Linux 7.2+
- Ubuntu 16 LTS or higher LTS version
- SLES 12+
- Debian 9 +
- OracleLinux 7.2
Microsoft, which is increasingly focusing on the Linux ecosystem, should not necessarily be a surprise, as the company has recently been making huge efforts to expand into this platform.
The Windows Subsystem for Linux, which is currently released as version 2 in Windows 10, is the living proof, as it allows users to run Linux distributions from within Windows. The new version was released with the May 2020 Update (or version 2004) and brings a Linux kernel modified by Microsoft itself.
The new antivirus is supposed to provide command line support to the client, but what administrators need to know is that installing Microsoft Defender ATP for Linux requires a Microsoft Defender ATP for Servers license.
The company says it is planning even more improvements for Linux, and we will have more announcements soon.
"We are just at the beginning of our journey on Linux and we do not stop here! We are committed to continuously expand our capabilities in Linux and we will provide you with more improvements in the coming months ", the company states.