@StryderNotavi @mjg59 @james That's how Redhat has always worked, they pick a kernel version and stick with it for the entire life cycle of that release, backporting features and bugfixes as needed. It isn't like a vanilla 5.14 kernel at all. EL6 was officially 100% EOL just last July, and that was 2.6.32.
@astraleureka @mjg59 @james That makes sense, although it does get me that RHEL 9.0 was released May 2022 with a Kernel that had already been EOL for six months.
I can get why you'd avoid upgrading subsequent releases to keep things stable for enterprise customers, but surely you'd want to start off up to date?