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MAAS installation: bare metal provisioning is easier than ever | Canonical Januscape vulnerability CVE-2026-53359 mitigations available | Canonical Managing Ubuntu on bare metal at scale | Canonical Ubuntu Server: a platform made for enterprise scale | Canonical Building an open source chain of trust: new research uncovers key blockers and ways forward | Canonical Beyond safety and security: Why automotive open source demands dependability  | Canonical DirtyClone Linux kernel local privilege escalation vulnerability fixes available | Canonical pedit COW kernel local privilege escalation vulnerability mitigations | Canonical Canonical becomes Gold Sponsor of Trifecta Tech Foundation | Canonical Challenges designers face in open source (and how to fix them) | Canonical Hunting a 16-year-old SQLite bug with TLA+: is dqlite affected? | Canonical Anbox Cloud on C4A metal: Android, at scale, without friction | Canonical Canonical announces live kernel patching for Arm64 | Canonical How to use RISC-V custom instructions with Ubuntu | Canonical Ubuntu Summit 26.04: connected by open source | Canonical So you need to add microcontrollers to your fleet: now what? | Canonical Virtualized Android comes to Anbox Cloud | Canonical Template: Streamlining open source design contributions | Canonical Beyond Mythos: responding to a new threat landscape | Canonical A look into Ubuntu Core 26: Building a local AI inference appliance in a virtual machine | Canonical This year we celebrate a decade of Ubuntu Server support on the s390x architecture: marking a long-standing collaboration between Canonical and IBM that began at LinuxCon 2015. The first release happened on April 21, 2016, bringing Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus) to IBM Z and IBM LinuxONE platforms.  A first for Ubuntu on IBM That […] AI at the edge: simplifying infrastructure with Cisco and Canonical | Canonical The next era of telco clouds: get open infrastructure choice with Sylva and Canonical Kubernetes | Canonical What is RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE)? | Canonical Beyond tokens per watt – using Ubuntu 26.04 LTS for AI | Canonical A look into Ubuntu Core 26: Deploying AI models on Renesas RZ/V series for production | Canonical RISC-V profiles – why is RVA23 significant? | Canonical AI with AMD ROCm on Ubuntu: your questions answered | Canonical When distributed workloads stall because nodes cannot exchange small messages quickly and consistently, the network is the limiting factor. How do you solve that problem? InfiniBand offers one solution. InfiniBand is an interconnect, meaning the end-to-end communication system that links compute, storage, and accelerator nodes. It is impl […] Microsoft has announced the preview of Azure Cobalt 200, its second-generation custom Arm silicon. Learn how Ubuntu and Ubuntu Pro support these new VMs from day one, offering seamless deployment, long-term security maintenance, and Kernel Livepatch without requiring engineering or platform changes […] How Canonical Support solves hard Linux performance bugs  – even in 12-year old code | Canonical Securing AI agent workflows on Ubuntu with the new NVIDIA OpenShell snap | Canonical Canonical announces optimized Ubuntu images for TPU virtual machines by Google Cloud | Canonical VMware hypervisor deployment using MAAS | Canonical Migrating from Apache Spark 3 to Spark 4 | Canonical Introducing Workshop: launch sandboxed development environments on Ubuntu with a single command | Canonical Run agentic workloads on Arm and Ubuntu | Canonical Decoding design: How design and engineering thrive together in open source | Canonical Developing web apps with local LLM inference | Canonical A local privilege escalation (LPE) security vulnerability in the Linux kernel, codename “PinTheft,” was publicly disclosed on May 19, 2026. The vulnerability was fixed in the mainline Linux kernel tree. A proof-of-concept exploit was published along with public disclosure. This has been assigned the CVE ID CVE-2026-43494; other discoverin […] Canonical has announced the general availability of Managed Kubeflow on the Microsoft Azure Marketplace. This fully managed MLOps platform allows enterprise AI teams to deploy a production-ready environment in under an hour, eliminating infrastructure maintenance. […] A look into Ubuntu Core 26: Cloud-powered edge computing with AWS IoT Greengrass and Azure IoT Edge | Canonical CVE-2026-46333 (ssh-keysign-pwn) Linux kernel vulnerability mitigations | Canonical
Validating real-world skills through Canonical Academy | Canonical
Ishani Ghoshal · 2026-06-17 · via Blog

In an increasingly volatile job market, standing out from the competition is vital. For many in the open source community, formal recognition for self-taught skills is a significant challenge. These skills are often built through hands-on hobbies, side projects, and deep community contributions. While the market is flooded with certificates and certifications, most fail to reliably measure practical execution, or fall behind the rapid pace of industry changes. Others demand a time commitment that busy professionals simply cannot afford.

Self-paced or instructor-led courses offer certificates of participation that acknowledge time spent rather than competence demonstrated. Meanwhile, traditional professional certifications often rely on dense, theoretical, multiple-choice formats. These are expensive, time-consuming, and they leave both the candidate and the employer unsure if real-world capability was actually proven. Even respected hands-on exams can suffer from diminishing industry relevance if their subject matter fails to update alongside modern, remote-first workflows.

A new standard for professional qualifications

As the company behind Ubuntu, Canonical has always focused on making complex systems accessible to everyone. When we looked at the engineering certification landscape, we saw an opportunity to design a highly credible, data-driven framework. This framework is built specifically for the needs of modern enterprises and professionals. The result is Canonical Academy.

We moved away from isolated tests to introduce structured, job-based Qualifications. Each qualification maps directly to a professional role. It is achieved by passing a series of modular, real-world exams. This design ensures deep coverage of both foundational industry standards and specific, modern operational methodologies.

To ensure our curriculum reflects absolute professional relevance, our process begins with an extensive Job Task Analysis (JTA). This analysis surveys industry experts to map exactly what employers expect from technical professionals. We established our initial focus on the System Administrator (SysAdmin) track. These fundamental operational skills form the bedrock for roles spanning from DevOps engineers to data scientists.

Built with rigor, monitored for quality

To turn these functional performance expectations into reality, we assemble diverse panels of subject matter experts (SMEs). These experts come from Canonical support, operations, core engineering, and the open source community. Together, we build realistic, multi-node lab environments and write intelligent grading scripts. Rather than forcing a single rigid solution, our grading architecture evaluates the end state of a system. This enables test-takers to showcase their personal problem-solving style and task execution efficiency.

What truly differentiates Canonical Academy is our commitment to continuous structural quality:

  • LTS alignment: Exams are continuously updated and versioned alongside every Ubuntu Long Term Supported (LTS) release. This ensures your credentials remain strictly aligned with enterprise production environments.
  • Psychometric rigor: Every single exam item is monitored using advanced instructional design metrics. This maintains consistent difficulty and eliminates measurement bias across different question variations.
  • Accessible and secure delivery: Delivered entirely through a standard web browser, our platform combines hands-on terminal realism with secure remote proctoring. No need to clear half a day to travel to a physical testing center.

The path forward: modular learning and continuous growth

By breaking our qualifications down into modular exams, professionals can validate their skills at their own pace and budget.

Our rollout roadmap is designed to systematically validate skills across the full spectrum of systems administration:

Exam TrackFocus AreasStatus
Using Linux TerminalNavigating filesystems, file management, basic security, and command-line mechanics.Available now
Using Ubuntu DesktopPackage management, application essentials, and desktop administration.Available now
Using Ubuntu ServerJob control, performance tuning, and essential network services.General Availability coming soon
Using DevOps PrinciplesCloud-init, system automation, and infrastructure deployment pipelines.Beta coming soon

Ultimately, a qualification from Canonical Academy is more than just a badge to display on a resume. It is verifiable proof of competency engineered by the publishers of Ubuntu. Whether you are an individual aiming to prove self-taught expertise, an educator expanding student employability, or an enterprise leader looking to benchmark your engineering team’s capabilities, Canonical Academy provides the pathway to validated open source skills.

Join us on the journey, explore our tracks, and take your next exam at canonical.com/academy.

Related posts


Introducing Canonical Academy

Ubuntu Ubuntu tech blog

Validate your skills and advance your career with recognized qualifications from the publishers of Ubuntu. Canonical today announced the launch of Canonical Academy, a new platform that enables individuals and enterprises to validate their open source skills with qualifications designed and maintained by the engineers behind Ubuntu. ...