Red Hat, Inc., the world’s leading provider of open source solutions, announced a landmark engineering initiative with Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. to build its next-generation software-defined vehicle (SDV) platform. This collaboration would involve Red Hat's In-Vehicle Operating System to provide a standardised, scalable Linux foundation for Nissan's Scalable Open Software Platform (SWPF), accelerating Nissan's transition toward flexible, software-defined mobility architectures.
The automotive industry is shifting away from hardware-locked legacy systems towards a modern, cloud-native architecture. As Nissan builds its SW PF, it requires an operating system that can support the technology upgrades of a vehicle for its entire lifespan. Given the multi-decade lifecycle of automotive platforms, Nissan identified Red Hat as a partner capable of sustaining an automotive software foundation over an extended period of time. As the industry expert in building and maintaining mission-critical Linux platforms, Red Hat provides the deep technical depth required to power vehicles that will remain on the road for decades with a modern operating system.
Nissan is leveraging Red Hat’s open source leadership to provide a scalable foundation for high-performance computing. By anchoring its platform on an open source foundation, Nissan gains immediate access to a global ecosystem of innovation. By decoupling application development from the underlying hardware, Nissan can update vehicle features with the agility of a smartphone while maintaining the rigorous safety and security standards required for the road. Building on the proven reliability and security posture of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat In-Vehicle Operating System provides a foundation where AI is a core component of the vehicle's DNA. This moves Nissan beyond traditional silos toward an AI-native architecture, where AI-driven workflows can streamline validation cycles and surge developer productivity to exceed shifting customer expectations.
This initiative redefines the relationship between software leader and OEM through an integrated development model. By embedding Red Hat’s engineering talent directly into Nissan’s development pipeline, the two companies are co-creating a unified platform that removes the friction of traditional systems integration. This approach empowers Nissan to exert greater control over its software stack, providing the agility to pivot instantly and scale innovation across its global fleet.


