I pretty much run a very heavily modified install of Fedora Core 2. I use Linux for "dynamic" situations, and BSD for "static" situations. By "dynamic" I mean actualyl doing stuff - web hosting, mail hosting, etc etc. By "static" I mean doing only one task, like ONLY hosting static pages, etc etc.
if the server is a brand name purchased from the likes of Dell, you are going to have either Redhat ES or Suse ES preinstalled on there. If you go with a white box from some random company, you will probably have redhat 9 or fedora core.
Very few companies are going to distribute boxes with debian or gentoo on there....that is for 'bleeding' edge distros. That would be a maintenance nightmare for them.
A lot of people go with FedoraCore, since it's the new produciton tree of RedHat, but I would stay well away from it, since it's far too unstable for a server. As a production tree it's updated far too often for a server environment - for a desktop it's great but for a server, you want a solid, well tested and stable OS.
FreeBSD 4.x is solid as a rock, but 5.x can also pull it's weight
For coding work - hit me up on andy // borkedcoder // com
(consider figuring out the email as test #1)
All models are wrong, but some are useful.George E.P. Box. p202
A lot of people go with FedoraCore, since it's the new produciton tree of RedHat, but I would stay well away from it, since it's far too unstable for a server. As a production tree it's updated far too often for a server environment - for a desktop it's great but for a server, you want a solid, well tested and stable OS.
FreeBSD 4.x is solid as a rock, but 5.x can also pull it's weight
I would avoid Fedora Core X since it is the overly bloated "consumer" linux and it has a piss poor life cycle, they're already on 4 releases in a little over a year and fc1 is already a legacy product...
If you want an alternative to redhat enterprise then got with CentOS it's a free recompile and you can get centos 3.4 "server" which is bloat free in comparison to the rest.
Been havng a mother of a time getting ISO images of Redhat 9 that'll install, so was wondering what else was popular.
I have a "boxed" set of Redhat 7.3, which installs a-ok, but I have a feeling they may have moved things around directory-wise compared to vers. 9.
Don't wanna be that far behind the version curve......
Need to set up a small server to work on here at home, something that I can't screw up .... LOL
I ran into a package from EngardeLinux.com that was sleek and secure (they claim) simple to the core..... but the built in security caused some issues whenever I tried to install some common stuff into directories .....
Mandrake installed OK from the ISO's I downloaded.....
Need to set up a small server to work on here at home, something that I can't screw up .... LOL
If the above is what you intend I would get Suse 9.2. It is a more consumer oriented distro. It works well with laptops (i.e. things such as your battery meter work without a kernel recompile), and a lot of devices are supported out of the box. The YAST tool is especially useful for someone that just wants things to work with a minimum of fuss.
Comment