[olug] SuSE or RHEL or Centos or Fedora or Xandros

Terry td3201 at gmail.com
Thu Sep 9 15:11:40 UTC 2004


Well, you see, I am looking out for your health.  Aside from doughnut
day at work, Tomb Raider, Slashdot polls, and the occasional jog to
the vending machine for another mountain dew,  your heart rates do not
get above 100.  Just contributing to a heart-healthy discussion.

:)


On Thu, 9 Sep 2004 09:55:26 -0500, vincent.raffensberger at dtn.com
<vincent.raffensberger at dtn.com> wrote:
> Come on, you don't know troll bait whan you see it?  Lighten up.  Terry
> started it anyway.  :)
> 
> BTW, I have a ton of hard working systems here.  Their only reboot was
> upgrading from 2.2 to 2.4 kernels.
> They're all Redhat, but it's still a Linux kernel that's keeping them
> up...
> 
> $ uptime; cat /proc/uptime; uname -rv
>  10:37am  up 592 days, 17:20,  1 user,  load average: 1.82, 2.19, 2.06
> 51211208.08 788273.75
> 2.4.18-19.8.0smp #1 SMP Thu Dec 12 04:36:25 EST 2002
> 
> 
> Christopher Cashell <topher at zyp.org> 
> Sent by: olug-bounces at olug.org
> 09/09/2004 09:15 AM
> Please respond to
> Omaha Linux User Group <olug at olug.org>
> 
> To
> olug at olug.org
> cc
> 
> Subject
> Re: [olug] SuSE or RHEL or Centos or Fedora or Xandros
> 
> 
> 
> 
> At Thu, 09 Sep 04, Unidentified Flying Banana
> Vincent.Raffensberger at dtn.com, said:
> > Other than Xandros, it was a list of secure, production level systems.
> 
> I challenge anyone who's actually had real experience with Debian to try
> to tell me it isn't a "secure, production level system".  And installing
> it for a few hours doesn't count as real experience.
> 
> Personally, I can't think of any other distribution that even comes
> close for server use.  And please, don't anyone tell me that Debian
> isn't supported[1], or that it isn't used[2] much.
> 
> Production Debian server:
> 
> nexus:~$ uptime
>  08:59:55 up 423 days,  6:45,  16 users,  load average: 0.70, 0.59, 0.58
> 
> This machine was initially installed in 1998.  It has been upgraded in
> place multiple times since then (Debian upgrades don't require reboots).
> The only time it ever gets rebooted is for kernel upgrades.
> 
> I'd love to see you try that with most other distributions. ;-)
> 
> And when you consider the new installer program that is currently being
> tested for the next Debian release (expected within the next month or
> so), I expect Debian use to grow even faster.
> 
>  [1] http://www.hp.com/hps/linux/lx_debian.html
>  [2]
> http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2004/01/28/debian_fastest_growing_linux_distribution.html
> 
> --
> | Christopher
> +------------------------------------------------+
> | Here I stand.  I can do no other.              |
> +------------------------------------------------+
> 
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