which is the most used as a server is that centos or ubuntu in smal busssiness
hello,
which is the most used in smal bussiness as a server is that centos or ubuntu. if you answere the first question as centos ,from where I can download it easily and which version is the new. or if you answer as ubuntu from where I can download it easily and which version is new. thanks johan |
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I'm not a CentOS guy but you can get ubuntu server from:
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ser...daily/current/ (Precise Pangolin is the latest stable LTS (long term support) version available or you can ge t it from http://releases.ubuntu.com/precise/ or their website http://www.ubuntu.com/server |
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Start at http://www.centos.org/ The link to the download page is pretty obvious on that page. |
I guess it depends on what your using it for. If we use voip then we use centos 5.5 as it's solid and never fails, for everything else we use Ubuntu.
If your after a server to use for a small business, may I suggest Clearos. It's built on centos and quite user friendly to use Glenn |
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I would guess (at least until recently anyway) that Habitual's order is correct, but, because Linux is free, no-one actually knows :)
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The draw back to this cycle is you are missing on a lot of "bleeding edge" tech that you might get from other distros. Keeping in mind that just about any Linux Distro can and will be able to function fully as a server, you just have to consider compatibility and if you want to fight to keep applications/services running without issue every 6mo (Ubuntu) or wait 5yr (RHE) before you have to fight with the system again. Note I keep referring back to RHE. When CentOS first went live it was a 100% fork of RHE, today that is not the case. CentOS has crossed RHE with Fedora to bring more modern "bleeding edge" tech to its platform. It is still close and the kernel and many of the services are still 100% forks of RHE upstream release on their srpm's but do not confuse the old with the new CentOS. CentOS is NO LONGER 100% compatible with RHE. Ubuntu was when it first went live a fork of pure Debian, an other great server class distro with a very good slow release cycle, thus making it loved by many linux enthusiasts as a server platform. it is stable. As of this month Canonical (the money behind Ubuntu) has increased its release cycle to 6mo. In other words it is now not a very good choice for a server as it will never have the time to become stable and every 6mo you will be faced with testing and updating in order to keep up with the security patches and releases of Canonical's current path for update cycle. You can just google for either CentOS or Ubuntu and go directly to their web page for a link to download. |
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Since the CentOS FAQ clearly states: "CentOS exists to provide a free enterprise class computing platform to anyone who wishes to use it. CentOS 5 and 6 are built from publicly available open source SRPMS provided by a prominent North American Enterprise Linux vendor, often referred to as "Upstream" or "The Upstream Vendor (TUV)". CentOS conforms fully with the upstream vendors redistribution policies and aims to be 100% binary compatible. (..)" I have to ask you to please back your statement up with an official CentOS statement that supports what you said. |
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should be around for a few weeks yet :) https://access.redhat.com/support/policy/updates/errata |
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The CentOS project started doing this early 5.x and have continued to fork further and further away from RHE due to the request of users to have more "bleeding edge" tech in their server. this breaks the upstream model created and stabilized by RH. If you were to grab the most current vs of RHE 6.x and CentOS 6.x they would not be srpm for srpm the same. CentOS will have done more then just removed the RH trademarks, names, and icons. |
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https://access.redhat.com/site/articles/3078#RHEL5 In addition in the past CentOS and all other forks of RHE are typically not allowed access to what RH is now calling Production 2 and 3. Still leaving CentOS with a, now, 5.5yr life cycle for support. That is much longer then Ubuntu with its current 6mo release cycle as stated above or even pure Debian with its 18mo release cycle. Does not change my points. All Linux distros can be used successfully as servers. One of the many concerns of the system administrator needs to be longevity of support and backwards compatibility of hardware, services, and 3rd party software that the business will be running. RHE with extended support can give you one of the longest in the business, if you want to pay that much for it. Not really that pricy in the long run. If you are comfortable with a 5yr cycle then CentOS is a great choice. If you want more bleeding edge tech and are not worried about backwards compatibility over the life of the business because you are only using say e-mail and web services then any other Distro will work just as well including Ubuntu or raw Debian, Slackware, Gentoo, etc... |
lleb I am not sure that's true..
If that were the case there would never be later releases of CentOS which match RHEL i.e one would not see CentOS 4.9 http://vault.centos.org/4.9/isos/ as that would of been in the later stages of RHEL release cycle(s). For RHEL 5.x if Redhat release another update in Q4 2019 or Q1 2020 the world should still see a CentOS release... not saying that Redhat will release many RHEL releases in the later parts of the release cycle but for things like security updates these will still roll down to CentOS given the time it takes CentOS to do changes. That's one of the reasons why CentOS 6 was delayed in the first place as CentOS wanted to concentrate on deployed releases first. As for the repository question if you install just CentOS without the extra repository or adding any other repo's then you won't get Fedora packages (as far as I know).... There will always be slight differences as CentOS does not know how RHEL are compiling the source packages but as far as possible CentOS should be as close as possible to the upstream. I would add that if people do require anything that is bleeding edge or solid for CentOS they can compile the packages themselves and I would hope that a lot of SMB to Enterprise companies are doing things this way to keep things the way they require. My personal choice is not to use Ubuntu for anything other than desktops or testing labs (I know a lot of development people like to use the buntu's due to the simplicity to get latest packages) due to the constant churn... its just Chaos... Hdaz |
hyperdaz, direct from CentOS FAQ
http://wiki.centos.org/FAQ/General#h...91e1dde5b75e6d Quote:
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