[ale] Linux Server distros
Raylynn Knight
audilover at speedfactory.net
Sat Jul 22 21:25:35 EDT 2006
On Sat, 2006-07-22 at 20:49 -0400, Jim Popovitch wrote:
> Richard Kolkovich wrote:
> > If you do not care about "official" support, I would recommend Gentoo.
> > I run it on my servers with no problems as long as you read before
> > updating packages (but that is the case with most anything...updates can
> > break things ;)).
>
> ;-) I've seen those sort of issues even with "professional" distros.
>
>
> Here's what I doing:
>
> I am setting up a few vmware server servers. On the base install I
> don't need anything that vmware server doesn't need. I don't
> particularly need LVM, but when using a RedHat distro (or derivative)
> LVM (and several other totally unnecessary things) must exist for the
> base install to exist. <- F**KING CRAZY! I don't need nfs, or nfs libs,
> hotplug (it's freaking server!), USB (who uses USB mice/drives/etc on a
> server?), DHCP (argh!). It just amazes me that in this day and age of
> using Linux on so many _servers_, it requires that the operator have a
> team of engineers to re-engineer a "professional" distribution in order
> to use it in their environment. Part of the problem is that every
> distro tries to be everything to everybody. Redhat Enterprise Linux,
> IMHO, is not a server distro, it's a workstation distro (but alas not a
> modern-day laptop distro). Debian (and it's derivatives) comes closest
> to being a secure and small install... BUT vmware doesn't provide out of
> the box modules for Debian, therefore I have to install _development_
> tools on a server just to get it to do what I need it to do.
>
> I hate Windows, BUT none of the above applies to using Windows... except
> that if I use Windows as a VMWare host I won't be able to sleep at
> night. ;-)
>
> I think there is a serious market for a Linux Server distro that is
> secure, stable, small, and doesn't have any dependencies on unnecessary
> crap.
>
> -Jim P.
>
Have you tried or looked at Trustix Secure Linux yet?
http://www.trustix.org/
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