[ale] Suse vs. Ubuntu. Is is worth the time to switch to ubuntu?
Brian Pitts
brian at polibyte.com
Tue Jul 31 12:39:26 EDT 2007
James Sumners wrote:
> 2) Ubuntu is about as userfriendly as SuSE. A lot of things are
> easier, administration wise, in SuSE due to Yast2. But Ubuntu is okay.
Yast2 does give SuSE an edge, but this may change once Ubuntu integrates
eBox. I wasn't aware of eBox until recently; it seems to be a cleaner
alternative to webmin. Here's what it currently supports:
* Objects
Creating network objects allows a high level management of IP
address that eases the administration of the firewall and other tools.
* Network Configuration
Network interfaces in the machine are configurable through the
eBox administration interface. It?s possible to create virtual
interfaces, 802.1q-enabled trunk interfaces and also set up the default
gateway, static routes and dns servers
* Firewall
It has a secure default configuration and lets the administrator
filter packets, do NAT and manage the access to all services provided by
other eBox modules.
* Software
The administration interface allows the update components of both
eBox and the operating system.
* Transparent Proxy and Content Filter
It provides a caching HTTP proxy that speeds up web browsing and
lets the administrator choose what contents can be accessed by each user
by filtering pages based on content and black lists. It allows custom
file extension and MIME filter as well. This module uses: Squid DansGuardian
* Users and Groups
An LDAP servers stores users and group accounts, which are shared
by all the modules that need them. This module uses: Open Ldap
* Windows PDC/File Sharing
eBox provides your network with a Primary Domain Controller,
allowing your Windows machines to authenticate against it. Your users
will be able to use roaming profiles, share directories and so on. If
you do not want a full-fledged PDC you can run ebox just as a file
server in a Windows network. This module uses: Samba
* Windows Printers Server
It makes it possible to share printers over the network for
different users and groups of users. This module uses: Samba CUPS
* Mail
eBox will store your mailboxes, filtering non-desired mail and
viruses, or simply will act as a mail relay with the mail filter at your
choice. This module uses: Postfix Spamassassin ClamAV
* Jabber Server
eBox provides Instant Messaging system for your corporate
environment, allowing the connection with the world-wide jabber IM
network. Integration with eBox platform let you adjust your needs of
Jabber users and administrators. This module uses: Jabber
* DHCP Server
A DHCP server is included. Its configuration interface lets the
administrator manage IP address ranges, MAC address based IP
assignments. This module uses: ISC DHCP Server
* DNS Cache
The DNS cache included accelerates name resolution. This module
uses: Bind
* Date and Time Server
eBox can act as an NTP server and synchronize its time and date
with external NTP servers. This module uses: NTP
* 802.1q VLANs
eBox supports the 802.1q protocol supported by most switches,
allowing to have network interfaces on several VLANs through one
physical network interface.
* Backup
eBox allows you to make configuration backups and restores of all
services supported in eBox. Furthermore, full backup gives you the
chance to store all logs, shared data among other things.
Ubuntu is also adding AppArmor support to the next release. I wouldn't
rule out Ubuntu for a fast-moving server deployment.
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/ebox
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/apparmor-gutsy
-Brian
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