I have been using Debian for a while now as a work station for a little bit now and have been pleased with it. I was originally quite surprised at the performance and reliability that I experienced. VERY soon I will have to install a server here at work for FTP and WWW services. I have been on the fence as to which way to go. Several people have been trying to convince me to go with FreeBSD or OpenBSD for these servers. One of these folks is my ISP who is running on Sun Spark systems with SunOS. One message that I got said that this person was running a FTP server with average loads of 100 Megs a day 150 Megs peek and had no problems. The machine never locked up or had to be reset which was not the case previously with Linux (Slackware I believe).
The documentation that I have found on Linux has been Far superior to that of FreeBSD, at least for my applications. This has so far lead me to gravitate twards Debian. The support that I have received via this list has also been quite good to the most part. It would not be too far a jump tward BSD at this point though. I would like to hear from folks that are running medium to high volume servers related to their experiences. My boss was talking to folks at Netcom and was convinced by them, to some extent, that BSD was far superior to any Linux. That BSD was based on being a network oriented system and that Linux was designed as a general purpose system that was not really suited to being an effective and stable server. Stability is certainly a large concern of mine since I really don't want to have to baby sit the thing much once it is set up. As long as other folks don't get in and screw with it, I don't see that that is much to ask. Part of the key to this may be in selecting proper hardware to enable us to utilize the most stable drivers etc. This is one of the things that I often see people neglect in the concept of a high reliability system. It is unbelevable the sacrifice in reliability I see in the name of minimal performance increases that is after unnecessary. -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .