Hi,

Thank you all for your suggestions, Especially, Cal and Sam.
I'd go with Debian Squeeze. That seems to be the best choice for now.

To be clear about the question, I'm using linux operating systems for the
past 7 years. The errors are not specific nor recurring, nor even device
specific.  Just gets stuck in between. I've never checked the log, as you
said, that might have helped. Same OS on a server with a specific app
running, might run stable for years. The  time gap would be 2-3 months
between screen freezes. And nothing in specific would be there to note. I
just want an OS which is a Juggernaut, that's it.

Compare this to a rolling release or distro with releases every 6-12
months where kernel is changing and OS has bleeding edge versions and
you will have a larger gaumet of issues. Concequently you will have to
know more and be better at problem solving. Will you have a rollback
plan when the dist-upgrade finishes and something breaks in a new
exciting way?



I'd seriously consider a rollback plan if it breaks.
So Thanks again,

Anoop

atm
___
Life is short, Live it hard.




On 1 August 2011 18:55, Sam Walters <mr.sam...@gmail.com> wrote:

> If a modern linux OS is crashing then it will likely /var/log whats
> going wrong. The phrasing of this issue seems to indicate lack of
> experience or familiarity with the linux os or unix model of os.
> Thats no problem if you are keen to learn the principles of the OS you
> will get better at using the OS and identifying issues.
>
> Now to answer your question specifically:
> debian stable branch is a good idea. I assume you will stick to
> something and keep it so go for a distro with long term support/longer
> release cycle.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian#Stable_ports
>
> Good documentation, forums, community support.
>
> I would avoid rapid release cycle stuff unless you know what you're
> doing. Eg: i use apto-sid which is an unstable branch of debian for
> some servers but i know what im getting myself into.
>
> I say debian because the package management, runs nearly all the
> dependencies that django and a lot of its addons require. Also once
> you have built a server stack... eg: nginx+fcgi+django+memcached+mysql
> or any web server stack of your choice on a stable distro you will
> reduce the pool of possible issues with any of these aformentioned
> components to a minimum and the problems can be googled with ease. And
> keep doing this for ~5 years until they stop the LTS and it stops
> getting security patches. eg: debian etch 2010
>
> Compare this to a rolling release or distro with releases every 6-12
> months where kernel is changing and OS has bleeding edge versions and
> you will have a larger gaumet of issues. Concequently you will have to
> know more and be better at problem solving. Will you have a rollback
> plan when the dist-upgrade finishes and something breaks in a new
> exciting way?
>
> Obviously you can develop on any flavour of linux shouldnt matter.
> Managing a production server is different ballgame.
>
>
> good luck and i hope this advice helps
>
>
>
> On Mon, Aug 1, 2011 at 6:27 PM, Anoop Thomas Mathew <atm...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Hi All,
> > Firstly, I am not here for a distro war.
> > I was using ubuntu 9.10, and then switched to fedora 14 and then to
> fedora
> > 15.
> > IMHO, It seems that they all were quite unstable. (Many times it hung up
> on
> > my Dell and HP machines - may be driver issues, still I don't want that
> > too.)
> > I would really like some recommendation for a linux distro which is much
> > stable, but still can support all relevant packages.
> > Top recommendations I found around was Debian and OpenSuse.
> > Please revert with your suggestions.
> > Thanks,
> > Anoop Thomas Mathew
> > atm
> > ___
> > Life is short, Live it hard.
> >
> >
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