On Jan 13, 2013, at 10:27 AM, Shaun Thomas <stho...@optionshouse.com> wrote:

> Hey guys,
> 
> I'm not sure the last time I saw this discussion, but I was somewhat curious: 
> what would be your ideal Linux distribution for a nice solid PostgreSQL 
> installation? We've kinda bounced back and forth between RHEL, CentOS, and 
> Ubuntu LTS, so I was wondering what everyone else thought.


Either would be fine. RHEL is a bit more Enterprisey - which is either good or 
bad, depending on your use case. They're more conservative with updates than 
Ubuntu - which is good for service stability, but can be painful when you're 
stuck between using ancient versions of some app or stepping into the minefield 
of third party repos. (CentOS is pretty much just RHEL without support and 
without some of the management tools).

Ubuntu LTS is solid, and has good support for running multiple Postgresql 
clusters simultaneously, which is very handy if you're supporting multiple apps 
against the same database server, and they require different releases. I've 
been told that they occasionally make incompatible changes across minor 
releases, which is Bad, but it's never happened anywhere I've noticed - I've no 
idea if it's an actual issue or "Well, back in the 2004 release, they…" 
folklore.

I run both in production, both on VMs and real metal. I tend to use Ubuntu LTS 
for new installations just because I'm marginally more comfortable in the 
Ubuntu CLI environment, but there's really not much to choose between them.

Cheers,
  Steve



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