On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 13:43 -0500, Allan West wrote:
> On 12/16/10 1:15 PM, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> > On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 12:35 -0500, Brian Mathis wrote:
> >> Yes, please do yourself, the next sysadmin, and the whole IT industry
> >> a favor and use a server-centric distro.  
> > +1
> > Use CentOS
> >> Fedora and Ubuntu are nice
> >> for the desktop, but running a server is not just a simple matter of
> >> getting the most recent packages.
> > Fedora is a [self-proclaimed] developer-oriented distribution; thus not
> > suitable for a production environment [that doesn't make it bad, it just
> > fills a specific niche, just like CentOS].
> Tangentially, how do you explain to developers that they have to pry
> themselves off the bleeding edge tools in "developer-oriented" distros
> when it comes time for a production instance? 

You don't, this is an error of approach.  You don't "explain to", you
"inform that".

> I'm getting tired of,
> "version x+2 has been out for months," as a reason for package requests
> far beyond the RHEL, or even CentOS, current version.

I don't have much a problem with this; production systems rarely require
bleeding edge.  And keeping a few more current packages specific to the
server's role up-to-date isn't that big a deal [PostgreSQL, Cyrus,
whatever].  That is the server's role after all.  But all the rest of
the system can be 'ignored' as it doesn't constantly churn.


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