Am 08.12.2011 02:40, schrieb Marko Vojinovic:
> On Wednesday 07 December 2011 20:19:31 Alan Cox wrote:
>>>> did you ever work in an environment with a lot of servers and
>>>> users and used rsync / nfs?
>>>
>>> Why would you even consider using Fedora in such an environment? If you
>>> have a server farm with shared users and use rsync/nfs/whatever, and
>>> you have the
>>
>> Why not (rsync btw translates names fine)
> 
> Because Fedora has a fast lifecycle, and introduces major system changes in 
> every version. Ok, sure, you certainly *can* maintain Fedora machines in a 
> production environment, but it typically involves more work than using a LTS 
> distro like RHEL. That was the point I was trying to make.

yes, that it for what you get paied as administrator

>>> whole thing (or a part of it) running on Fedora, then you'd better be
>>> prepared to do some nontrivial amount of work when upgrading the Fedora
>>> machines.
>>
>> And presumably RHEL in future.
> 
> Umm, AFAIK RHEL explicitly doesn't support upgrades across major releases. 

Umm Fedora does not recommend upgrade via yum and i did it some hundrets
of times since FC5 until now

> The thing is --- you need to do that "some nontrivial amount of work" when 
> upgrading the OS in both cases (Fedora and RHEL). It's just that with RHEL 
> you 
> do that kind of work once every 5-7 years, while with Fedora you do it every 
> 6 
> months.

well, and if you are a company which develops web-based systems and hosting
them on your own infrastructure you bave to wait 5-7 years for major upgrades
of php/mysql which is quite impossible in this business

and if you start include third-party repos to get newer versions you
lose the support - this 7 years support is for people relying on
crappy apllications which permanently break if anything on the system
is changed but not if your business is IT-centred because 5-7 years
in the IT is a very very long time

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