It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
I'm not that experienced in Linux os but have been using Ubuntu for a while and am slowly learning the ropes.
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
So, pulled down a copy of Debian 8 and installed it. On the face of it it looks similar to Ubuntu (I understand it was it's parent of sorts) and it seems ok also.
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
ubuntu is based off of debian... debian is more stability prone whereas ubuntu it more ahead of the game and closer to the bleeding edge... not
on the bleeding edge but closer then debian...
now i'm off back to trying to get access to my main bbs/mail/web server box so i can see what damage the storm at 0600 monday morning did to
it... can't lay my hands on it where it is currently placed and with so
machines already gutted... not very happy right now but not as depressed as i was since i got the firewall back up and operational... at least i can get to some of my email accounts and onto the web... extremely glad
it wasn't my new box with all the VMs of the other older systems we've
That's a good place to start, even to stay if you are comfortable there.
red hat, before they went commercial. After that I went to Mandrake and liked it. Then they changed their name to mandriva and I didn't want to run something called mandriva (picky, eh!?) so I went to debian. That
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
I swear by so many of them it's really hard to nail it down to anything. Use what you like!
ArchLinux is worth a look, it's a rolling release so you always have the latest software and kernel whereas debian (if you use stable) has what
it had when it was released and only security (or important) updates are available.
I use Debian in very specific scenarios only, personally. I refuse to
ever use a Canonical product.. Partly political, partly just plain
sanity.
I swear by CentOS though for server grade. It's tested, proven, and
always rock solid. When you /need/ things not included, building an RPM
For a long time I have used Puppy Linux, which is based on Slackware.
It is a very lightweight desktop with decent applications. I made use
of this on my old Dell. For the last couple of years, Ubuntu has been
my goto distro since aquiring more powerful hardware. I have not really
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I use Debian in very specific scenarios only, personally. I refuse
to ever use a Canonical product.. Partly political, partly just
plain sanity.
Curious about this? Is it that they have commercialised Linux or offer a interface that (from what I read) a lot of tux fans just hate with a passion.
I did laugh when I installed Debian Jessie and saw a broswer called Ice Weazel that looked 99% like Firefox ;)
I swear by CentOS though for server grade. It's tested, proven, and
always rock solid. When you /need/ things not included, building an
RPM
Cool thanks - In time I will take a look at it. Do you happen to know if the INN2 package is well supported in its repositories?
Web/Security/Etc. Server: CentOS is my goto here. Ubuntu Server is probably second in line, but CentOS is just so solid. Ubuntu has jumped around with too many technologies while CentOS has just gotten better each release. It's basically just the free version of RHEL.
FreeBSD (I know, not linux): Is amazing for serving up multiple things via jails, and the BSD's blow away the Linux IP stack so they are great for things like routers. I suggest pfSense here. For routers I'd always go BSD
Linux.
You have a lot of choices in the Linux realm. To me, operating systems (not just Linux) are tools in a toolbox and there are better choices for certain jobs (and certainly a lot of personal preference). As for
Heh. Just to name a few specific reasons:
INN isn't in CentOS's own repositories, but it's supported in EPEL.
I literally just finished migrating my BBS from Manjaro to CentOS 7, finally, and the migration is fairly flawless for me already.
machines already gutted... not very happy right now but not as depres as i was since i got the firewall back up and operational... at least can get to some of my email accounts and onto the web... extremely gl it wasn't my new box with all the VMs of the other older systems we'v
Best of luck, keep us posted. Sending good vibes your way ;)
On 07/15/15, wkitty42 pondered and said...
ubuntu is based off of debian... debian is more stability prone where ubuntu it more ahead of the game and closer to the bleeding edge... n on the bleeding edge but closer then debian...
Hey wkitty42.. thanks for the detailed overview and LTS suggestions. I
run a low power fm station as a hobby and use Utbuntu LTS distros to run the on-air software (Rivendell) and agree LTS is the way to go.
I'm left wondering about the Debian stablity vs Ubuntu LTS path?
On 07/15/15, Avon said the following...
I'm not that experienced in Linux os but have been using Ubuntu for a while and am slowly learning the ropes.
That's a good place to start, even to stay if you are comfortable there. My first linux distro that I was able to use and get stuff done on was
red hat, before they went commercial. After that I went to Mandrake and liked it. Then they changed their name to mandriva and I didn't want to run something called mandriva (picky, eh!?) so I went to debian. That
was ~10 years ago. I have considered myself a debianite and been at home there ever since.
I did laugh when I installed Debian Jessie and saw a broswer called Ice Weazel that looked 99% like Firefox ;)
Heh. I just wish CentOS/Fedora would hurry up and stop using Mozilla NSS~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
for TLS/SSL, and get back to using OpenSSL. The only reason RHEL went with Mozilla NSS is because they had FIPS compliant first. heh
I've always hated BSD's pf. Last matching rule wins is bassackwards, and silly. :)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Linux, first matching rule wins, and stop processing through the entire
list of hundreds/thousands of rules. :D
</rant> ;)
$ Psi-Jack was quoted saying . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heh. I just wish CentOS/Fedora would hurry up and stop using Mozilla~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NSS for TLS/SSL, and get back to using OpenSSL. The only reason RHEL
went with Mozilla NSS is because they had FIPS compliant first. heh
I've had to use NSS directly for projects, and yeah, it's horrid. However, it's better code wise than the disaster that is OpenSSL. What a absolute mess.
The work being put into dumping all the garbage in OpenSSL for libressl is nice (BSD devs!)
$ Psi-Jack was quoted saying . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I've always hated BSD's pf. Last matching rule wins is bassackwards,</rant>> ;)
and silly. :)
Linux, first matching rule wins, and stop processing through the
entire list of hundreds/thousands of rules. :D
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BSD pf rules have 'quick' that sets them to be evaled before others (and can stop at that point given a match)
Hi guys,
I'm not that experienced in Linux os but have been using Ubuntu for a while and am slowly learning the ropes.
A current hobby project for me at present has been to learn to configure
a Usenet server that runs on a tux os. I have configured things ok on the Ubuntu system but received advice that it would be better to use
something more stable like Debian as a server os.
So, pulled down a copy of Debian 8 and installed it. On the face of it it looks similar to Ubuntu (I understand it was it's parent of sorts) and it seems ok also.
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
Hi guys,
I'm not that experienced in Linux os but have been using Ubuntu for a while and am slowly learning the ropes.
A current hobby project for me at present has been to learn to configure a Usenet server that runs on a tux os. I have configured things ok on the Ubuntu system but received advice that it would be better to use something more stable like Debian as a server os.
So, pulled down a copy of Debian 8 and installed it. On the face of it it looks similar to Ubuntu (I understand it was it's parent of sorts) and it seems ok also.
It got me wondering what others here use and swear by and why?
Best, Paul
--- Mystic BBS v1.10 (Windows)
* Origin: Agency BBS | telnet://agency.bbs.geek.nz (46:3/203)
A Usenet server? Hot damn!
Hook me up with some access so I can go to alt.comp. I have never been
on Usenet. Ever. Please. :))))))
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