We're big Redhat Enterprise fans, but, of course, don't require the paid
support from RH. CentOS IS Redhate Enterprise repackaged to conform to the
GPL. I've some old college friends who work for Redhat, so if there are
drivers that need working on or tinkering that needs to be done, I can always
hit them up in exchange for food and drink. ;)
We used to use Fedora, but we've had more than a few.... issues. It's designed
to be absolute leading edge stuff, which often leaves room for a lot of bugs
-- something we can't afford to have in a production environment (okay for a
desktop, perhaps; not so great for a machine hosting several thousand users).
N.
On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 13:05:40 +1000, Nick Hoffman wrote
On Fri September 29 2006 23:53, "sip"
<sip(a)arcdiv.com> wrote:
We run SER quite happily on HP DL360g4 servers.
It gives us some
redundancy with a hardware raid mirror and dual power supplies, the
footprint is very small (1U), and with dual Xeon 3Ghz processors, it
screams through a lot of calls per second.
As an OS, we're running CentOS 4.4, and it works exceptionally well.
Everyone has his own ideas of what make the best servers, though. Your
mileage may vary.
N.
Hey there. I'm curious as to what made you decide on CentOS. I've
been hearing a lot about it over the past 6-12 months, but haven't
checked it out yet as I'm a Debian fan.
Cheers,
-- Nick
e: nick.hoffman(a)voxpak.com
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