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-   -   Most stable OS ? (https://vborg.vbsupport.ru/showthread.php?t=175592)

pedroenf 04-12-2008 04:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dismounted (Post 1486492)
They will all serve you well, regardless of which you choose. Although I (personally) prefer a RHEL-based variant, such as CentOS mainly because I am most familiar with it.

Definitly. Great OS.

MidnightPyro 04-12-2008 04:28 PM

For some reason, I've heard CentOS is the best for web hosting and most of the hosts I've seen have been using it. I'm not too sure why CentOS lends itself well to that though :)

I personally use Ubuntu for all of my server stuff, but I'm just fiddling around and learning at this point.

rockergrrl 04-13-2008 12:52 AM

I personally use Centos 5 on my servers. The company I work for also uses Centos on their servers as well (a couple Fedoras in the mix - only a couple).

I've never had any issues with Centos on any of my servers.

Johnny Utah 04-13-2008 12:53 AM

Debian has always outperformed RedHat/CentOS/Fedora in my experience.

khb1st 04-13-2008 02:51 AM

debian here

and stats I've read, back up that debian is a very popular (if not most) OS for web server applications

wolfstream 04-22-2008 01:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by khb1st (Post 1489479)
debian here

and stats I've read, back up that debian is a very popular (if not most) OS for web server applications

I'd love for you to show those stats, because I could show you stats completely opposite.
Debian may be good, but as far as 'widely used', or 'the most widely used'? I'd have to say not so much. BSD has a better shot at 'most widely used', but that still belongs to the redhat crowd, as evidenced in the poll here.

A breakdown of the options above:
-- Fedora - Unstable, because it is redhat's testing bed . If you're comfortable running a test os on your server, by all means, head there

-- RHEL / CentOS - The same exact thing, released by two different companies at two different cost levels. My own personal choice though,

-- BSD - Too 'security minded', not end user friendly at all, from what I've seen. There needs to be a ballance between security and usability, something that the BSD crowd has completely forgotten about.

-- Debian - Not bad, but not widely used at all

snunhuck 05-07-2008 10:43 PM

CentOS - I use it at home as well :) Call it a pre-deployment environment.

khb1st 08-12-2008 08:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfstream (Post 1496540)
I'd love for you to show those stats, because I could show you stats completely opposite.
Debian may be good, but as far as 'widely used', or 'the most widely used'? I'd have to say not so much. BSD has a better shot at 'most widely used', but that still belongs to the redhat crowd, as evidenced in the poll here.

A breakdown of the options above:
-- Fedora - Unstable, because it is redhat's testing bed . If you're comfortable running a test os on your server, by all means, head there

-- RHEL / CentOS - The same exact thing, released by two different companies at two different cost levels. My own personal choice though,

-- BSD - Too 'security minded', not end user friendly at all, from what I've seen. There needs to be a ballance between security and usability, something that the BSD crowd has completely forgotten about.

-- Debian - Not bad, but not widely used at all

sorry I didn't see your response earlier, and I have in the meantime changed to the mandriva server setup, and I like it, for now

but it seems, by far ubuntu wins with debian a far second, as listed here
Code:

http://efytimes.com/efytimes/fullnews.asp?edid=27979
but even these numbers will change in the next few months

Quote:

Thursday, August 07, 2008: The Open Source Census, a global, collaborative project to collect and share quantitative data on the use of open source software, has identified more than 275,000 open source installations on more than 2,000 machines. While Firefox has been ranked as the most installed open source project, Zlib, Xerces, Xalan and Wget are the second, third, fourth and fifth, respectively. Participants span a wide variety of company sizes, geographies and industries.
The Open Source Census has revealed some interesting facts and found data that is contrary to common held ideas regarding the popularity of various open source projects.

Ubuntu (45 per cent) and Debian (14 per cent) are the most used Linux distributions. More than half of the open source software found has been on Windows machines, and the number of unique installed open source packages ranged from 22-62 per machine.

Perl (45 per cent) is the most common open source development language while Ruby, PHP and Python have 29 per cent share. Hsqldb (45 per cent) is the most common database, because it is bundled as the default DB with many open source software components; MySQL (27 per cent) is twice as common as Postgres (12 per cent). And more than 65 per cent of participants are located outside of the United States.

This is a clear indication of increasing adoption of GNU/Linux and Free Software.

RLShare 08-12-2008 10:35 PM

^Where does it state that it is the most used OS for web servers as thats what it seems you were discussing and what he was replying to. Being the most widely used overall does not equate to widely used as a web server. Debian based systems use that RPM installer package that make it user friendly and great for users coming from another OS such as windows, I would say a large portion of those statistics are desktop systems and not web servers.

khb1st 08-13-2008 01:30 AM

agreed

and I got sidetracked into reading up on stability of OS, not servers

sorry, will continue reading

thank you


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