!No Bueno!! Long live Whitebox Linux!!
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One of the benefits of using Red Hat is that they guarantee that the
ABI will be stable for a number of years (about 10). If you're a
small business, and you can't afford a lot of time to be fixing
software, especially when breakage comes in security updates (and we
really, really want people to apply security updates), then having a
stable ABI is beneficial.
If you're a hobbyist, or you're in the business of IT support, these
aren't really critical, and it's part of the learning experience to
find that something is broken and learning how to fix it.
I tried CentOS and Red Hat in the past and found them to be out-of-date and no easier or more reliable than my choices.
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On Wed, Mar 3, 2021 at 7:37 AM Tilghman Lesher <tilg...@meg.abyt.es> wrote:One of the benefits of using Red Hat is that they guarantee that the
ABI will be stable for a number of years (about 10). If you're a
small business, and you can't afford a lot of time to be fixing
software, especially when breakage comes in security updates (and we
really, really want people to apply security updates), then having a
stable ABI is beneficial.
If you're a hobbyist, or you're in the business of IT support, these
aren't really critical, and it's part of the learning experience to
find that something is broken and learning how to fix it.If you have hundreds to thousands of servers to maintain, you don't scale very well when they break during a patching cycle. So the long term stability of RHEL is very appealing.
If you are working in a small shop and your employer can absorb the downtime (and not hold you responsible for it) caused by patching gone wrong then going with a distribution that has an increased "churn" is fine.I tried CentOS and Red Hat in the past and found them to be out-of-date and no easier or more reliable than my choices.Take a look at RHEL8. That has changed with the application streams. RHEL8 isn't stuck at the version of httpd/postgres/whatever that was current at the time of release.Kent
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Good to know! But what does RHEL offer being a paid distro over CentOS? Is it just the support and contract stuff, or is there some extra software involved?