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Hi,
can you recommend Archlinux as production server? I really like all the cutting-edge technologies.. But I had problems with Arch on my VPS (after-update kind) and I'm not sure if they are caused by Arch or by OpenVZ.. But production server simply cannot be down for a few hours simply because I ran "pacman -Syyu"..
So I am considering both Arch or SL6..
Thanks for your opinions ^_^
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If you have to ask the question, then Arch is not good on a production server...
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What do you mean?
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If you cannot have downtime you need redundant systems; means more than one server. Updates are always risky, no matter which distro.
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Hi,
can you recommend Archlinux as production server? I really like all the cutting-edge technologies.. But I had problems with Arch on my VPS (after-update kind) and I'm not sure if they are caused by Arch or by OpenVZ.. But production server simply cannot be down for a few hours simply because I ran "pacman -Syyu"..So I am considering both Arch or SL6..
Thanks for your opinions ^_^
No. Get RHEL.
When I win the lottery, the first thing I will do, before I buy a new car or a house, would be to buy a goddamn Cisco XR 12000 router and enough T3 lines to wire a country.
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can you recommend Archlinux as production server?
No.
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I really like all the cutting-edge technologies. ... But production server simply cannot be down for a few hours
You should probably choose one or the other. If I had to set up an important linux server, I would go for something ultra stable and well-tested (probably debian stable).
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Ok, thanks for opinions.. I will probably go with SL
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The main reason that I see for not using archlinux on a production server is that in a production server applications cannot get major upgrades automatically. Arch doesn't follow this. In example, the python command one day changed from python2 to python3. This kind of sutff can't happen in a production server unless explicity requested.
On the other hand, this is also one thing that I like about ArchLinux, because it "enforces" you to stay up to date about newer version of all kind of stuff, making it your way of living to be familiar with present day technologies (or future technologies in case of most production servers).
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We are running Arch in production... Only problem so far was the kernel upgrade to 3 broke a raid array, but it was fixable.
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We are running Arch in production... Only problem so far was the kernel upgrade to 3 broke a raid array, but it was fixable.
One server, 1 raid broke. Imagine that you have to take care of 100 ArchLinux servers
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