Novell Nterprise Linux Services Announced 236
eer writes "At BrainShare (Novell's customer/developer conference), Novell customers reacted positively to the news that they would have the choice of running Novellâ(TM)s network services on Linux or NetWare or both. Today the company provided more details by introducing Novell Nterprise Linux Services, which will give customers file, print, messaging, directory and management services in an integrated package that runs on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux and SuSE Linux Enterprise Server distributions--along with providing those customers with comprehensive Novell technical support, training and consulting services for Linux. Partner companies, including IBM, HP, Dell, Red Hat and others, also voiced their support for Novell's Linux."
Two fingers to SCO (Score:2, Insightful)
Two fingers? (Score:5, Funny)
North Americans are more efficient. We only need to use one finger.
Re:Two fingers? (Score:2)
could have been an american using both hands. toward sco? i know i would.
Re:Two fingers to SCO (Score:2)
Re:Two fingers to SCO (Score:2)
Re:Two fingers to SCO (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Two fingers to SCO (Score:2)
They haven't just shot themselves in the foot on this -- they've blown off their whole lower leg.
Hey Novell ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hey Novell ... (Score:2, Funny)
Some marketing wanker needs to learn to spell. Or is this based on 'NT' - I'm so confused!
Re:Hey Novell ... (Score:5, Funny)
I, for one, won't stand for it! What next? Ntelligence? Nterior design? I like I. You like I.
I I I I!
Even Star Trek used I.
Kirk (calling on communicator): Scotty!
Scotty: I, captain.
I is a part of geek culture and should NOT be abandoned for the mushy N.
Re:Hey Novell ... (Score:2)
Re:Hey Novell ... (Score:2, Funny)
Mushy? No. 'n' is an important char indeed. (Score:2)
Re:Hey Novell ... (Score:2, Funny)
Coincidence? I think not. Or is that "coNcidence?"
Whew, (Score:5, Funny)
BrainShare (Score:4, Funny)
How many brains do they have to share between them?
Re:BrainShare (Score:3, Funny)
A couple years late? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A couple years late? (Score:3, Interesting)
I spent some time selling and installing these boxes to small bu
Re:A couple years late? (Score:2, Interesting)
fainlly! (Score:4, Funny)
And, if i'm reading this right, we can have files under linux too!
In your face SCO!
Re:finally! (Score:2, Interesting)
If Nterprise uses an alternate file ownership scheme with network ACL's, I'm all for it!
Novell Is Smart. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:5, Informative)
Please (please?) can we stop with the "Novell runs on MS-DOS" business? Propriatary hardware (Sun, IBM, most minis and workstations) have ROM-based bootstrap loaders and monitors built in so that the machine will boot and can be managed/repaired even if the main OS is dead. This doesn't mean that these systems "run" on the bootstrap loader.
Since about Netware 1.1 Novell software has always run on commodity Intel boxes. Commodity boxes don't have bootstrap loaders or monitors. So Novell uses xx-DOS, which is cheap, simple, fits on a floppy, and understood by most sysadmins worldwide, as their bootstrap loader and monitor. After boot, feel free to do a "REMOVE DOS" command and purge all traces of DOS from memory.
Netware DOES NOT "run on MS-DOS". And if you think it does, I really have to question that "+5 Informative".
sPh
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:3, Informative)
FWIW, NetWare 2.x (I've never seen an earlier version than 2.0a) had its own bootloader. You essentially compiled a static kernel w
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:2)
So what, Linux is the same way [ffm.fgan.de]. ; )
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:3, Interesting)
The novell server it is on has been up for over 7 years now. noone touches it except to change the backup tape daily. no administration, no reboots, no nothing ever needed to be done to it. something
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:2)
sPh
Re:Novell Is Smart. (Score:2)
We had Oracle running on Netware 3.11 at the same time, but it was still easier and cheaper to make a Quickbasic app that talked to Btrieve (I cost lots less per hour than the Oracle programmer...)
What we need to remember is that the NLMs back then ran at ring 0 on the super-duper 386 machines, which
Way to go Novell (Score:5, Interesting)
I have seen many people put Novell down recently with all the SCO crap going on. But the truth is, they really do make great stuff that nobody can compete with (right now). Linux/Sendmail/mySQL is great (I use it a lot) but everything from Novell is just easier to deploy (flame bait).
I mean
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2, Insightful)
They don't even have to challenge it. Just show pretty pictures and spend enough money on researching Outlook that managers then have little or no choice but to follow through (or be seen having wasted money). *sighs*
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:4, Insightful)
As one who has to suffer with Groupwise under Windows at work, I am concerned for your mental well being. For me, GW has been nothing but a leading source of crashes on my desktop. In all likelyhood this is related to our IS department (complete with the Windows experts that plugged my SCSI Zip drive into the parallel port after an upgrade), so I should take your message to heart and not blame Novell.
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2, Interesting)
Look into your IT staff
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2)
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2)
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2)
You know, we had GW at my last sysadmin job. I hated the crap out of it and even planned to replace it until email became the primary transport vehicle for virii. I even used to send out weekly 'virus alerts' to my coworkers that went something like "Another virus is out but you can ignore it as long as you DON'T OPEN ATTACHMENTS because GW doesn't open them automatically. Click here for details....blah, blah." Mostly, it was just to explain why they were getting all these identical emails from their frien
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2)
And Groupwise is really not that bad, at least from a user's point of view, *if* it's competently administered. It's a bit limited in being able to hook things into it easily, though.
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:3, Informative)
Certainly, I can. For the longest period of time, Groupwise has been one of the most obnoxious anonymous spam relays on the Internet. Anyone who was stupid enough to have an Internet-facing Groupwise was essentially running an anonymous spam relay.
I really can't bring myself up to trust anyone with anything concerning E-mail if they seem to be unable to grasp even the simple concept of a Received: header (not even mentioning such an advanced concept as a "clos
Re:Way to go Novell (Score:2, Informative)
Novell is coming around (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Novell is coming around (Score:3, Interesting)
A step that is seven years late. Find it hard no one remembers this.
Funny, seven years ago this was blasphemy. The Linux world was up in arms. Novell is evil! SCO rocks!! Please leave our little Linux alone!!!
Today, the present. The Linux world wishes for ALL corporations to use Linux. SCO is evil! Novell rocks! Please add to our Linux and make it your own.
Distributed User Management (Score:2)
Of course, I replaced all those expen$ive novell $ervers as soon as I could... but I do look forward to seeing Novell finally get a hook into Linuxland and expect that they will make a pr
Re:Novell is coming around (Score:2, Informative)
Too bad no one COUGH-BANYAN-COUGH did this earlier COUGH-VINES!
Re:Novell is coming around (Score:3, Funny)
Because of this, we at the GNU Project have recently started GNUterprise, which aims to recreate the propriatery Novell Nterprise enviroment using only sof
No we know... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not sure about that. Can you imagine if Novell had announced this 2 years ago? Linux lovers would have praised them, but no one else would have taken them seriously because so few people took Linux seriously. It would have been another questionable product/marketing move from Novell.
Now, however, Linux has tons of mind share, and we also know why Novell got involved with the SCO train wreck.
--madgeorge
Re:No we know... (Score:3, Insightful)
I remember the big push by Microsoft to use Active Directory in enterprise networks, upgrading from NT to 2K and using Active Directory to manage everything. Just like today, no one else really had a solution for massive infrastructures (using a client-server setup) with a central system for administration. Sure, NetWare was/is available, but it requires Windows to be utilized completely. This new fun
Re:No we know... (Score:2)
Netware works with clients of any flavor, older versions even supported *nix clients, but no one ever bothered. Works flawlessly with Windows and Macs, however, so this is really not true.
Non-Windows != Linux
Re:No we know... (Score:2)
So, the solution was there, but it was not very attractive to many, well anybody, actually at that time. Now that SCO case ha
Hooray, Linux for huge networks (Score:2, Interesting)
Once you got to Novell 4 and 5, you were able to manipulate very large scale networks, with thousands of users, something MS barely does (one PDC?) and Linux not at all. It makes me laugh when Linux Zealots talk about replacing corporate networks with Linux servers, and the largest network they've administered is 3 Pentiums and a Pentium II f
Re:Hooray, Linux for huge networks (Score:2)
Ok I was agreeing with you until you started trolling...
So you are telling me that UNIX is impossible to have thousands if not millions of users? ar
Re:Hooray, Linux for huge networks (Score:5, Informative)
In the NT world, and *nix, you have an account on a machine, you log in to one machine, then maybe connect to others, maybe having permissions there or not, all controlled by the servers you connect to or the NFS mounted shares, whatever.
In the netware world, you authenticate to the network as a whole, with one account, you have different permissions on various network resources (not servers), and through replication this permission set is passed anywhere its needed. Any workstation on the network can authenticate you to the network, because you have an account on the network. If the local server doesn't know about you, it can query around and find your account, and your envirnment is perfectly identical to what you had at 'home' as it were. Properly integrated with the client OS, moving offices is completely painless - this is not the case in NT or *nix setups.
I've not done a huge *nix installation, perhaps there are ways to make *nix do this, but it appears very very server centric, much like NT 4 was.
At one time the only viable solution for a large wan with thousands of users was Netware, and I'd argue that Active directory is still much inferior to it (and slower).
Dont' get me wrong, in that same vast installation, any critical service should be running on some flavor of *nix, because I don't see Novell competing there in the slightest.
When they finally ditched their silly IPX protocol (well or strongly favored TCP/IP) around version 5ish, Novell/*nix networks should have dominated the planet.
I like Linux as much as the next guy, but I use the right tool for the right job, and don't see *nix as being comparable to Netware in some respects (at least before this sort of project), but then again, neither is Netware as good as Linux in others.
enterprise (Score:5, Funny)
Kids! Never trust any product with Enterprise in the title unless it comes with batteries and has a light up deflector array and real torpedo and phaser sounds.
On a similar note, if a website ever uses the acronym "SME" even semi-seriously then you should avoid that assiduously too.
graspee
Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:2)
Re:Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:2)
I suppose you could hold a mic up to the speaker and record it, but --*shudder*-- first-generation analog lossiness! What would the audiophiles say?!? And even then, your recording would
Re:Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:2)
From Novell's APPNOTES [novell.com]:
Once again, Google provides the answer if you know how to ask t
Re:Fire Phasers in Novell. (Score:2)
another link of interest (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Accessing Novell apps in Linux? (Score:2)
Kind of makes you wonder .... (Score:4, Interesting)
It all makes a little more sense now. I'm glad they finally embraced their services on Linux though. I always like the Novell File Services!
More distros please (Score:5, Funny)
I can't wait to see a version of Novell's package for OpenLinux, or even UnixWare+LKP
Why Enterprise editions of Linux? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why Enterprise editions of Linux? (Score:2)
Most corporations are used to having an 18 month or so upgrade cycle between major releases of Solaris and AIX, and often skip a revision, so where I work we have had lots of Solaris 2.6, mainly skipped Solaris 7 (2.7) and are now finalising upgrading everything to 8. That because we have over 8000 Solaris servers. If
How much will we pay for convenience? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How much will we pay for convenience? (Score:2)
I would think that the idea of this product is to make NetWare and Linux "play nice together" - IOW enterprise level integration. IMHO, Novell's focus as of late hasn't been Netware but eDirectory and other NDS based services.
NDS can kick Active Directory's ass and take it's lunch money any day of the week, since it's a much more mature product. By integrating Linux and Netware, they can leverage the OSS communit
Re:How much will we pay for convenience? (Score:2)
Not only much more mature, but much more powerful, too. In fact, a 4-billion object NDS has been implemented years ago! In the meantime it became even more scalable.
Not to mention that NDS has been ported to several different platforms - including WindowsNT and 2K, too.
About time (Score:5, Insightful)
Used to be, the reason why you bought Netware was to do thse these things:
1. File Server.
2. Print Server.
3. Administration of 1 and 2.
For a long time, Novell had the best of 1 and 2 - and with their directory services, they weren't matched. I loved using Novell's admin tools. They were usually easy enough to get in and do what you want, and powerful enough to do all sorts of other things. You could set up rights, trickle them down or stop trickling, take care of email stuff - right there in one nice interface. Sure, it wasn't perfect - but compared to the compeition....
The problem came with Linux, and people realized "Hm - do I need to spend this much for a file/print server?" They web server offerings in my humble opinion stank, and I never really liked Groupwise that much. It could do a lot of cool things, but other simple things that I would have expected were beyond it's grasp.
So I see this as a Very Good Thing for Novell. In a way, they can be like Apple, only for the Server world on Linux. Apple's OS X's strength is that you can do all the cool Unix stuff you want - without having to do anything Unix-y to get it to work. You can crawl under the hood if you like or just sit at the dashboard.
I'm browsing through the Novell offering, and here's what I'm hoping for:
1. A kick-ass admin tool like thier old NWAdmin.exe tool. Start making plugins for things like Sendmail, Postfix, Apache - whatever. Go ahead and charge for the plugins so we can just sit back and go "click, click, click" and get stuff done rather that going "Hey - what was the setting in Apache for turning on directory indexing!" (Yes, I know what it is, thank you, move on.) Sure - there's stuff like Webmin that can do this, but Novell's Admin tool was still (IMHO) cooler. And with drag and drop, the directory style layout, and being able to click on a user and get all info right there would be most excellent.
Make it Java based so I don't have to run it off of Windows. (What the hell was up with that, anyway? I could never figure out why Novell couldn't make an Admin tool for their servers that didn't run on Windows - granted, the last Novell I really used was Netware 5, so don't sue me if things have changed.)
2. You can have multiple Linux servers out there, and instead of trying to figure out your LDAP settings and that, just install the software, start the admin, and say "These Directory users have these rights on this box on this directory" - click, click, click - you're done, have a nice day. This was something promised with eDirectory, but I'd like to see it really hardcore delivered.
With this, merge the strength of Linux's "no license fee" with Novell's admin/directory tools. I want to have a server I can throw 5, 500, 50000 users on and not worry about licensing - and I just pay Novell for the user interface and tools. I can even see paying Novell like their mass server license - I pay for how many concurrent users I have on the system, unlimited servers. (So, for example, I can have 500 servers out there, and if I only need a 5 user license, I just pay Novell once for 5 users to administrate the boxes.)
I think if Novell plays their cards right and goes for the "administrate, authenticate, and authorize" bit for Linux services, they can work with Linux to make a lot of money, and make Linux so Admin Friendly as to keep pushing that other desktop/server OS [microsoft.com] out of the market.
Of course, I could be wrong. But... isn't it nice to dream....
Re:About time (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:About time (Score:5, Funny)
sPh
Re:About time (Score:2, Interesting)
NWAdmin's tool was so powerful, we migrated all of our SAM-based NT domains 4.0 to NDS for NT 2.0 on Novell 4.x in as OU's in the primary tree. (No small task, this was at the number 1 largest air conditioning company in the world no less.)
Nothing better than having a single interface to manage all your organizations accounts and permissions, especially NWAdmin.
Now, apply that to linux/*nix services across the board, and you've got a winner. Albeit a most likely expensive, commer
In other news (Score:3, Funny)
In other news, IBM announced they'll give their customers the chance to run OS/2 on AS/600.
Novell already relies on Linux (Score:2, Interesting)
support (Score:2, Interesting)
This will also mean more products on Linux as a lot of companies which already support NetWare will have to move in Lin
Re:support (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the problem with a lot of linux tools for implementing "enterprise" solutions is that they tend to require that the admin know every little detail about each component technology in that solution. in an ideal sense, this is good because it encourages learning. in the realistic sense, it means that a potential convert ends up saying "Fuck this noise" and reaches for the fuzzy-feely-pointy-clicky thing that proprietary v
Re:support (Score:2)
Why Companies Support Linux (Score:2, Insightful)
Why does IBM support Linux? So they can sell more consulting, hardware and software, their bread and butter. How about Dell? More hardware, more choices of consumer OS. How about HP? Same as IBM. What about Oracle, Veritas, WebLogic and Novell? To sell more of their software.
I'm not saying Linux is the best solution f
Re:Why Companies Support Linux (Score:2)
WITCH! Burn him!
Who cares! (Score:3, Interesting)
I earned my Novell CNE (Certified NetWare Engineer) back in 1996, and since then watched Microsoft's Windows NT steadily eat away their market share. Novell succeeded back in the 80's and early 90's because they filled a need. It didn't matter that their support was bad or their marketing non-existent, because at one time NetWare was the only game in town. But they lost their market share to Microsoft because they did not improve their support or their marketing.
But times have changed. Microsoft may be the leader now, and although they do a good job of marketing, their support is awful, mostly because their products are bloated piles of spagetti code. I ditched working with NetWare because I can do everything and more with NT, and then I ditched NT because I can do everything and more with Linux and can support it or make changes without things blowing up. Linux will never have the marketing that Microsoft has, but it doesn't need it because word of mouth and an ever improving product is the best form of advertising.
Sorry Novell. Sorry Microsoft. You treated guys like me who paid thousands of dollars for your certifications like crap for years, so we left and decided to write our own. Linux doesn't need Novell or Microsoft to succeed in the long run. Anyone who says different hasn't worked in the industry long enough.
Learn the phrase... (Score:2)
Question (Score:3, Interesting)
If all I'm doing is providing body panels and upholstery I'm not going to be calling myself an auto manufacturer.
TW
Novell supporting Linux.. (Score:3, Interesting)
This has got to be the smartest marketing Novelll has ever done. (Any of you familiar with Novell know how absolutely BAD they are at marketing). I actually have a renewed interest in Novell products, and I may just dust off my CNE cert and hang it on my wall proudly, rather than hiding it at the bottom of my underwear drawer where no man but me dares tread. A CNE and a CLE might look nice together on a resume.
cool (Score:2, Interesting)
debian advocacy (Score:3, Interesting)
Is this needed? (Score:2)
Not saying there may not be a need, i just am not aware of one..
I, for one, am a happy boy. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now I can have the best of both worlds. I actually prefer to work with Linux. NetWare can be frustrating, but it's bulletproof when it's setup correctly. Linux seems to be more forgiving in many ways. Plus the wide variety of software for Linux (there are, what, 6 different widely-used MTAs alone?) means I can accomplish more with the platform.
This news kept my largest NetWare client from moving to all-Windows servers. The client had been intrigued with Linux, but didn't feel comfortable using it in production. Now they won't have a problem with it. In their eyes, Linux is ligitimate now. I'm sure they aren't the only ones.
pointless (Score:2)
"Microsoft Active Directory for Linux"
Think of all the reasons you wouldn't buy that. Then tell me why Novell services on Linux are such a grand idea.
Re:pointless (Score:2)
It is a grand idea because no current Linux distribution provides all the features and functions of Novell services, certainly not as well as Novell does. Options are good. You can take 'em or leave 'em.
Re:pointless (Score:2, Informative)
Well if we take the directory alone, then:
Re:Legacy users only? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Legacy users only? (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe it does blow donkeys, but I've got it as an http proxy for 1,000 simultaneous users right now - I think that's pretty darn good. And it used to crash a whole lot, but it was a hardware problem - 45 days up, and climbing fast. So sad that so many of those users are looking at pictures of...
People... blowing... donkeys?
Christ, these internet logs scare me. Over 130 MB/day, too.
SALVAGE SALVAGE SALVAGE (Score:3, Informative)
It's worth the thousands it cost for the licenses when the research dept deletes a days worth of work which hasn't b
Re:SALVAGE SALVAGE SALVAGE (Score:2)
Our secretaries are continually overwriting old versions of documents when they should have created a new version. When we had Novell I would just fire up salvage and restore the overwritten version in minutes.
Restoring from last-night's backup takes much longer and doesn't work if they had made other changes to the document before the creating the new version. With Salvage I could pick from several deleted versions over time.
I'd like to see someone add this fu
Re:Legacy users only? (Score:5, Informative)
Here are a few reasons:
With ZenWorks, you can lock down a users' W2K or XP workstation, deploy/install applications and printers without leaving your desk and remote control their PC if they are having a problem (technical support).
With groupwise, you have all the functionality of any other Enterprise level Email system. With the security of GroupWise, you have less worries with some of the Virus' that can plague many of the MS Email systems.
The Directory Services of Novell is far superiour of any other company's, mostly because it is more mature (going on what... 9, 10 years now?). Novell's eDirectory can handle about a billion objects in the Tree. Maybe more now, I am not sure
Of course, Novell NetWare runs pure IP or a mixed IPX/IP environment if you want. Since 5.0, NetWare has had IP natively.
Re:Anyone use Novell anymore? (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, people still use it.
Secret project? Yes Actual product? No (Score:3, Interesting)
The real goal of M$ Linux would be to take concepts that work and port them back to Windows, so as to reinforce the monopoly in the places where it is crumbling. They might try to use marketing magic to bring some of the NSA credibility to Windows, although they are a l
Re:People Still Use Novell? (Score:4, Informative)
Does anyone wonder how personal biases get introduced into business decisions? Maybe when people decide to completely disregard all products from a company for no reason other than their ignorance of those products.
Just to prove it, go look at the capabilities of the DirXML product from Novell. Then I can explain how our HR department processes a new hire and DirXML automatically creates the network account, portal account, email account and gives access to all appropriate backend systems seamlessly. And then it keeps everything in sync.
Does anyone wonder...? (Score:3, Funny)
The most bigoted person I've ever met in my thirty year career was a Novell MCSE. He makes old VMS zealots look like OSS proponents. This guy is so slobberingly in worship of Novell I swear to $DEITY he's just a breath away from strapping on a vest full of C4 and walking into somebody's Microsoft server room.