Red Hat EL 4.0 Released 88
diegocgteleline.es writes "As it has been noticed by some news sites, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 has been released. RedHat's web site doesn't seem to have any reference, but with Red Hat being probably the most used distro in the enterprise and featuring for first time a 2.6 kernel, this is a major milestone for linux in the server arena. There're already some reviews."
Linux 2.6 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Linux 2.6 (Score:3, Insightful)
In other words, the whole world can now pretty much agree that the 2.4 kernel and the software that runs on it is in maintenance mode now.
RHEL & Long support cycle (Score:1)
A couple things... (Score:4, Informative)
2) Ability to use selinux MAC and auditing
3) New versions of OO, gimp, gtk, moz out of thje box...
4) Aaaand... there's not much else that stands out. Most stuff that works on 3 will work on 4 and vice versa, maybe requiring a SRPM re-build. It looks pretty much the same, still bluecurve with some tweaks. Not that it doesn't look good.
Re:FP! w/e read on (Score:2)
Why does the enterprise version, which is marketed to be stable and rarely changing, have more updates than the Fedora set? It makes zero sense.
Re:FP! w/e read on (Score:1)
PS: I'm waiting for White Box to clone the new release. ;)
Re:FP! w/e read on (Score:2)
Speaking as someone forced to admin RHEL 3 without provisioning credits (it's politics and bureacracy, not money), what did you have to do to get kernel 2.6 on it, did you have any problems with it, and could I bum the RPMs off of you? I have a SuSE 9 box right next to it on identical hardware, and it's blowing the doors off the RH box (some of it has to
Red Hat! (Score:4, Funny)
*smiles*
*shakes head*
Ol' Red Hat. Heh. Didn't know people were still usin' it.
*low whistle*
I remember that one time my RPM database got wedged in the middle of a critical glibc upgrade. Let me tell you, them admins didn't like being paged at 4 in the AM. But that's how it was with ol' Red Hat.
And that time I tried to install a customized version of PHP. I just wanted to change one little line in the config for a client. But I had to hunt down and install 12 different devel RPMs first. I didn't want no ODBC, but I had to compile it anyway. Then when I was done, it turned out I downloaded some with security holes. Why couldn't they just put all latest RPMs in a single directory so I could download them easy? That's how it was, with ol' Red Hat.
*looks whistfully into the distance*
*Yup, ol Red Hat. Wonder how she's doin' now. But don't get me wrong, it's over between us. We had some fun. But when her ass started gettin' big and she refused to go on a diet, and she still wore those ol' 1970's style hats when she new it looked stupid, well, that's when it was time to move on. I got a new love now. She does whatever I want and doesn't fight back. But that don't mean she ain't strong. Nooo sir. She just wants the same things I like. Stability. Ease of use. Flexibility. Ain't never seen a distro bend like she can. Whew!
What's that? No I ain't tellin' her name. I figgur, long as you're over there with Red Hat running PostgreSQL 5.0, kernel 2.2, and whatever else, trying to figure out how the heck a
Well, nice talkin' with you son. I best be movin' along. This ol' back a' mine don't take well to settin' still.
Re:Red Hat! (Score:1)
Re:Red Hat! (Score:2)
Yeah, even a RH guy like me giggled some over that.
RH does what I need, and I run customized versions of a whole lot of apps I could use RPMs for. When I don't need 'em custom, the RPMs are all right by me.
The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, don't get me wrong, I used it for a long time, and I'm sure we all did. However, Redhat fell behind the times a few years ago, and many of us moved on to bigger and better things. ie. Fedora, Xandros, Debian, Mepis, Knoppix, etc.
So how relevant would you say Redhat is the Linux distro wars of this day and age?
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:3, Insightful)
To the average linux user: not very.
To non computer geeks, who only hear about linux through mass media: almost as relevant as back in the day.
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2, Insightful)
Flamebait or no, I'm guessing most RedHat users are the 7 Year+ UNIX Sysadmin guys and not the crowd trying to use Linux to watch WMV porno and play Halflife in their mom's basement.
I wouldn't say that. (Score:2)
rp
yum install mplayer
7+ year sysadmin AND watching WMV porno.
And while the Nvidia accelerated drivers work fine, I don't run Half Life. I use that for q3a + mods.
dingdingding we have a winnah... (Score:3, Insightful)
I run a tight shop and when WebSphere doesn't play ball on a production server for some reason I need to know that, as a last resort, I can scream at someone. Preferrably both the app and os people.
I haven't needed phone support yet, but if I did, I could go that route. And the clients like that. If they like it, it's successful.
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2)
There's a reason why it's called Enterprise Linux.
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2)
SuSE is a Windows Update (Score:2)
SuSE [novell.com] has in its favor [?] the confusion to be made with System Update Service [susserver.com] for Windows.
Adding to the confusion, SuSE is in some camps [alacos.com] a reasonable way to update Windows:)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2)
It's spelled "SuSE", but it's pronounced "Novell".
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:1)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:2)
I guess my point was that Red Hat has pretty much lost interest in supporting non-server users. But even in that context, their refusal to upgrade their file system support is pretty shortsighted.
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:4, Interesting)
By far RedHat's biggest failing IMO is the lack of support for ReiserFS - JFS and XFS would be nice for others, but the former is all I really care for. I like having a filesystem that genuinely allows for atomic disk transactions without any noticeable performance hit. But as has already been stated, RedHat aren't interested in supporting it. It's a real shame, but something we have to live with for now.
And they're not supporting it for good reason-- its extended attribute implementation is horrifically broken, and so it won't even mount on an SELinux system. IMHO (and a great many people share the same view), the increased security from SELinux is more important than the slight speed gain, especially at the expense of much higher CPU usage.
In RHEL 3 you could have (at least) JFS (Score:2)
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:1)
RedHat is the new Sun Micro.
Red Hat is lacking a significant hardware division. Red Hat is more like the new Microsoft, but smells nicer and doesn't require first born children in the contract.
Re:The Relevancy of RedHat (Score:3, Informative)
Not getting the 'Enterprise' word: (Score:1)
Compared to . . .? (Score:3, Insightful)
From the article:
I guess they aren't comparing release cycles with Debian . . . maybe Longhorn?
All joking aside, I think RHEL isn't so much competing with other Linux distro's as with Windows. RedHat is trying to offer a choice to companies that are considering the jump away from MS: AS and ES for server machines and WS for workstations, solid support. I haven't used RH in a while, but I hear RPM hell isn't the "killer" app it used to be. Sounds like it's good competition for Windows.
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:1)
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2)
I find most people who've never done large scale administration highly overestimate the value of new versions. Especially when there's the option of a stable platform with all the relevent security updates.
Most businesses I've dealt with are prone to be lax with regards to s
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:4, Insightful)
I personally can't make much sense in using commercial distros for replacing Windows in a small / medium enterprise market - much easier to sell is free (as in beer) OS. Plus, FC3 does the job well on a server and on a client side - it's been rock solid for my needs (file, print, squid, email mostly).
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd bet Linux has a single-digit percentage share in financial institutions behind mainframes and Solaris/HPUX/AIX. What is the basis for your so confidently stated statement? Even that Omaha bank article that re-surfaced recently had their IT people saying they would have stayed with Sun if Sun's current product line up were available a couple of years ago.
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2)
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2)
Do they actually execute trades on Linux? IIRC, the Chicago exchange was using Linux on the web servers and still had a mainframe-like system actually pushing the money. Saying an exchange is "running Red Hat" implies more than it means, IMO. Linux is very appropriate for web servers and app servers, but I would hope machines running billions of dollars in trades would be five-nines all the way.
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2)
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not at all. RedHat is very happy staying in the "Enterprise Unix" niche -- J2EE, financial applications, Unix, Oracle. They're stealing business like mad from UNIX/RISC companies and barely acknowledge Microsoft. Who needs Main Street when you have Wall Street?
RedHat has done almost nothing to compete in the "LAN" or Windows server market -- file & print, directory services, groupware, RAD apps -- they've simply got no an
Re:Compared to . . .? (Score:2)
Call me when... (Score:1, Insightful)
-Xen or virtualization solution like VMWare, Virtual Server, Solaris Zones
-Fair Share Scheduler like in Solaris
-Better management tools with better documentation, particularly GUI tools to displace Windows installs
RedHat needs to integrate/clone/whatever the following solutions:
-A fully supported Samba + LDAP solution like IDEALX, to eliminate the need for MS ActiveDisease
-A mail/groupware solution with a client (suggest latchin
Re:Call me when... (Score:3, Informative)
-Xen or virtualization solution like VMWare, Virtual Server, Solaris Zones
Excuse me? We're using VMware Workstation here, running on a Fedora Core 2 host.
Do your homework and read the specs [vmware.com]. VMware has been running on Linux since ancient versions.
Re:Call me when... (Score:2)
One thing to note is that Xen and Solaris Containers are both free. Solaris 10 doesn't run Windows binaries like VMWare would, but Sun claims it will run Linux Standard Base and Solaris binaries side-by-side.
Re:Call me when... (Score:1)
Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:5, Interesting)
fukig FreeBSD (Score:1, Troll)
I'd say about 8 times out of 10, if it'll run on Linux, it'll run on FreeBSD. Nothing to do with "fucking hell." It's actually quite nice to use. Postfix rocks and can replace sendmail with probably less than 25 keystrokes.
Motherfucking Windows is 100x more suitible than fukig FreeBSD for thes
Re:fukig FreeBSD (Score:2)
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
I'm sure RHEL is nice and everything. I'm sure RH has changed since using it back at version 7 or so, but FreeBSD is just so refreshing to use. The RPMs were a huge hassle and configuration was just kludgy. I just have a few FreeBSD machines myself, and run a small hosting biz. It's nothing but a joy to use.
The comment was somewhat trollish, but I guess that was intentional. Anybody clicking on "the Red Hat article" might come across my link and check it out.
Commercial supporter
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:4, Insightful)
What does red hat do to make that same kernel so much more stable than kernel.org? If an application is screwing things over, logical step is to drop it.
RedHat does the kind of stress testing using common usage patterns and edge cases, and on a scale that loosely organised volunteers currently don't. I'm not saying that Debian (for example) couldn't come up with a project that does this kind of thing, but this is the area that RHEL appeals to (non-pointy haired) bosses.
The conservative release cycles of RHEL are because the users can't afford the downtime required by the frequency of Fedora upgrades (and Gentoo is a non-starter for enterprise users unless you're a masochist who likes getting ragged on by your boss when the system crawls during an emerge).
Well that's f*cked off the Debian and Gentoo amateurs ...
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:1)
In the case of Gentoo, though, you have the same reply to "It's the kernel. What does red hat do to make that same kernel so much more stable than kernel.org?" Gentoo provides several patched kernels in addition to the vanilla kernel, with gentoo-sources the norm. Pretty much all distributions do the same. (I forget what the stock Debian kernel is.)
So, yes, an RHEL kernel is a very different thing than a kernel.org release.
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
To reply to both people saying they would compile for Gentoo servers elsewhere, it's still a pain in the arse. I don't have the time to compile my own packages, and I don't see any signed and checksummed packages for Gentoo from sources I can trust. I want to be able to install a set of packages that I am confident have been well tested on a base operating system that doesn't differ from my own. RHEL is a win here, because the slow release cycles are partly down to a thorough QA process. I'm also more confi
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:3, Interesting)
It's the kernel. What does red hat do to make that same kernel so much more stable than kernel.org?
Red Hat properly tests the kernel and patches problems they find. Also, they add features which may be too intrusive for a stable kernel. Not because of code stability (as in: crashiness), but as in interface stability. But it's mostly the far better QA. Sane people don't run vanilla kernels on their production servers.
If an application is screwing things over, logical step is to drop it.
Now that's a i
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:3, Informative)
Wherever there is a demand for paid support, you'll find plenty of people and businesses willing to provide it. http://www.debian.org/consultants/ [debian.org]
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
As opposed to RedHat, which shipped several major releases with broken package management [redhat.com]?
Tell me, does RHEL3 let you run emacs-nox without X yet?
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
Both Slackware and Debian have consistantly been more reliable than RedHat. For that matter, so has SuSe.
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Seriously, if you have to be a self-important elitist, perhaps you should just shut the fuck up.
Asshole.
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:2)
The hope is that Red Hat is driven by the same blood curdling fear of disaster to thoroughly test every release that drives sysadmins to want to spend 4x as much and set up every server with dual redundant power supplies and battery backed hot swap scsi drives in a raid 1 or raid 5. If someone is badly bitten by an "enterprise" distribution they'd be more apt to let everyone know.
But for the most part, when it works it works, no matter what distribution. Alwa
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:3, Interesting)
since RHEL 4.0 is based on fedora core 3, the kernel in RHEL 4.0 will be almost mainline.
Re:Just to head off the kiddies.... (Score:1)
I think it's still premature (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally, I have been using Fedora Core 3 (on which RHEL 4 is apparently based) for several months now, and I'm seriously considering downgrading to a more mature release the next time I replace my hard drives, and then just installing piecemeal upgrades of various applications as needed. Most of my trouble with the 2.6.x kernel comes from poor driver support: I haven't had accelerated 3D graphics or been able to record CD-R's since upgrading, VMware takes at least ten seconds to set up its dynamic virtual device nodes every time the system boots, and I recently discovered that the driver for the RAID controller I was going to buy has had some serious stability problems (NOT good for a RAID array!).
The company I work for has around twenty licenses for RedHat Enterprise Linux, and I know they're not going to adopt RHEL 4.0 anytime soon. Half of their servers still run RedHat 7.1, due to in-house application stability problems with Apache 2.0 and Perl 5.8. The other servers can't even install anything later than 3.0 update 1, because installs are done over the network and update 2 introduced problems with the ethernet driver our servers use.
As much as I'd like to have leading-edge software and all the latest security patches, as administrator of a network that has to maintain at least 99.5% uptime (and preferably 99.99%), stability is the top priority.
Re:I think it's still premature (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I think it's still premature (Score:2)
errr....
RHEL4 v Fedora3 ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyone know if they fixed this rather serious problem [redhat.com] yet?
Re:RHEL4 v Fedora3 ? (Score:2)
Fedora Legacy has done an okay job at keeping up with some of these, however Red Hat seems a bit more responsive w/ their Enterprise line.
Re:RHEL4 v Fedora3 ? (Score:1, Interesting)
New advanced server, new advanced problems ... (Score:2)
why not get fedora instead (Score:1)
Looks like Fedora Core 3? (Score:1)
Re:Looks like Fedora Core 3? (Score:2)
Most RHEL boxes look like this to their admins:
foo:/root#
Anti-RedHat bias? (Score:3, Interesting)