Red Hat Begins Testing Core 5 237
Robert wrote to mention a CBR Online article which reports that Red Hat has begun testing on Fedora Core 5. From the article: "The next version of Raleigh, North Carolina-based Red Hat's enterprise Linux distribution is not scheduled for release until the second half of 2006 but will include stateless Linux and Xen virtualization functionality and improved management capabilities. Fedora Core 5 Release 1 includes updated support for XenSource Inc's open source server virtualization software, as well as new versions of the Gnome and KDE user interfaces, and the final version of the OpenOffice.org application suite."
A little clarification? (Score:2)
Re:A little clarification? (Score:2)
Re:A little clarification? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm assuming they just mean the final version of OpenOffice.org 2.0, which had been in testing for quite some time.
Re:A little clarification? (Score:2, Insightful)
skimpy (Score:2)
But more importantly: can someone expound a little on what "stateless Linux" is?
Re:skimpy (Score:5, Informative)
The Stateless Linux project is an OS-wide initiative to ensure that Fedora computers can be set up as replaceable appliances, with no important local state.
For example, a system administrator can set up a network of hundreds of desktop client machines as clones of a master system, and be sure that all of them are kept synchronised whenever he or she updates the master system. We provide several technologies for doing this.
The scope of the project is the entire OS, since we are trying to improve configuration throughout all packages. However, there are some packages which are specific to Stateless Linux:
* readonly-root
* stateless-common
* stateless-client
* stateless-server
Stateless Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Stateless Linux (Score:4, Interesting)
I think Stateless Linux is a great idea. In fact, I think Gnome should be extended so that a session can span several computers where the person logs on to. Then we could couple up distributed computing on top of that and make it part of the Stateless Linux-Gnome system.
Gnome had saved session stuff for a while now... and it all sucks.
What we need more is...
Have you ever used 'screen'? It's a multiplexor for the unix shell. Allows you to open up multiple shell instances on different computers on the same terminal, and then be able to disconnect the shell and still leave everything running on the background. Allows you to move from computer to computer while disconnecting and reconnecting over ssh and such without loosing anything.
It's very handy.
X Windows is a networking protocol. The X Clients are just programs like Firefox, or Nautilus, or Abiword, or any game that runs ontop of your X server, which is simply the program that controls your inputs and monitors and displays the outputs of your X Clients on your local machine.
X Clients can be anywere (once the networking is enabled.. there are certain security considurations with X, which is why networking outside your local computer is disabled by default) on your network.. They can be on your local machine, remote machine, on the internet anywere.. It doesn't matter.
Think of it like your X server is your X Browser and the X clients are like frames or websites on that you interact with. They can be anywere.
What we need is a standard way for X windows to have a thing like 'screen' were you can save your current output and move it to any computer that can handle X windows.
Sun already has this for their excellent X terminals that they sell.
Not only that we need a way to move programs from one X Server to another. You can run multiple X servers on your machine, I do that all the time. I also run X servers on my laptop and other computers that I have aviable.. I should be able to move the a X client from machine to machine, from output device to output device without stopping or restarting any programs.
If you combine that with network-based home directories, some sort of networked sound system, and network authentication and directory system, then you should be able to use any system transparently. It will be roaming desktop.. but on steroids. Not only you could use and have your home enviroment on every single computer in the system.. but also be able to use any program on any computer on this system.
Combine that with clustering capabilities, such as distributed file systems and the ability to migrate not only proccesses from computer to computer, but using Xen moving entire running operating systems from computer to computer.. then we would have a true Network-based operating system.
The entire computer network of a corporation, school, or other orginization will be able to share proccessor, memory, and disk resources transparently. Any part of the system, any computer, would be a plug-n-play system.
You buy a Dell. You format Windows off of it, you plug said Dell into network. Thats it. Thats all it would take to install Linux on it and make it work with the rest of your networked computers.
This is what stateless linux is working for. Stateless linux is the first major step in this direction.
Re:Stateless Linux (Score:3, Informative)
You mean like xmove [debian.org]? Basically xmove starts up a pseudoserver which clients can connect to. At startup clients connecting to the pseudoserver display on the default XServer, but can be moved to any other display on the network.
I agree that a cleaned up easy to use xmove system would be a nice idea though.
Jedidiah.
Re:skimpy (Score:2)
More info (Score:2)
Re:skimpy (Score:2)
It's a rogue Linux out in international waters.
better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:2, Insightful)
Ubuntu detected my wireless
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:5, Informative)
This post brought to you on a Dell D600 running Ubuntu Breezy Badger using WPA.
I'm not down with the Ubuntu terms... (Score:2)
I can't download when I don't have my wireless working. Why isn't WPA_supplicant included by default at the beginning? It's a 50k file! Couldn't cram it onto the CD?
Re:I'm not down with the Ubuntu terms... (Score:3, Informative)
In Synaptic, click Settings / Repositories, click Add, tick the Universe box, click OK. Now search for WPA again and you should see the package. Except if you don't have a working network connection :-(
You'll also notice more packages available: my Synaptic has 17,000+ of them, heh.
but it's a basic networking component (Score:2)
"Sorry, the default install only supports UDP. To get TCP/IP working you need to download TCPIP_suplicant."
WTF?
Re:but it's a basic networking component (Score:2)
so the better alternative is to (Score:3, Insightful)
At the point where the STABLE system does not detect the networking correctly or cannot configure the user should right then and there be able to grab the UNSTABLE stuff which in all likelihood will get their networking to work, albeit unstably.
I'm not a windows lover (Score:3, Insightful)
You think wireless security is optional and call me an idiot?
I think getting networking working is fundamental. And if that means giving the user the option of using an unstable piece of software then that is what must be done.
Re:I'm not a windows lover (Score:2)
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:2)
A few weeks ago I tried out Linux, downloading a couple of distros (Ubuntu and SUSE) that were recommended to me.
I was plesantly surprised that these distros detected the hardware on my Toshiba laptop as well as it did.
Except for the wireless card (a Linkyss WPC54G), since I wasn't about to run a cat5 cable across the apartment for an laptop.
So I rebooted into Windows, saved to a flash drive all the instructions and files I supposedly needed to get wireless wo
most wireless security FAQ/checklists (Score:2)
1) Change the default SSID on your router.
2) Change the default password on your router.
3) Turn off SSID broadcasting.
4) Enable encryption.
And usually under step 4 in parens is (WEP encryption is insecure and susceptible to hacks/attacks/whatever. WPA is better. Use WPA).
I don't know why WPA is better than WEP. Maybe it isn't. But I'm just doing what the checklist says, because I don't want my connection to be compromised. That is why I want to use WPA rather than WEP.
Re:most wireless security FAQ/checklists (Score:2)
Pointless - no increased security here, move along.
Re:most wireless security FAQ/checklists (Score:2)
Re:most wireless security FAQ/checklists (Score:2)
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:3, Insightful)
I didn't expect it to do everything (Score:2)
Shouldn't getting a network up be somewhat high on the list of things a linux system should do automagically at the very beginning? If you don't have the networking then a user is plain dead in the water so far as grabbing updates to get other things working.
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:2)
Does NetworkManager still do caching DNS (either builtin or using nscd)? Last time I tried using NetworkManager DNS was too slow. I like the interface it provides for configuring wireless, but I just couldn't handle the slow DNS.
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:2)
I tried to install FC-4 on my laptop USB HD without success, first tried booting from CD, but FC would not recognize the USB disk.
Then installed using VMWare (which only made FC see my USB disk as a normal HD) using a persistent native disk config. After that tried to boot from the USB disk and it was almost done until I got a FC kernel panic because it didnt find the USB disk (WTF i had just booted from there lol).
Anyway, I got Mandriva 2006 and installed flawlesly from the D
Fedora FTP Installs - Think about this? (Score:2)
Here is what I do.
1) install say FC4 on a server box. Select EVERYTHING.
2) then setup a cron job to do a daily "yum update". Add some log
forget games, OpenBSD does this I think (Score:2)
I don't even think you understood what I said. What are you talking about copying all sorts of junk to a server?
You get a Boot ISO. You boot from it. You choose FTP install. As it exists now you type in some server that you copied down the info for from the mirror list that you grabbed from the web page with mirrors on it.
What I would like to see is simply a list of the mirror sites during the install that I c
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem with the wireless hardware is that:
1. Most of the manufacturers haven't released any specs so the driver writing has needed lots of reverse engineering.
2. Much of the hardware has gone through rapid development cycles, meaning that by the time the drivers are available you probably can't get the hardware anymore.
3. Linked with (2), many of the manufacturers sell their updated revisions under the same name, model number and even FCCID in some cases, even though the new revision is *completely* incompatable with the old revision, so you may end up researching which hardware will work only to find that when you buy that hardware is is an incompatable revision.
4. Most cards require uploadable firmware which the manufacturers won't release under good licences so can't be shipped with most linux distributions as standard so you have to download it yourself.
The Prism54 drivers are a good example of (2) and (3) - the drivers were of good quality but by the time they made it into the stock kernel Intersil had stopped making the supported chipset and had replaced it with a completely incompatable SoftMAC based chipset. A number of the manufacturers, such as SMC, released the cards using the SoftMAC chipset under the same name and model number as the old ones and it was nigh on impossible to know which version you were going to end up with because even the retailers didn't know there were 2 incompatable versions of the same card.
I understand that the new Prism54 drivers now support the SoftMAC chipsets so maybe I'll fetch the incompatable SMC card I ended up with off the shelf. Interestingly, the Prism54 website says they're working on an open GPL firmware and I hope they succeed in producing it as that means we can at last have some hardware *completely* supported by a vanilla kernel. Having GPLed firmware also opens up some possibilities for new uses for the hardware since interested parties can hack the firmware to do strange new things (enhanced Mesh networking, etc?)
Speaking from experience of setting up supported Prism54 802.11g cards under both Fedora 3 and 4, it's simply a case of grabbing the firmware and sticking it in the right place and then it Just Works - you can't get a lot easier than that unless the distributor breaks the firmware licence and bundles the firmware illegally.
The last time I installed Fedora Core 4 off a boot CD I was amazed that to do an ftp install I still had to punch in manually what mirror I wanted to do the install from. Computer games have been grabbing "master server lists" for some time now. Can't something similar be worked into the FTP install?
Maybe you don't want to install off one of the official mirrors?
Re:better wireless hopefully... and install... (Score:2)
Yes, "miserable fucks" is a good description (although I doubt burning them down is a good solution...). There's an (heroic, in my opinion) effort [sourceforge.net] to create drivers by reverse-engineering those used in Linux/MIPS-based routers via a cleanroom design.
that's just a sad excuse and you know it (Score:2)
Re:that's just a sad excuse and you know it (Score:2)
The latest official stable RedHat supported distribution (RHEL 4) was released on Feb 15th 2005.
The latest stable Fedora Core release (Fedora Core 4) was released on 13th June 2005.
What point are you trying to make please?
I'm not a programmer (Score:2)
And read up a few threads. This totally validates my point. What is it STABLE and usable? Or unstable and unusable? People are trying to have it both ways.
Re:I'm not a programmer (Score:2)
Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:5, Interesting)
"that is crap use this"
Don't these people realize that no solutions fits every situation? It blows the mind.
Anyway, I love Fedora Core. I use it on my desktop at work, Running FC 4 right now. Stable as can be, gives me the tools I need. See, I'm a system administrator. I have about 7 RHEL systems under my administration that I personally over see. Fedora Core allows me to see what will soon be included in RHEL and get familiar with it.
Why Redhat? If you have to ask, you don't know linux or open source. They contribute millions of dollars to opensource and to linux development. Sure they're making a buck off support and I'm glad to pay it, in return I get a rock solid OS that is guarenteed to be there in 7 years. Oh, and Redhat seems to be doing pretty good finacially too, as seen on Slashdot here recently.
http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/11/15
I just don't understand why they are upbraided for that. They're just trying to make a living at linux, same as me. I mean, if you don't want to pay, RH has even allowed (by the GPL) others to make almost identical OS (CentOS), only thing missing is the shadowman.
I can't wait for FC5 to go live, I'll be upgrading.
Re:Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:4, Insightful)
All they said was that they wer eno longer interested in trying to support mom and pop with redhat. There is nothing wrong with that. They didn't take anything away from you, you still have fedora core.
If you want EL without paying for it there is centos and others too.
Red Hat is in the support business. When you pay for RHEL you are paying for support and in order for them to deliver credible support they have to have a known good quantity to support. RHEL is simply a support package against a known good snapshot of Fedora Core.
By the way if you think that when you buy windows XP MS will answer all your questions for five years you are in for a big surprise.
Re:Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:3, Informative)
also, rhel is $349 [redhat.com]. not $500+. and for what you pay, you get miles better support SLA than microsoft.
Re:Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:3, Informative)
from the redhat web pages (which you might actually bother reading sometime before making claims which are easily refuted):
basic edition:
Web support: 1 year Installation & Basic configuration
Phone support: 30 days Installation and Basic configuration
Scope of coverage: 30 days telephone / 1-year web Installation and Basic configuration
Re:Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:2)
I really wouldn't mind sending money in Red Hat's direction, except that I'd never be able to justify it nowadays. They charge too much for something I already get for
100% FUD (Score:4, Insightful)
http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/ [redhat.com] http://sources.redhat.com/redboot/ [redhat.com] http://sourceware.org/jffs2/ [sourceware.org] http://cygwin.com/ [cygwin.com] http://people.redhat.com/mingo/exec-shield/ [redhat.com] http://sourceware.org/insight/ [sourceware.org] http://sourceware.org/cluster/ [sourceware.org] http://sourceware.org/systemtap/ [sourceware.org]
and don't forget ext3 is largely bankrolled by redhat.
there's lots more. just because you're unaware of it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
why don't you ask them?
why don't you ask them?
yes. sure, redhat employs kernel devs like alan, ingo and arjen. redhat also pays to employ gcc and gdb developers. and others.
yep.
really? who wrote rpm then? should you not then lambast mandrake and suse for using rpm, because they didn't write it?
sure there are legitimate gripes about fedora. that's no reason to make stuff up.
Re:100% FUD (Score:4, Informative)
so I guess debian, gentoo, and all the other distros are just as much "at fault" or "to blame" as redhat?
or are you saying debian and gentoo or any other distro has individually contributed more money and software to open source than redhat?
redhat has employed many opensource developers for about 10 years now. it's not hard to see how that could ring up into $millions$.
like i said, just because you're unaware of something doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
Re:100% FUD (Score:3, Interesting)
You're right, of course. And I'm sorry I went off in that last post.
But, you gotta understand my perspective. I was deep into the small-business webhosting business when the redhat swing went down. There was no way out. At that time, there were "other" linux distros, but other mainly consisted of Mandrake (which was falling off the map, despite bein based on RH), Debian (which most people considered a fringe distro), and slackware (outdated and hard to administer, at least when time-to-learn is a factor
Re:Congrats Fedora Core Team! (Score:2)
Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:3, Informative)
"improved management capabilities" I can cope with, but "stateless Linux and Xen virtualization functionality" and "open source server virtualization software" are worthy of the worst type of social science academic paper or local government policy document!
Re:Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:3, Informative)
here I'll even link you, www.google.com [google.com].
If you're technically literate enough to read slashdot you should know that google is your friend. I promise you that the first documents for search terms 'xen virtualization' and 'stateless linux' are very useful.
Re:Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:3, Funny)
Clue : If you're reading a tech news site with a leaning to Linux, it'll probably help to have some idea of the latest major developments in technology, as they relate to Linux. If you don't know what Xen is, or what a virtual server is, it's not as if it's hard to find out [wikipedia.org]
Re:Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:2)
Oh, well, if the site is only intended to preach to the converted then that's fair enough of course. I was somehow under the mistaken impression that, as someone who is paid to work on Windows more often than I am paid to work on Linux, the site could be useful for me to keep up to date with "the latest major developments in technolo
Re:Any chance of an English translation of this?? (Score:2)
Virtualization has been talk
Will OpenOffice be faster? (Score:2)
Re:Will OpenOffice be faster? (Score:2)
Re:Will OpenOffice be faster? (Score:2)
You can hide the load time by running /usr/lib/openoffice.org2.0/program/soffice -nodefault -nologo. I have a perlscript running that restarts this after exiting OOo. This cuts the subsequent load time to almost nothing.
Final Version? (Score:2, Informative)
Did I miss some news? Have they actually stopped development of Open Office?
FC3 - FC4 - FC5 (Score:2)
Every other one... (Score:3, Interesting)
I started on RH 5.1. Briefly hit 6.2 on the way to 7.x. Still have a number of servers running 7.x.
Never touched 8.x, and was moving into 9 when RedHat EOL'd their "RedHat Linux" product.
Now, I'm using CentOS for most of my (smaller) servers, and Fedora for personal use. I used Fedora Core 1, never touched Core 2, now happy on Core 3. Haven't touched 4, but am considering 5.
Why upgrade on each one, unless there's some OMFG Do0d feature you just gotta have...
Xen Poised to Take the World By Storm (Score:3, Interesting)
They should be farther along (Score:4, Informative)
"Produce robust releases approximately 2-3 times per year, using a time-based release model: A time for a feature freeze is set in advance, and an expected schedule for test releases is produced before the feature freeze date. (Important feature schedules will be taken into account when setting the schedule for Fedora Core releases.)"
http://fedora.redhat.com/about/objectives.html [redhat.com]
Re:They should be farther along (Score:4, Informative)
The most irritating thing about FC5 is the long wait... they've decided to leave ~9 months for it. The problem is that there are parts of GTK that have, over the last few months, *FINALLY* been optimized by someone who knows what they are doing -- and they are now dramatically faster (this is quite apart from the other massive optimization efforts for speed and memory going on in GNOME right now). All Fedora users are going to have to wait until the second half of 2006 before we see these improvements... and believe me when I tell you that GNOME/GTK desperately needs them.
It doesn't look like they will be backported, so it's GTK2.8 and the next version of GNOME... which means FC5... which means 9 months wait for something that's very badly needed.
Re:They should be farther along (Score:3, Informative)
You're talking about Federico's profiling effort against the GTK file chooser? Yep, he's doing some [ximian.com] good [ximian.com] stuff [ximian.com].
Re:They should be farther along (Score:4, Informative)
??? Now, where did you hear that stupidity?
Reasons for delay are:
- Trusted X (SELinux based X11)
- Xen integration
- Free Java replacement
- Live CD
- RHDS integration
- Actualy trimming setup to 1 or 2 CD-s
- Boot speedup
- New sound server
- Library deprecation
Here is Wiki about it for you to get your facts straight
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FC5Future [fedoraproject.org]
This are all too big plans for them to keep at 6month release. That is why this was changed to 9 months not GTK. GTK being speed up is just one of additional features that coincides with FC5 timing, not the reason.
Re:They should be farther along (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:They should be farther along (Score:3, Insightful)
You are Misinformed (Score:2)
FC5 final release is currently scheduled for late February. It may be delayed a week or two in order to get GNOME 2.12 into the release.
Thanks,
Warren Togami
wtogami@redhat.com
Re:They should be farther along (Score:2)
Re:5? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:5? (Score:2)
Think of these as public betas between official releases.
Re:5? (Score:5, Funny)
Redhat got up to 9, and had to reset the counter with Fedora Core. The next step is to build your version numbers up again (since point releases are passe). Mark my words - once it hits Fedora Core 9, they will rename it to "Fedora NG R1" or something silly like that.
Re:5? (Score:2)
Re:5? (Score:2)
You don't use emacs, do you?
Re:5? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:*cough* Ubuntu (Score:3, Informative)
Re:*cough* Ubuntu (Score:2)
Windows NT 3.0 = Windows NT 1.0
Windows NT 3.5 = Windows NT 1.5
Windows NT 4.0 = Windows NT 2.0
Windows 2000 = Windows NT 3.0
Windows Server 2003 = Windows NT 3.5
Oh well, sorry for rambling on.
Re:*cough* Ubuntu (Score:2)
IIRC, It was Windows version 3 (after Windows 1.0 and 2.0). The NT referred to New Technology (meaning non-DOS based kernel). So the naming did kinda make sense. You could get Windows 3 as layer above DOS or you could Windows 3 with NT kernel. Plus the kernel version starts at 3 for NT. Windows 2000 reports as NT kernel 5.0 and XP reports as 5.1.
Re:*cough* Ubuntu (Score:2)
They wanted to start with version 3 because they already had Windows 3.0 on the market and they didn't want people to think this was older, or inferior. However, Windows NT 3 is the first version of Windows NT. It's not just "Windows 3 on NT Kernel" because it was not compatible with a large number of Windows 3.0/3.1 apps and almost no DOS apps. Windows 3.0 was a 100% 16-bit OS, and Windows NT 3 was a completely different and new 32-bit OS. Sure, it looked
Re:*cough* Ubuntu (Score:2)
The first version of Windows NT was badged at NT 3.1 presumably for marketing reasons - so the suits would see the two as interchangeable.
Re:Off to Debian (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Off to Debian (Score:2)
Has that always been true? I thought FC1 / FC2 used up2date be default. I could be wrong.
I would be happy paying RH a one-time fee per box, assuming we get free security updates.
Re:Off to Debian (Score:2)
Re:Off to Debian (Score:3, Informative)
-Erwos
Re:Mature? (Score:5, Informative)
As someone who has used FC in production, I can attest to the its stability.
Not in my experience. (Score:2)
One client had an existing Debian setup on fairly common PC hardware. They wanted to transition to FC4, after hearing about how great it was. So I attempted to install it on one of their experimental servers. The installer started bitching about corrupt packages. I assumed at first that I had gotten bad images, so I downloaded the images from another mirror onto another computer (in order to use
Re:Not in my experience. (Score:2)
I had been expecting FC4 to work. Of course, when I ran into those problems my reaction was to not use it, just because the quality was so lacking. Had you read my post, you would have seen that we found these problems while testing the viability of Fedora Core. Indeed, Fedora made it nowhere near their production systems.
As for yo
Re:Not in my experience. (Score:2)
You should have read my post. (Score:2)
So, had you read my post, you would have seen I downloaded them again. I did that on a completely different computer than I used for the first set of downloads and CD burns. The second set of downloads were from a different mirror, and hard drive they were stored to the second time around was different, and the CD writer used to burn them was different. I even went out of my way to select a different brand of CDs, thinking that might be the problem. The downloaded images checksumm
I'm not the only one! (Score:2)
http://groups.google.com/group/linux.redhat/browse _frm/thread/6f2c0e2a969d5929/ [google.com]
http://groups.google.com/group/linux.redhat.instal l/browse_frm/thread/b359bb48f7c60017/ [google.com]
http://groups.google.com/group/linux.redhat/browse _frm/thread/c53d572d41d7a1bd/ [google.com]
Note that people have run into similar problems with numerous different releases of FC. There are serious quality problems with Fedora, like it or not.
I though
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
Friends of mine had similar experiences with Fedora, and in that time they converted to Slackware
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
We have about twenty FC3 workstations where I work. Nearly all of them used to be FC2 workstations which were upgraded to FC3.
I had to update the yum configuration, but yum update worked fine afterwards. There were some exceptions (mailman was installed on one box, and the configuration broke, but it was easily fixed.)
I think the issue is that each of us uses the systems differently, installs different custom software, and has different skills for fixing issues. A relat
Re:Mature? (Score:2, Interesting)
I admit it is quite easy to break FC and make it unstable (even inadvertantly). In my experience, unstability has been primarily a result of installing software not packaged properly for FC. For instance, DRI nightlies are tarballs and not well built RPMs, Sun's Java RPMs don't use the
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
Ditto. (Score:2)
In fact, I prefer it over the RH Enterprise stuff, simply because it has been reliable, and it also has the latest set of features, which has saved my butt in being able to get things done. This has happened over and over again. The Fedora folks deserve Kudos for their efforts.
I would also say that the FC releases aren't flawless. But there are always issues with every O.S. release, be it FC, other Linux distros, Windows, O
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
Ah, but life-cycle is different from lifetime. Short life-cycle means you get new versions of the OS quickly, new technology etc. You don't have to update, and indeed you shouldn't if you are running a server. You can run the server on the stable ageing FC install for years if you want because the lifetime can be pretty long. RH addresses security issues and critical bugs even after a newer FC is released (for about a year I think), after which poi
Re:Mature? (Score:2)
It has all the greatest tech before everyone else
These statements are contradictory. Pick one.
But RHEL *is* due second half 2006 (Score:2)
Re:Architecture Migration (Score:2)
You need to change which repository tree you're downloading from, I can't remember exactly the config file (my FC machine is in the shop) but it's something like
2)Is it possible to upgrade the i386 version to the x64 version?
Not to my knowledge, you could attempt to change to the x86_64 repo tree and you might get away with it (the i386 packages are actually the same in both tree
Re:What is XENSOURCE Virtualization ? (Score:4, Informative)
They have Xen kernels in the package list for FC4, and I used them without much difficulty. I thought it was rather nice, I set the virtual machines to auto start upon bootup of the parent kernel. Another nice feature is that virtual machines can be transfered "on the fly" while still running, between different physical hardware on the same subnet.