Folks
I'm sure the Centos team has done a yeoman's job getting Centos7
ready, and that the Redhat team has done marvels in creating rhel7,
but here's a little voice from a personal hobbyist user.
Background:
('ve been maintaining several remote servers since Redhat 6 days,
migrating from that to Whitebox, then Centos, and things have been
running as expected including the current version of Centos6. As an
experiment, I've tried to play with Centos7 on an in-house virtual
machine (VMWare on Win7), and have encountered a collection of
annoyances greater than I've even seen. Below is a note about
them. If someone has some elegant solution, I'd love to try, but
Centos7 is still unusable for me.
1: Firewall changes
The change in firewall technology forced a complete re-do of my
scripts which maintain firewalls, respond to attacks, etc. I think
I've programmed my way around the issues, but it wasn't easy.
2: Apache changes
These were subtle, but again were solved.
3: Service -> systemd
The change from object-oriented view of service: (service httpd
restart) to function-oriented (systemctl restart firewall) seems to
be unnecessary, and counter to the way stuff is generally done in the
modern world. Nonetheless, it was possible to solve that with some
adaptive script programming.
4) Something with Unknown lvalue 'ControlGroup' in section 'Service'
I don't know what to do with this. I constantly get the diagnostic:
[/usr/lib/systemd/system/rtkit-daemon.service:32] Unknown lvalue
'ControlGroup' in section 'Service'
and attempts to browse the internet for solutions come across
barriers that require some paid subscription to view. This is
currently a progress-stopper. The messages I see deal with boinc,
which does not show up on my system using "rpm -qa | grep -i boinc".
5) Sendmail is out, postfix is in.
This is a huge change, since I had lots of scripts that tailored
the Sendmail system for spam protection, dealing with SmartHosts that
required SMTP-AUTH and others required weird configurations,
etc. Whether this is working yet I don't quite know, but it seems
the scripts can accommodate the change.
6) Installation
I have no idea why, when using the net-install, one must explicitly
turn on the network. It seems unnecessary.
7) Lack of 32-bit support
I think I understand this. After all, 32-bit machines may become
"unusable" when the clock overflows, but isn't that a few years away,
and couldn't some solution be found, even if kludgy? Some of the
32-bit hardware was of very high quality, and still runs
perfectly. I'd hate to spend a few hundred dollars each to replace
all those systems.
8) And more
...
I haven't got a server or desktop running to my satisfaction yet, so
I don't yet know what pitfalls await. Any advice would be appreciated.
David in San Francisco
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