On 12/20/18 12:19 PM, lejeczek via CentOS wrote:
On 20/12/2018 15:33, mark wrote:
lejeczek via CentOS wrote:
hi guys
I wonder if any Centosian here have done something different than only
contemplated using Fedora Server, actually worked on it in
test/production
envs.
If here are some folks who have done it I want to ask if you deem it to
be a viable option to put it on at least portion of servers stack.
Anybody?
I would not run it as a server. In a server and workstation environment,
you do *not* want to have daily multiple updates to software, you want
stability, or you're likely to have your users seriously aggravated by
you, for breaking their jobs far too frequently.
Spin up a VM or two, for folks who actually (or think they actually)
need
newer software and utility stacks, but use something stable as a base.
mark "I do see how many update's my manager's fedora box gets..."
What I'm really looking forward to - why I thought I'd poke around,
thus that question - is RDP in Wayland.
When it get's into RHELs I worry be ages and I'd really love to try to
introduce Linux desktops to those really dumb and unreformable users.
Everything else - frequent updates, etc. These can be as rare as we
users want them, another extra bit of time to think of it would not
kill me, personally.
Why are we beating ourselves up about updates. I have a couple Win7
systems here and updates are constant. My daughter is often caught not
being able to do her homework as the system is applying updates on
powerup. Or I wake up to my Win7 system running at the login after I
had suspended it the prior day, as some non-sleeping task took advantage
and did a required reboot overnight.
dnf update is now part of the startup and a regular process. Warnings
about needing to reboot, are really no different than what Win users
deal with. Again, my daughter is often clicking on delay autoreboot for
an hour so she can finish her homework (and the other night she got the
BSOD for her efforts).
Also, we all know, what is in those Fedoras(maybe more so when it
comes to "server" variant) is going to end up in our Centoses - why
not help by using/testing those, I ask myself. Especially now with 29
which I suspect might be our Centos main new version.
So I'm thinking.. I'll start mixing that Fedora Server in.
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos