Re: Transition test report going from CentOS8 to Debian 10.

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On 2/4/21 1:23 PM, Warren Young wrote:
On Feb 4, 2021, at 8:39 AM, Lamar Owen <lowen@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
I posted a pretty complete rundown on the scientific linux users mailing list, so I won't recap it all here.
Link?

Yeah, I forgot to post the link... sorry about that.  Akemi beat me to it, so I'll not repost.  Thanks, Akemi!

the transition was not any more difficult, really, than moving from CentOS 7 to CentOS 8.
That’s not my experience.


I thought long and hard about it before posting to the CentOS lists, because I don't want to be perceived as advocating for a particular transition path.  I am exploring different paths, and I started with my own workstation.  Of course workstation needs are going to be some different than server needs; and thus I posted here to sincerely see others' experiences.  Thanks for the great information!

I keep several of my packages running on CentOS and Debian (and more) and I keep running into several common problems:

1. The package names are often different, and not always differing by an obvious translation rule.  ...


This one I've run across, and yes the package name differences are annoying.  I did some cross-packaging myself back in the day, all on RPM systems, and I had to do special cases for SuSE since the package names are quite different there, too.  Why are they different?  Different naming standards developed at different times by different people with different ideas; I would consider it very odd if different distributions had identical package naming after going through such different paths.   I consider this to be very minor in comparison to other items.

2. Some packages simply won’t be available.  Most often this happens in the Debian → CentOS direction, but I’ve run into cases going the other way. ...


Yes, true.  True going from C7 to C8, too, especially if you rely on third-party repositories for packages.

3. Debian adopted systemd, but it didn’t adopt the rest of the Red Hat userland tooling.  For instance, it’s firewalld on CentOS, UFW on Ubuntu, and raw kernel firewall manipulation on Debian unless you install one of those two.  And then, which?

That one is more serious for the server than the other two, for sure.  If migrating from CentOS I would probably go with firewalld.  I haven't decided yet in my evaluations.  But I put an ACL on the Cisco 7609's here on all server-bound traffic, so not yet an important consideration for me.  But it will be soon enough.

4. Network configuration is almost entirely different unless you turn off all the automation on all platforms, in which case you might as well switch to macOS or FreeBSD for all the good your muscle memory and training will do you.


Again I started with my workstation, and since I chose a GNOME install I got all the NetworkManager tooling; once NM is in control there aren't too many differences.  Red Hat and Debian chose different paths for system configuration information, that much is for sure.  But I try to not EVER use strict muscle memory in a sysadmin role, since that is guaranteed to break on CentOS version upgrades too, and I have too many different systems to rely on muscle memory, although I do find myself using that out of habit.  Constantly doing things differently keeps me sharp, hopefully, at least.  YMMV.

I’m not saying “don’t do it,” but to say it’s as smooth as from CentOS 7 to 8?  Hard sell.

On my workstation with my workload it hasn't so far been that big of a deal and was less of a hassle than what C7 to C8 was; that is my specific workstation and my specific workloads, of course.  I am getting ready to take an older internal server that is on CentOS 6 (yes, I know, EOL etc etc) to Debian 10 as a test; I had planned to take to CentOS 8 in early December, at least until the news hit, causing me to hold it up until I had a better idea of the issues.  I'll know a whole lot more after that is done.


... it’s always *something.*

True that.


I will say that thus far my experience is mostly on the workstation, although I did set up a couple of test servers.  One is an old Dell PE1950; had no issues with the Red Hat-unsupported Dell PERC RAID controller and the C8-removed PCI IDs from the megaraid_sas driver.  The other one is....... well, INTERESTING: for grins and giggles I installed the 32-bit version on an ancient IBM eSeries x330 rocking dual Pentium III-S  1.4GHz Tualatins with a full 4GB of RAM and dual 146GB U320 SCSI drives - maximum performance you'll get from a Pentium III (and almost as good as a much newer 64-bit Netburst-based Xeon at 3.2GHz; Byte Unixbench on the Tualatins at 324.6; on the Noconas 491.4, at over twice the clock speed, too). And it's fun to just be able to say I have one of the most maxxed-out Pentium III-S systems you'll find, at least without overclocking or going past a dually.  YMMV, and you might not think it so much fun, but you'll see my idea of computer fun in my SL-users list post when you get down to the paragraph about the TRS-80 emulators.....



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