david@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (David Siebert) writes: > Well I am kind of stuck using OpenSuse. Not a bad distro and is the one > we use in our office for production work. > I like CentOS myself for database work and tend to use that for test > systems here since I manage them myself. > I was more wondering if someone had made a Postgres centric distro yet. > Sort of FreeNAS, OpenFiler, or what ever the Asterisk distro is called > these days. > Seems like you could build a nice little distro that was database > centric. Maybe use FreeBSD, Solaris, or Centos as the base. > Sort of a plug and play solution. A "pretty minimalist" approach would be... - Install Debian base (~20MB of "install") - Figure out packages needed for PostgreSQL PKGS="postgresql-client-8.3 postgresql-8.3" - Libraries, and such PKGS="${PKGS} libpq5 libdbd-pg-perl" - Some tools PKGS="${PKGS} pgadmin3 pgadmin3-data" - Some useful 3rd party bits PKGS="${PKGS} cfengine2 ntp ssh vim" Then install that... $ apt-get install ${PKGS} That's going to draw in some dependancies, but is still quite, quite minimal, moreso than anything that wasn't *expressly* customized for the purpose. That will, for instance, be *way* smaller than Centos. You could do much the same using ports/openpkg on FreeBSD. -- output = reverse("gro.mca" "@" "enworbbc") http://cbbrowne.com/info/finances.html "Computers are like air conditioners: They stop working properly if you open windows."