On Thu, 2007-01-25 at 09:29 -0500, Derek Manson wrote: > Good morning everyone, > > I am seeking some advice on how to move forward with our plans to > integrate Fedora 6 into our network. We are a small town ISP currently > running in an all Windows network. Moving into this new year we are > discovering that our costs to run this type of network is getting very > costly. We are looking to move our entire services to Linux and preferably > Fedora. I have done a bit here and there with Fedora 5 and 6, however, not > to this large of scale. My question is how and where should I be looking > to get a really good understanding of how to operate in Fedora 6? We are > needing to setup a Fedora an email and web solution rather soon. I have > read a number of tutorials, forums and even some published books, I just > need a bit more. Any suggestions? As others have said, RHEL is the way to go. RHEL 5 is schedule to come out in February, so if you really want the latest and greatest waiting for that to come out is also an option. WRT to running the whole network, it will basically be done the same way as you would be doing it with any other Linux distribution. After you've installed Apache/Postfix/Bind (or whatever combination you plan on using), administering the system will really come down to your knowledge of how to administer these individual pieces of software. You should probably have read at least one book for each of these pieces of software. Obviously you'll want to start small (e.g. deploy an all Linux environment in the office first), and scale up. Designing a really scalable architecture can be difficult, so you'll definitely want some help with that. Of course you're welcome to ask the list, but you'll probably also want to do one of the following: 1) Try to hire a really experienced Linux sysadmin 2) Contact Redhat and ask them about what kind of training/support they can offer you In either case, having someone with a lot of expertise will help you immensely, so I strongly encourage you to get someone on board who has done this kind of thing before. Best of luck! -- Evan Klitzke -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list