Red Hat EL 4.0 Released
diegocgteleline.es writes "As it has been noticed by some news sites, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 has been released. RedHat's web site doesn't seem to have any reference, but with Red Hat being probably the most used distro in the enterprise and featuring for first time a 2.6 kernel, this is a major milestone for linux in the server arena. There're already some reviews."
I hate to disappoint you, but Linux 2.6 used in RedHat 4 enterprise distributions hardly makes it a major milestone in the Linux server arena. Enterprise Linux distributions with Linux 2.6 kernel is not exactly a ground breaking thing. SUSE LINUX Enterprise 9 featuring Linux 2.6 was released many months ago. Also the 2.4 kernel used in the 3 series of RedHat enterprise distributions isn't quite vanilla 2.4. It contains already many, many features backported from Linux 2.6.
1) Fedora-like desktop. Of particular note: memory keys are auto-mounted thanks to dbus/HAL support and udev
2) Ability to use selinux MAC and auditing
3) New versions of OO, gimp, gtk, moz out of thje box...
4) Aaaand... there's not much else that stands out. Most stuff that works on 3 will work on 4 and vice versa, maybe requiring a SRPM re-build. It looks pretty much the same, still bluecurve with some tweaks. Not that it doesn't look good.
THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
*looks down*
.spec file is supposed to look, and payin' through the nose for it, my business is already one step ahead a your'in.
*smiles*
*shakes head*
Ol' Red Hat. Heh. Didn't know people were still usin' it.
*low whistle*
I remember that one time my RPM database got wedged in the middle of a critical glibc upgrade. Let me tell you, them admins didn't like being paged at 4 in the AM. But that's how it was with ol' Red Hat.
And that time I tried to install a customized version of PHP. I just wanted to change one little line in the config for a client. But I had to hunt down and install 12 different devel RPMs first. I didn't want no ODBC, but I had to compile it anyway. Then when I was done, it turned out I downloaded some with security holes. Why couldn't they just put all latest RPMs in a single directory so I could download them easy? That's how it was, with ol' Red Hat.
*looks whistfully into the distance*
*Yup, ol Red Hat. Wonder how she's doin' now. But don't get me wrong, it's over between us. We had some fun. But when her ass started gettin' big and she refused to go on a diet, and she still wore those ol' 1970's style hats when she new it looked stupid, well, that's when it was time to move on. I got a new love now. She does whatever I want and doesn't fight back. But that don't mean she ain't strong. Nooo sir. She just wants the same things I like. Stability. Ease of use. Flexibility. Ain't never seen a distro bend like she can. Whew!
What's that? No I ain't tellin' her name. I figgur, long as you're over there with Red Hat running PostgreSQL 5.0, kernel 2.2, and whatever else, trying to figure out how the heck a
Well, nice talkin' with you son. I best be movin' along. This ol' back a' mine don't take well to settin' still.
Now, I am not trying to start a flamewar here, but how relevant is RedHat anymore these days?
Now, don't get me wrong, I used it for a long time, and I'm sure we all did. However, Redhat fell behind the times a few years ago, and many of us moved on to bigger and better things. ie. Fedora, Xandros, Debian, Mepis, Knoppix, etc.
So how relevant would you say Redhat is the Linux distro wars of this day and age?
From the article:
I guess they aren't comparing release cycles with Debian . . . maybe Longhorn?
All joking aside, I think RHEL isn't so much competing with other Linux distro's as with Windows. RedHat is trying to offer a choice to companies that are considering the jump away from MS: AS and ES for server machines and WS for workstations, solid support. I haven't used RH in a while, but I hear RPM hell isn't the "killer" app it used to be. Sounds like it's good competition for Windows.
Don't save Windows XP! http://www.petitiononline.com/jjw1xp/petition.html
I'm no Solaris or Windows fan per se, but RHEL is still missing a few things:
-Xen or virtualization solution like VMWare, Virtual Server, Solaris Zones
-Fair Share Scheduler like in Solaris
-Better management tools with better documentation, particularly GUI tools to displace Windows installs
RedHat needs to integrate/clone/whatever the following solutions:
-A fully supported Samba + LDAP solution like IDEALX, to eliminate the need for MS ActiveDisease
-A mail/groupware solution with a client (suggest latching onto Mozilla project) to displace the killer MS Exchange+Oultook combo and Lotues Notes.
Don't get me wrong RHEL is a very good product given its age, but it could be better that's all.
If they can do the above in the next 12-18 months RedHat will be a serious contender...
- Do you have 5+ years of sysadmin experience?
- Do you have 100+ users?
- Do you have 10+ machines?
- Do you have to support enterprise applications?
Seriously, if you can't answer "yes" to all four questions, perhaps you should just keep your opinions to yourselves. The other distros are great for your mommy's basement, but in the enterprise, there are serious support/stability issues to consider.Is this as bloated and slow as FC3?
I realize that Enterprise Linux is geared toward a narrower market of server-class computers than the multitude of desktop PC's, but it seems like they still need some bugs worked out.
Personally, I have been using Fedora Core 3 (on which RHEL 4 is apparently based) for several months now, and I'm seriously considering downgrading to a more mature release the next time I replace my hard drives, and then just installing piecemeal upgrades of various applications as needed. Most of my trouble with the 2.6.x kernel comes from poor driver support: I haven't had accelerated 3D graphics or been able to record CD-R's since upgrading, VMware takes at least ten seconds to set up its dynamic virtual device nodes every time the system boots, and I recently discovered that the driver for the RAID controller I was going to buy has had some serious stability problems (NOT good for a RAID array!).
The company I work for has around twenty licenses for RedHat Enterprise Linux, and I know they're not going to adopt RHEL 4.0 anytime soon. Half of their servers still run RedHat 7.1, due to in-house application stability problems with Apache 2.0 and Perl 5.8. The other servers can't even install anything later than 3.0 update 1, because installs are done over the network and update 2 introduced problems with the ethernet driver our servers use.
As much as I'd like to have leading-edge software and all the latest security patches, as administrator of a network that has to maintain at least 99.5% uptime (and preferably 99.99%), stability is the top priority.
... Oracle, applicaiton servers, messenging or any of the other shite that goes into enterprise applications. What in fucking hell are you going to do with it, run flaming fagot shite like fucking sendmail? ...
I'd say about 8 times out of 10, if it'll run on Linux, it'll run on FreeBSD. Nothing to do with "fucking hell." It's actually quite nice to use. Postfix rocks and can replace sendmail with probably less than 25 keystrokes.
Motherfucking Windows is 100x more suitible than fukig FreeBSD for these apps.
You got the first part of your sentance right; "100x" I'd say is a stretch. Thank you for your comments though.
Coward.
Anyone know if they fixed this rather serious problem yet?
RHEL 4 , not RHEL 4.0
Really, RHAS/RHEL distros were the ones i spent most of my time just making it work properly. Who knows, maybe it's just because i expected too much from them ...
i hate to say this but i prefer fedora over redhat, though same company but still the basic functions is the same.
anything is made affordable...
rpm --import http://freshrpms.net/packages/RPM-GPG-KEY.txtm -i http://ftp.freshrpms.net/pub/freshrpms/fedora/linu x/3/freshrpms-release/freshrpms-release-1-1.fc.fr. noarch.rpm
rp
yum install mplayer
7+ year sysadmin AND watching WMV porno.
And while the Nvidia accelerated drivers work fine, I don't run Half Life. I use that for q3a + mods.
THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
You needed to install the kernel-unsupported RPMs from the (4th?) disc. It didn't show you it in the install because they didn't to encourage anybody to use something they couldn't support as easily. But if you wanted it you could have it. They even provided the user space tools by default (jfs-utils).
THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
SuSE has in its favor [?] the confusion to be made with System Update Service for Windows.
Adding to the confusion, SuSE is in some camps a reasonable way to update Windows:)
"Provided by the management for your protection."
I wonder if RHEL 4 looks like Fedora Core 3?
Redhat Enterprise 3.0 went thru 5 major updates in a span of 1 year. Doesn't that defeat the purpose of the enterprise edition.
Why does the enterprise version, which is marketed to be stable and rarely changing, have more updates than the Fedora set? It makes zero sense.
> As I HATE upgrading Linux boxes for fear of messing them up, and ive laready gotten the 2.6 kernal on my RHEL 3 machine, what benefit does this have?
Speaking as someone forced to admin RHEL 3 without provisioning credits (it's politics and bureacracy, not money), what did you have to do to get kernel 2.6 on it, did you have any problems with it, and could I bum the RPMs off of you? I have a SuSE 9 box right next to it on identical hardware, and it's blowing the doors off the RH box (some of it has to do with them installing ext3 on the RH box instead of xfs, but that's not the whole story).
I'm relying on openpkg to run non-core packages, but it's hardly a great solution.
I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
If you're not an amateur, and deploy Gentoo in the enterprise, then I seriously doubt you'd be compiling packages on the same server your boss relies on. Better to build binary packages on a central server and distribute them from there.
But hey, if you had any experience with this, you'd know that, right?
I run a tight shop and when WebSphere doesn't play ball on a production server for some reason I need to know that, as a last resort, I can scream at someone. Preferrably both the app and os people.
I haven't needed phone support yet, but if I did, I could go that route. And the clients like that. If they like it, it's successful.
So long, michael. Don't let the door hit you...
RHEL is the leading enterprise Linux distribution and RHEL 4 release is a _big_ news for most RHEL users but somehow Slashdot editors didn't deem it to be important enough to put the story on the slashdot front page. Coincidence? I think not..
PS: I'm waiting for White Box to clone the new release. ;)
Consumer systems, eh?!? Running slow? Hit it with AdAware and Spybot to clear the infection. Then stick some more RAM in the system so that big ol' Oracle DB doesn't swap so much...
Many IT reviews online are disappointed with the late release by Red Hat of an Enterprise Linux based on the 2.6 Kernel. I disagree with their views, Red Hat has done a lot to it's previous release running on the 2.4 kernel to make it stable, performant and has back-ported quiet a lot of interesting 2.6 features. Enterprise want stable systems above all, and they do not want to change their installed base to often (just look at how many Windows NT 4.0 servers there still are out there in companies, while SP1 for Windows Server 2003 is just around the corner).
One surprising testament to this slow upgrade-cycle is that Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 will have a seven year support cycle. That's two years more than RHEL3, and way longer than other operating systems. And this is a customer request.
What I'm looking forward in RHEL4 is LVM2, Larger filesystem support (1TB+), SElinux, e-poll (will provide better support for some commercial applications)