Best Linux for server?

SkypeUser

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 8, 2006
Messages
255
Reaction score
0
Location
Who wants to know?
Which Linux distro is the best (i.e. most reliable and most secure) for a backup server and for a firewall?

Your opinions will be appreciated.
 
Disclaimer: Linux n00b input ..not for nothing but if you look at the Linux hosting options from - well, just about everyone, you'll see that the usual platform choice is CentOS.
 
Disclaimer: Linux n00b input ..not for nothing but if you look at the Linux hosting options from - well, just about everyone, you'll see that the usual platform choice is CentOS.

Thats the same distro that Asterisk@home runs on if im not mistaken
 
Another newbie, trying to help:
CentOS (+webmin) works fine for me, as well as for the local boffins I regularly ask for help. They manage *way* more critical networks than the one I have at home - security and backups are very high on their clients' priority lists.
 
Debian Sarge. If you feel a little more adventurous try Debian Etch - it's currently in testing but expected to become the new stable in the next month or so.
 
Hello,
my recommendation is RHEL, but have seen many guys use freebsd for this purpose most of the time.

cheers
 
Curios. Noone has said Ubuntu. Is there a reason?

Ubuntu is more of a desktop or general purpose server distro.

Of course any Linux distro can be configured to one's liking and I run an Ubuntu firewall (Shorewall) but it's not a standard out of the box configuration like IPCop or Smoothwall.
 
Hello w1z4rd:

Centos is also RHEL clone ;). I am managing a full data center on RHEL and it rocks, RHEL for servers is the best option.


cheers.
 
what kind of server? Fileserver/app server/database server?

*EDIT*

Fedora core will probably do for most
 
Last edited:
Fedora Core has proven too many times to be buggy. Fedora is a *development* distro. If you like the Red Hat feel, rather go for CentOS - it's based on RHEL, which in turn is far cleaner than Fedora.
 
If you don't want all the overhead, go for Gentoo.
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X