Server Consolidation and The Cloud as well as Appliances go hand by hand, and most of those solution seem to be using Linux.
If you recall an old Story about the early days in Ford, the Car manufacturing giant, they used to say "It does not matter which Ford car color you want to choose, as long as the color is black".
If you recall an old Story about the early days in Ford, the Car manufacturing giant, they used to say "It does not matter which Ford car color you want to choose, as long as the color is black". Later on they changed their mind and now you have more colors to pick from :-) Having said that, there are several major Linux distributions, but right now, let's focus on a very prominent one: Redhat Linux.
Theoretically appliance manufacturers who want to build their cloud applications based on Redhat Linux could choose either Commercial Redhat Enterprise Linux or Oracle Enterprise Linux or the Open Source CentOS. All those distributions share a similar base source, applications and kernel. CentOS is based on the base Commercial Redhat Linux distribution, although it lags a bit the Redhat releases and it does not include support from Redhat. CentOS support is based on the Open Source community. Oracle's offering is takes Redhat's release and adds several major components including kernel and applications as well as patches. Oracle claims that those additions provide better Oracle database performance and better stability in general. I believe Oracle also claims to have larger and better support team.
I am not going to get into the argument referring to the best one to use as a server in your data center. My question is more about: If you were to buy an appliance, and you had the option to choose whether it will be based on either Redhat Enterprise Linux, Oracle Enterprise Linux or CentOS what would you choose and why. Here are several key points related to those distros:
1. Redhat and Oracle require a license fee, it could be separate or embedded in the appliance pricing.
2. The official Redhat and Oracle prices differ
3. Reahat and Oracle will do their best to integrate their release with their system management and other products, while CentOS should be focused on the basic Linux functionality.
There are other factors as well and I'd love to hear what see as such. But in general it looks like choosing CentOS is a very good option...
1. Price is good (free) - and so you as the Appliance's customer, can pay less for the appliance
2. You get the basic features you need as the basis for the appliance: less code, less bugs, bigger stability
3. You are not locked to a specific vendor
4. You probably have more people trying out the system and debugging it, since many will choose the free offering
5. Even if you are heavily invested in Redhat or Oracle's Linux, since you want the appliance do its job, you don't really care what base operating system is used for the appliance
So what's you take on this question regarding The Cloud and Server Consolidation ?
If you recall an old Story about the early days in Ford, the Car manufacturing giant, they used to say "It does not matter which Ford car color you want to choose, as long as the color is black".
If you recall an old Story about the early days in Ford, the Car manufacturing giant, they used to say "It does not matter which Ford car color you want to choose, as long as the color is black". Later on they changed their mind and now you have more colors to pick from :-) Having said that, there are several major Linux distributions, but right now, let's focus on a very prominent one: Redhat Linux.
Theoretically appliance manufacturers who want to build their cloud applications based on Redhat Linux could choose either Commercial Redhat Enterprise Linux or Oracle Enterprise Linux or the Open Source CentOS. All those distributions share a similar base source, applications and kernel. CentOS is based on the base Commercial Redhat Linux distribution, although it lags a bit the Redhat releases and it does not include support from Redhat. CentOS support is based on the Open Source community. Oracle's offering is takes Redhat's release and adds several major components including kernel and applications as well as patches. Oracle claims that those additions provide better Oracle database performance and better stability in general. I believe Oracle also claims to have larger and better support team.
I am not going to get into the argument referring to the best one to use as a server in your data center. My question is more about: If you were to buy an appliance, and you had the option to choose whether it will be based on either Redhat Enterprise Linux, Oracle Enterprise Linux or CentOS what would you choose and why. Here are several key points related to those distros:
1. Redhat and Oracle require a license fee, it could be separate or embedded in the appliance pricing.
2. The official Redhat and Oracle prices differ
3. Reahat and Oracle will do their best to integrate their release with their system management and other products, while CentOS should be focused on the basic Linux functionality.
There are other factors as well and I'd love to hear what see as such. But in general it looks like choosing CentOS is a very good option...
1. Price is good (free) - and so you as the Appliance's customer, can pay less for the appliance
2. You get the basic features you need as the basis for the appliance: less code, less bugs, bigger stability
3. You are not locked to a specific vendor
4. You probably have more people trying out the system and debugging it, since many will choose the free offering
5. Even if you are heavily invested in Redhat or Oracle's Linux, since you want the appliance do its job, you don't really care what base operating system is used for the appliance
So what's you take on this question regarding The Cloud and Server Consolidation ?
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