Ethical Hacking Learn to find vulnerabilities before the bad guys do! Gain real world hands on hacking experience in our state of the art hacking lab. Course designed and taught by expert instructors with years of penetration testing experience. 12 student maximum in every class. Certification attempt included in every package. | Computer Forensics Training at InfoSec Institute Gain the in-demand skills of a certified computer examiner, learn to recover trace data left behind by fraud, theft, and cybercrime perpetrators. Discover the source of computer crime and abuse at your organization so that it never happens again. All of our class sizes are guaranteed to be 12 students or less to facilitate one-on-one interaction with one of our expert instructors. |

| Subject: | Re: AW: Re: Selecting OS for High-availability/mission-critical web p ortal |
|---|---|
| Date: | Wed, 13 Dec 2006 09:05:50 +0100 |
On Fri, 2006-12-08 at 20:13 +0100, Gruber Christoph wrote:
Hi all! If you want to build up a web server with these requirements, you won`t be satisfied with any distro. I think you will need to build up your binaries on your own. A critical server won`t have any paket manager at all. And other reqs like a statically linked kernel build for your hardware isn`t found in an distro. So, help yourself and build up from source. Maybe LFS will help you. Best regards.
Tbh, I totally disagree here. LFS is nice to get started when learning linux, but for a critical servers you need some sort of package management and well maintained repository. You cannot spend your time updating and compiling software and fixing patches every time there is an update whilst the next zlib/ssl exploits are floating around the net. One thing I do agree with is creating a custom kernel suited for your hardware. I think the basis for a mission critical server is its hardware. Make sure you select hardware wich is well known and widely supported for the distro you intend to run. Don't choose exotic hardware raid cards just because they might work good. Choose the one wich has the best drivers. The same goes for all other hardware offcourse. Now for the distro to choose there is a wide variety which can be used. Whatever your needs are, pick a distro with good support. Depending on what kind of server you need to run choices could be (but are not limited to) Openbsd for firewalls/security, Solaris for stability and support, Debian for feature richness or Redhat Enterprise for a large hardware base and its support. If pure stability is the only factor in my decision I would go for Openbsd or Solaris and choose hardware which is 'known-to-be-good' for those platforms. I hope this helps a little. Regards, Jeroen Simonetti Network Manager Denit Internet Services BV * Murder is contrary to the laws of man and God. -- M-5 Computer, "The Ultimate Computer", stardate 4731.3 *
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| ||
| Previous by Date: | Re: Selecting OS for High-availability/mission-critical web portal, Razvan Cosma |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | RE: AW: Re: Selecting OS for High-availability/mission-critical w eb portal, Gruber Christoph |
| Previous by Thread: | AW: Re: Selecting OS for High-availability/mission-critical web p ortal, Gruber Christoph |
| Next by Thread: | Re: Selecting OS for High-availability/mission-critical web p ortal, Syv Ritch |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |