I know that Fedora and redhat are related and how, not so sure on the SuSE genealogy. It is my understanding that OpenSuse is the "development" version of SuSE in the same way that Fedora is the "development" version of Redhat.  My point being (as has been discussed in the last few messages) that since this is to be a production environment, the bleeding edge version is not the best choice.

Steve Phariss

On Sun, Jan 31, 2010 at 6:13 PM, Eric Shubert <ejs@shubes.net> wrote:
Steve Phariss wrote:
> The downside to "newer bits" is that they may not be as tested.
> Arguably, a CentOS/RHEL install will have more long term stability.
> Newer is not always better when it comes to getting down to business.
> OpenSuSE is the equivalent to using Fedora correct?

No, Fedora is related to RedHat. Fedora is community driven and bleeding
edge, from which RedHat is derived. CentOS is a rebranded (from sources)
 RedHat. People will commonly refer to CentOS systems as being RHEL
(which they are for the most part).

OpenSuSE uses rpms, and it too has an Enterprise version, but that's
about all that it has in common with Fedora/RedHat/CentOS.

> a test/dev
> distribution for the main distro...
>
>
>
> Steve
>

--
-Eric 'shubes'

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