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crackytron
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 4:48 pm    Post subject: Gentoo as a Production OS Reply with quote

Hey there :)

I was wondering whether many of you think Gentoo would be stable and secure and reliable enough for being a production OS - this means it must be low maintenance, system must work when things are updated, uptime must be 100%...etc. The stuff I've read has recommended Debian over Gentoo because it is easier to keep stable, however I'm still considering Gentoo as I just like the way its laid out, where the config files are - generally feels better.

I thought I'd get it straight from the horses mouth and see if you lot think it'd be wise to go with Gentoo.

As for my skill level, I'm fairly confident doing a fair few things, but I'm far from being an experienced sysadmin.

Thanks!

PS - what is this "religious" thing I hear about Debian :S
PPS - and fyi, the server will be handling things like ftp, http, mysql, mail. Nothing overly mad but it will be taxed by a fair bit of traffic.
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SwissBushIndian
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 6:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The "religious" bit about Debian is that they are, some may say overly, devoted to open source, which effectively means that they do not support non-free software in their repositories.
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 10:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It depends on your preferences. Personally I find Gentoo the most stable and consistent OS thusfar (I have supported and tested lots of distributions) . Setting up may take some time, but it is imo by far the easiest OS to maintain and more important the most consistent OS I know. If you need a server OS then you can also try Centos.
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 18, 2007 7:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Gentoo isn't that hard to maintain. The problem is that you have to learn a new way to handle updates.

While using other distros you will plan for a big update once in a while, with Gentoo you will have updates on a daily basis. That means: (1) You need to learn that you don't have to update just because it is available. There are tools to find what you need to update (like glsa-check), and you can check the forums, IRC, mailing lists, etc.. This is valid for any Distro, but much more for Gentoo.

Just like any other update with any other distro, (2) always keep a backup. Nobody is insane to update to a new release of Debian without a backup. It's no different with Gentoo: but the "new release" is any time you want. I think this is the key point with Gentoo: you have to keep in mind this is a meta-distribution with continuous releases (instead of a periodic release). Any time you run "emerge -DNu world" you are creating a new release.

Since Gentoo is source based (and not binary based) you will need time (a processing cycles) to update. (3) Never emerge if you are in a hurry or if the machine is running something else that needs to be finished soon. Before emerging, make sure you will have some time to fix a eventual error. Also: (4) Test first. Don't start your update with the mission critical server, start with your own box.

Most important: (5) Don't ever use exotic CFLAGs, or ~arch in a production environment. Don't even think about that. Using ~arch is like using a beta OS (it may be fun at home, but it can't be trusted).

Following these 5 tips, Gentoo is almost as stable as Debian. I won't say it's as stable because Gentoo usually have newer packages that aren't as tested as Debian's are. If you need to have the latest version of some packages, Gentoo may be even more stable than Debian (it's much easier to use one ~arch package in Gentoo that the same version in Debian).

Gentoo is different than most distros. It can be as stable as others if you learn how to work with Gentoo (but it takes some time to learn the Gentoo right way). I recommend that you start using Gentoo at home or with a non-critical machine. Since Gentoo gives you much more freedom than other distros, it takes discipline to use Gentoo. It's not for everyone, but if you have the wisdom, Gentoo may be a wonderful tool.

BTW: I don't have the wisdom to use Gentoo in a production environment, at least not if I I'm alone. I always think that new package is too cool, and it won't take more than an hour for a full update. Bah, "emerge -DNu world" and go to lunch when I'm back everything will be running fine, just a "etc-update" and I'm ready. (Sometimes it works that way! Sometimes...) ;)
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 18, 2007 9:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Drysh wrote:
Gentoo isn't that hard to maintain. The problem is that you have to learn a new way to handle updates.

While using other distros you will plan for a big update once in a while, with Gentoo you will have updates on a daily basis. That means: (1) You need to learn that you don't have to update just because it is available. There are tools to find what you need to update (like glsa-check), and you can check the forums, IRC, mailing lists, etc.. This is valid for any Distro, but much more for Gentoo.

Just like any other update with any other distro, (2) always keep a backup. Nobody is insane to update to a new release of Debian without a backup. It's no different with Gentoo: but the "new release" is any time you want. I think this is the key point with Gentoo: you have to keep in mind this is a meta-distribution with continuous releases (instead of a periodic release). Any time you run "emerge -DNu world" you are creating a new release.

Since Gentoo is source based (and not binary based) you will need time (a processing cycles) to update. (3) Never emerge if you are in a hurry or if the machine is running something else that needs to be finished soon. Before emerging, make sure you will have some time to fix a eventual error. Also: (4) Test first. Don't start your update with the mission critical server, start with your own box.

Most important: (5) Don't ever use exotic CFLAGs, or ~arch in a production environment. Don't even think about that. Using ~arch is like using a beta OS (it may be fun at home, but it can't be trusted).

Following these 5 tips, Gentoo is almost as stable as Debian. I won't say it's as stable because Gentoo usually have newer packages that aren't as tested as Debian's are. If you need to have the latest version of some packages, Gentoo may be even more stable than Debian (it's much easier to use one ~arch package in Gentoo that the same version in Debian).

Gentoo is different than most distros. It can be as stable as others if you learn how to work with Gentoo (but it takes some time to learn the Gentoo right way). I recommend that you start using Gentoo at home or with a non-critical machine. Since Gentoo gives you much more freedom than other distros, it takes discipline to use Gentoo. It's not for everyone, but if you have the wisdom, Gentoo may be a wonderful tool.

BTW: I don't have the wisdom to use Gentoo in a production environment, at least not if I I'm alone. I always think that new package is too cool, and it won't take more than an hour for a full update. Bah, "emerge -DNu world" and go to lunch when I'm back everything will be running fine, just a "etc-update" and I'm ready. (Sometimes it works that way! Sometimes...) ;)


And never ever put ~x86 in your make.conf. Debian may have a longer testing procedure but unfortunately this doesn't result in a sane OS. For example I installed the latest Debian stable on my gfriends laptop, installed X-windows-system and every time X starts it hardlocks :? I have also encountered problems (not being able to connect and therefor not being able to login KDE) with the ifup ifdown network setting on large lans.
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 19, 2007 12:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I would run gentoo in production.

But I would make sure I knew exactly when downtime/slowtime was acceptable.
I would update frequently the "core packages". (Monthly at most)
I would watch for gcc, glib updates and plan updates for those (I'm taking major version changes, not -r* ).
I would have/do have standard CFLAGS.
I would have a development/test box where an update occurs and is shakedown tested first. I would attempt to mirror the production server as much as possible.

note: I am reasonably paranoid :)
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 19, 2007 12:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't think Gentoo is any more or any less stable. My vision is a bit different.

Those numbers that I will say are just illustrative, and they do not mean a concrete thing, so just bear with me.

In a regular binary distro, 75% of the stability (or instability) is given by the OS itself, and 25% by the administrator. In Gentoo those numbers are the contrary. That means that you have more responsibility. You have the power to screw up yourself, and no one is going to stop you. That can be good if you know how to do the things, or bad if you don't and don't have the time or will to learn a bit.

Again, I know that that picture is way too abstract. Gentoo also offers the glsa system, and while you stick to only the updates that are strictly needed to cut any security risk or support new hardware, you should be on the safe side. You have also an excellent documentation on how to harden your system, starting from the basics like iptables and up to more advanced topics like selinux and the like. Few distros out there have such amount of documents and such a useful forums like Gentoo.

For those brave enough, you even have the choice to use portage over FreeBSD, though I must admit that I am not sure that that would be any good at the current stage (I don't even know if there is a current stage, indeed).

About religious wars, I always avoid them. Everyone has the right to use whatever s/he thinks that fits better for him or her. Those kind of discussions are not only useless (no one is gonna change his mind just because you don't like the way he thinks... it'd be stupid to even think about that), but also counterproductive.

Linux is just linux, after all. You can do the same things on any distro. In ultimate instance, the only thing that matters is the support you are going to find on the concrete community, and regarding that, Gentoo is superb.
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 8:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

i92guboj wrote:
I don't think Gentoo is any more or any less stable. My vision is a bit different.

Those numbers that I will say are just illustrative, and they do not mean a concrete thing, so just bear with me.

In a regular binary distro, 75% of the stability (or instability) is given by the OS itself, and 25% by the administrator. In Gentoo those numbers are the contrary. That means that you have more responsibility. You have the power to screw up yourself, and no one is going to stop you. That can be good if you know how to do the things, or bad if you don't and don't have the time or will to learn a bit.

Interesting point of view :). That make me wonder though why other distributions have so many issues.

Quote:

About religious wars, I always avoid them. Everyone has the right to use whatever s/he thinks that fits better for him or her. Those kind of discussions are not only useless (no one is gonna change his mind just because you don't like the way he thinks... it'd be stupid to even think about that), but also counterproductive.

Linux is just linux, after all. You can do the same things on any distro. In ultimate instance, the only thing that matters is the support you are going to find on the concrete community, and regarding that, Gentoo is superb.


That depends. People pay me to give them advice on which OS to use (e.g. in stead of Vista), extensive testing of various other distributions made me reluctant to advice anything else then Gentoo. And believe me, I'd rather support a binary distro because this takes less effort.

To get an idea what I encountered read these reviews of openSUSE 10.3 en fedora respectively:
http://www.mandrake.tips.4.free.fr/opensuse10.3.review.html

http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20071119#review
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 9:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think I've already put my spiel about this in the thread titled "Gentoo for Enterprise" -

For home/hobbyist/tinkerer/educational/entertainment use, this is fine, but

chance(breakage from emerge -u package) >> chance(breakage rpm -U file)

At least it seemed that way - I never had a broken system when I used Redhat after an update, and if there was breakage, it was for that package only, not anything else.

Gentoo? There's a nonzero chance of widespread breakage. Once, without non-portage intervention, almost required a boot disk to fix because portage broke after an upgrade.

I don't know way too much about how SuSE works, but I also felt that Debian was similar to Redhat, there were a lot of packages that apt would simply not upgrade in fear of ending up with an unusable system. Or at least a system that needs serious work to get it usable again (such as upgrading apache)... It's sometimes hard to tell when to just start fresh with Gentoo or not, and also minimize the number of fresh installs...

"Moving Target Syndrome"
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 11:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

eccerr0r wrote:
I think I've already put my spiel about this in the thread titled "Gentoo for Enterprise" -

For home/hobbyist/tinkerer/educational/entertainment use, this is fine, but

chance(breakage from emerge -u package) >> chance(breakage rpm -U file)

At least it seemed that way - I never had a broken system when I used Redhat after an update, and if there was breakage, it was for that package only, not anything else.

Gentoo? There's a nonzero chance of widespread breakage. Once, without non-portage intervention, almost required a boot disk to fix because portage broke after an upgrade.

I don't know way too much about how SuSE works, but I also felt that Debian was similar to Redhat, there were a lot of packages that apt would simply not upgrade in fear of ending up with an unusable system. Or at least a system that needs serious work to get it usable again (such as upgrading apache)... It's sometimes hard to tell when to just start fresh with Gentoo or not, and also minimize the number of fresh installs...

"Moving Target Syndrome"


I only have tested CentOS (which is essentially the same as Red Hat) and found it worthless for the desktop. What if a company want to listen to music (mp3's) or watch movies (dvd). Of course you can add this functionality but this would be unsupported, then why are you paying a subscription fee in the first place :?. Compare this with Gentoo which has 14.000 packages which are checked for security issues.
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 22, 2007 1:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

To get the best out of the two worlds : make a gentoo host server with vserver-sources (Linux-Vserver) , then set up a debian vserver with all your services (or one for each service depending on what you want to do) . Thus you wont need to update your gentoo box so often (as it only hosts your virtual servers) and you'll run rock stable services. Another good thing with this setup is you can actually test new configurations in new vservers before running them for real.
A little overhead while learning vservers but great benefit in the long run.

PS : vservers use a *very small* amount of the host machine, so you're not limited by their numbers.
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 24, 2007 2:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

So I can gather from this topic that Gentoo is good in production if you have the knowledge and experience to keep it running well. Now, I don't want to cop-out entirely, but if there are production system (gentoo specific) checklists for things like security (IE - you must reset these passwords and get rid of these accounts) it would be incredibly useful. At the moment I'm more of a "programmer guy who knows the most about system administration" than a "system administrator". I'll admit that I'm inexperienced, but I'm being paid a low wage and I've set up numerous linux systems but never in a production environment. I think if I work hard I could do it, and I'll be covering my ass in writing, but if anyone has any good, up-to-date resources on production server administration, dos/donts, security checklists, it would be exceptionally helpful.

Ats2's suggestion is quite an interesting idea. I've never worked with virtual hosts but it does seem like an interesting idea.

FYI the reason I like Gentoo is that because I inherited a network that has a load of issues, been around for 10+ years, etc etc so I don't have all of it inside my brain. I like starting from the beginning and understanding exactly what is going on. This is the great thing about Gentoo - if something is there it is because you have put it there.

Also, what are your opinions on leaving things like packaging tools on live systems - my friend says that if you leave emerge/apt etc it could allow the system to be compromised more easily - is this true? Can emerge be locked to certain groups?

Thanks
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 24, 2007 3:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

crackytron wrote:
So I can gather from this topic that Gentoo is good in production if you have the knowledge and experience to keep it running well. Now, I don't want to cop-out entirely, but if there are production system (gentoo specific) checklists for things like security (IE - you must reset these passwords and get rid of these accounts) it would be incredibly useful. At the moment I'm more of a "programmer guy who knows the most about system administration" than a "system administrator". I'll admit that I'm inexperienced, but I'm being paid a low wage and I've set up numerous linux systems but never in a production environment. I think if I work hard I could do it, and I'll be covering my ass in writing, but if anyone has any good, up-to-date resources on production server administration, dos/donts, security checklists, it would be exceptionally helpful.

Ats2's suggestion is quite an interesting idea. I've never worked with virtual hosts but it does seem like an interesting idea.

FYI the reason I like Gentoo is that because I inherited a network that has a load of issues, been around for 10+ years, etc etc so I don't have all of it inside my brain. I like starting from the beginning and understanding exactly what is going on. This is the great thing about Gentoo - if something is there it is because you have put it there.

Also, what are your opinions on leaving things like packaging tools on live systems - my friend says that if you leave emerge/apt etc it could allow the system to be compromised more easily - is this true? Can emerge be locked to certain groups?

Thanks


Just read this and all thou questions will be answered :): http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/security/
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 25, 2007 2:09 am    Post subject: Re: Gentoo as a Production OS Reply with quote

crackytron wrote:
I was wondering whether many of you think Gentoo would be stable and secure and reliable enough for being a production OS - this means it must be low maintenance, system must work when things are updated, uptime must be 100%...etc.

It all depends on what purpose you're trying to fulfill. I can tell you that the 100% uptime requirement is going to be hard to maintain with any OS. That's just Murphy's law for you.

I'm a sys admin for a medium size ISP. We have our share of FreeBSD, Debian, Solaris, and Gentoo machines. I like the Gentoo machines far more than I like the others. Gentoo's more up-to-date packages, config protection, and package customization - all out of the box - make Gentoo my distro of choice. Compilation takes time, and yes, some things may break from time to time. But like with any production machine, you should always have a backup in place and test the hell out of it before you apply it to production host.

I would give Gentoo a shot. If you get stuck, the community here is always eager to help :).
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 25, 2007 3:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I use Gentoo as a production server and it works great, and I constantly update it. I don't unmask anything and I normally only do an full update if I am sure it will work. But I am also not that worried about 100% uptime, any problems that I have fallen into are fixable within a few minutes. I would highly recommend testing out Gentoo on an other server and seeing how everything works before putting it on a production server. Maybe also learn your way around before putting it to a production server too. I used Gentoo for a few months before I thought putting it on a server that I would need, had a few problems at first but now everything is smooth.
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 26, 2007 2:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'll definately give that handbook a read.

The reason I'm considering Gentoo so heavily is that I've found emerge far more reliable than apt-get, rpms, whatever in the while I've been using linux. I've used Fedora, Debian, Ubuntu, Mandrake and SuSE and I've found that Gentoo is the most logical, most enlightened (compare the default Gentoo apache config to anything else, it is beautiful).

I just need to cover my ass in writing so I can say - I did this research which showed that Gentoo was a suitable OS, I did these measures to protect security etc etc - if everything went pear shaped.

I'm pretty much settled as other distros seem to annoy me every time I have to use them.
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 28, 2007 11:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

eccerr0r wrote:
I think I've already put my spiel about this in the thread titled "Gentoo for Enterprise" -

For home/hobbyist/tinkerer/educational/entertainment use, this is fine, but

chance(breakage from emerge -u package) >> chance(breakage rpm -U file)


Nah. I'd rather say that whenever YOU install something on a production machine YOU are the one to care about that.

As I said above, if you use more control, you are supposed to be more responsible about it.

Quote:

At least it seemed that way - I never had a broken system when I used Redhat after an update, and if there was breakage, it was for that package only, not anything else.


'course. On bin distros the ldd links are always broken, so, you only have to care about the actual program (cause the rest of programs that links about that libs shall be broken anyway). Anyway, I am on Gentoo since 1004, and I usually don't have to care about any other package that the one I am updating.... Your mileage may vary.

Libs that are used by most programs will require full recompilation (see expat), that's ok. You can compare that to a distro release. On Gentoo there are no releases, you (again) are responsible

Quote:

Gentoo? There's a nonzero chance of widespread breakage. Once, without non-portage intervention, almost required a boot disk to fix because portage broke after an upgrade.


Grub? Do you know you have to keep a kernel just in case the latest you compiled can't boot?

That's not Gentoo, that's Linux.

Quote:

I don't know way too much about how SuSE works, but I also felt that Debian was similar to Redhat, there were a lot of packages that apt would simply not upgrade in fear of ending up with an unusable system. Or at least a system that needs serious work to get it usable again (such as upgrading apache)... It's sometimes hard to tell when to just start fresh with Gentoo or not, and also minimize the number of fresh installs...

"Moving Target Syndrome"


Comparing SuSE or Debian to RedHat is a bit strange. Believe me, I have used apt in the past (well, the thing might have changed), and it broke things, just like urpmi did, just like yast did, just like.... Such is life.

You are the one to keep your system sane. No distro nor installer can do that for you.
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 28, 2007 11:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I'd rather say that whenever YOU install something on a production machine YOU are the one to care about that.

Quote:
You are the one to keep your system sane. No distro nor installer can do that for you.


couldn´t agree more ! If you don´t care about your system and blindly update everything, things will break sooner or later, it really is that simple.

I manage a few centos and gentoo production boxes and i´m quite happy with all of them. In gentoo i just never update anything unless glsa tells me to do so and even then i first test on a cloned environment to be sure everything will work out of the box. Yes, i´m that paranoid, downtime is not a choice ;)

cheers
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 28, 2007 11:50 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just thought I'd give my 2cents here.

At my Job I'm the Lead System Administrator. I manage and deploy our servers as well as train new sysadmins.

Gentoo is the sole reason why I can work as a System Administrator. I had tried linux in the past, but gentoo was the first one where I actually learned about linux (because your forced to), and as a result of that I also managed to get everything working under Linux that I wanted to.

Because of all this, my personal preference is always Gentoo, mostly because thats the distro Im familiar with the most. Sometimes out of boredom, I will try another distro on my laptop, but in the end I always come back to gentoo.

Considering this, my view is probably tainted, but here are some points about my experience with gentoo.




First of all, one of the things I love about gentoo is its flexibility of installation. Since you install everything by hand anyways, you can easily perform a "Parasite" install. e.g. Boot a livecd of any distro, and then just proceed to do a chroot installation, and download all the packages you need of the net.
I'm sure that this is possible with other distros as well, but the process just doesnt seem as straightforward and requires a lot of tutorial hunting.

Compilation Time:
One of the most cried about (dis)advantages of gentoo.
I have to say, that while I will think twice about installing gentoo on someone else's Desktop or Laptop, I have no problems with installing it on a server.
If you are only installing a Server environment withouth X, then the biggest packages you have to worry about are maybe Apache, Mysql, glibc and gcc. But even with that in mind, on a modern server compile time is not that big of an issue.

If you are renting a root server from a provider, you can get a DualCore or X2 system rather cheaply. Even if you build a server, you can get a cost-effective system and still have a Dual Core or X2 cpu.


Maintenance:
While the initial configuration will take some time. After all you have to do it all by yourself. This results in a "less bloat" situation. Since your are more likely to activate only what you need if starting more or less from scratch, rather than if you had a "activate-everything-just-to-be-on-the-safe-side" default config file, where you had to specifically disable stuff you didnt want.

Once the initial configuration is done, updates are usually painless. Portage will inform you if any config files need updating. With etc-update or dispatch-conf you can easily select which configs can be blindly updated and which need to be edited by hand.
It is rather rare that I had to manually update configs by hand. Its only when a new package version changes the way it does things or changes the syntax of its config file. I dont know how much of headache this is on other distros, but obviously BIG upgrades should never be taken lightly. e.g. PHP4 to PHP5.

Thinks to be wary of, or simply be careful about are major updates of things like: Apache, PHP, MySQL, Postfix.
There was one instance where Apache especially caused a major headache for me, since it shifted around some config file locations and some of our vhosts entries did not work properly anymore.
The problem was easily fixed once I dug a little deeper into the apache projects Website. It was mostly my fault anyways, since I didnt inform myself ahead of time of potential issues with updates.

Golden Rule of Thumb: If you have something mission critical like postfix or apache, make sure you read the changelogs and stuff, BEFORE you update it.
Security updates should usually not pose a problem. Especially if applied via glsa-check.

The only other big problem I ran into with gentoo, or rather a colleague of mine, was a update of amavis. The syntax changed slightly and this resulted in our mails being stuck in an infinite loop. Easily overlooked but also easily solved.

All that being said, if you want to make automatic system updates for everything except your mission critical software, then make extensive use of the package.mask config.
You can define there if a certain package should only be installed with a specific version number. To be on the safe side, you should also never delete that package source file from /usr/portage/distfiles, just in case the file is no longer available from the mirrors.



Conclusion:

From my personal experience I can say, that Gentoo can be just as stable or unstable as any other distro. I have only had two major issues with it on a production system, which was mostly our own fault. That being said, you should always choose the distro you are most familiar with for a production system. Regardless of what the distro might be.
And with "most familiar" I do not only mean your level expertise with that distro, but also the availability of support. Corporate or community wise.

Supportwise I prefer gentoo, since pretty much ANY question I ever had about gentoo, was either solved through forums.gentoo.org or www.gentoo-wiki.com.
I also find that the gentoo community in general seems more knowledgeable about linux than for example the ubuntu community. (only my personal opinion.)

My recommendation would be for you, choose what your familiar with AND what you can get support for. Preferrably community support, unless your willing and able to spend the cash required for commercial support.
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crackytron
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for all the advice. I'm not sure if rackspace actually allow you to reinstall your OS (after all this :/), but if anyone knows anything about linux in general it'd be nice to know the answer to this question:

On our current rackspace/tdmgroup servers which I figure are CentOS or RHEL (any help in how to identify which/version etc would be brilliant), what is the best way to make sure they are up to date? I'm not sure the person previous to me was particularly hot on updating things, so I have a bad feeling that there our servers are full of holes. It appears to have RPM but not yum or anything.

I also have a feeling that upgrading lots of things will break lots of things. So its a tradeoff between risking lots of downtime (argh), or knowing that our server is most likely horrendously insecure. Fuck, for all I know, rackspace are doing it for us. The previous sysadmin left me with NOTHING to work with. There's like a black hole in the history of *what the fuck happened with our servers* for about 2 years.

The servers do appear to be extremely stable, however.
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Urban Cowboy
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 03, 2007 6:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The problem is.. if it went to production, you'd have to have tech support - which would be a nightmare. There are way too many variables and configurations with gentoo.

You'd have to pigeonhole gentoo to specific cflags, use flags, packages, drivers - which would essentially ruin exactly what makes gentoo so awesome - configure-ability.

Imagine someone explaining how they deleted python and can't re-emerge it and need help.
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Suicidal
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 03, 2007 7:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Gentoo is fine as a production server, based on you build everything on a image host.

I had at one time ~20 gentoo servers.

I had one that I did all of the building on, I ran it like so:

Code:
emerge system

emerge world

emerge -e world


All with bulidpkg in the use flags.

after I thought I had a stable release I synced the packages to my test box (vm) and:

Code:
emerge -k system && emerge -k world && emerge -ek world


If there was an issue I figured out what not to do and tested again.

It was really not too difficult, and it sure beat Redhats or any other binary distros upgrade mechanism.
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Kasumi_Ninja
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 03, 2007 4:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Suicidal wrote:
Gentoo is fine as a production server, based on you build everything on a image host.

I had at one time ~20 gentoo servers.

I had one that I did all of the building on, I ran it like so:

Code:
emerge system

emerge world

emerge -e world


All with bulidpkg in the use flags.

after I thought I had a stable release I synced the packages to my test box (vm) and:

Code:
emerge -k system && emerge -k world && emerge -ek world


If there was an issue I figured out what not to do and tested again.

It was really not too difficult, and it sure beat Redhats or any other binary distros upgrade mechanism.


How did you sync the binaries with the other 20 servers?
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gringo
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 03, 2007 4:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
How did you sync the binaries with the other 20 servers?


i don´t know how Suicidal did, i just use http-replicator ;)

cheers
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 04, 2007 11:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The two posts above me seem like a sane way of doing things. You'd lose a bit of the rice if you had one testbed and one powerbox for compiling stuff and only used generic 686 code that will run on all of them. But in essence you'd not be doing anything different from what binary distros do. You'd be compiling binary packages that your production box(en) will use. The test server will give you some amount of warning if you're about to bork things up big time.

Gentoo is a long-winded install and if you're not familiar with Linux you have to step up to the plate and be willing to learn, but after I've tried some of the more "mainstream" distros out there (suse, debian, [K-X]Ubuntu), I'm still in love with it...
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