[CentOS] two cents or not two cents
Keith Roberts
keith at karsites.net
Thu Dec 16 23:19:21 UTC 2010
On Fri, 17 Dec 2010, Sean wrote:
> To: centos at centos.org
> From: Sean <soso at orcon.net.nz>
> Subject: [CentOS] two cents or not two cents
>
> Hello Producers
>
> "Longevity of Support" is an attractive drawcard for CentOS if it means
> the exact opposite of Fedora's "short support cycle" that does not
> provide updating of infrastructural libraries for very long, libraries
> which newer versions of applications (like Firefox, Thunderbird, Opera
> etc) depend on and which wont install unless the libraries are also
> newer versions? But is that what it means -- ie that those
> infrastructural libraries (libpango, libcairo etc) are continuously
> updateable to fairly recent versions?
>
> If so, the problem is in reconciling that meaning with the reputation of
> CentOS to only support older versions of applications (eg Firefox-1.5,
> Thunderbird-1.0 etc). It does reconcile, of course, if the implications
> are merely that the CentOS user must compile and install the later
> versions of such applications from source, rather than having the luxury
> of pre-packaged binaries. It doesn't reconcile if there is some other
> critical reason why newer such applications just wont install. But which?
>
> I ask here because the profusion of vague mission statements and
> 'target-enduser-profile' claims that litter the internet re '*nix
> distros' seldom actually address those real issues. And hopefully
> someone can enlighten. My complex production & developement desktop
> takes months to fully port to a new OS (or OS-version), so OS updates to
> get library updates (ala Fedora philosophy) becomes increasingly untenable.
You might be interested in giving my ALI scripts a whirl on
a spare machine (even an old laptop) to start with, so you
get used to how they work.
I wrote these especially to deal with doing a fresh linux
installation.
http://www.karsites.net/centos/anyuser/auto-linux-installer.php
I can set up the services I want running in under 10
seconds. Beats sitting there doing it manually for 3 days!
The general idea is that you modify the installer scripts to
work with a particular system - just do it one time. Then
you can replay the scripts as often as you want, to
re-install your system.
Please let the list know if they help with your
installation/update woes.
BTW. Some applications such as Firefox need to be updated to
their latest versions, otherwise websites will not work with
an older version. I had these issues with running an
old version of FF on Fedora 8. I went from F8 to F12 using
my ALI scripts without any problems.
Kind Regards,
Keith Roberts
--
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.
This email was sent from my laptop with Centos 5.5
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