Thanks Greg and to everyone who responded. The efforts you describe, the overwhelming positive responses I received by email and on this list, besides simply just seeing how you are turning out updates as quickly as RHEL releases them, is exactly what I am looking for.
I wanted to remain with the stability of a RHEL disto while avoiding the licensing fees and the Fedora upgrade treadmill. Not to knock the decent effort of other RHEL clones, this clearly is not an one man show like Whitebox or Tao, nor lacks the community involvement of Fedora Legacy. This was something I was clearly looking to avoid.
Also I found in checking security fix dates compared to RHEL mailings that Centos beats out Whitebox which still has not released the group of fixes from 9/1.
As far as giving back I am not an expert, but as soon as I get up to speed I can provide any feedback on anything I find undocumented and will participate in the forums if I can be of any help.
--- Greg Kurtzer greg@runlevelzero.net wrote:
Are you curious how many people have access to the private key? If so, then just 4.
If you are interested in how many people contribute or help the project, then the number is much higher. For the re-spinning of Centos3 with the U3 updates, we are already looking at a shared model for this (ie: certain people maintaining the updates, another group to maintain the ISO's, and someone else to maintain the base OS and rebuild when necessary (ie. RHEL4), etc...).
Being part of the cAos Foundation also means that there are other people that will help with bugzilla, web site, mailing lists, server administration, and also bandwidth costs. We are trying to share as much of the load as possible and leverage the resources that we have through donations and monatary contributions.
One of my goals when creating the initial caos project and which is now a goal of the Foundation itself, is that our projects utilize a significant amount of time, and being able to "share the load" through the community actually makes the amount that one person has to do quite less.
I am very appreciative to all of the people that have contributed to the cAos Foundation and its projects. Without the community helping, we would not be where we are today. With that said, we still need more help. If any of our projects interest you, then please volunteer your efforts or contribute to the foundation.
As far as the U3 release of Centos, there was some talk about it on the centos-devel mailing list, and they are coming. Please stand by for some announcements. ;)
On Wed, Sep 08, 2004 at 06:43:57AM -0700, Michael Rock told me:
Hi, can someone tell how many are behind
maintaining
the site and converting security and regular RHEL fixes for Centos-3? I see the last round of
security
updates for RHEL were turned out in a day which is impressive.
Trying to get an idea if Centos has alot of
community
support and being maintained by more than one
person.
I am not confident enough yet in building my own updates.
I am another RH 7.1/8.0 admin that labored over
the
decision to go with Fedora Legacy 6 months for
these
servers only to find mailings to stop without any notice. Since it seemed awfully quiet for a time I checked their website and found support suspended
for
these version due to lack of community
involvement.
So doing a little more investigating this time to
see
if the community is really into the project before settling down with a solution.
thx
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-- Greg M. Kurtzer http://runlevelzero.net/ http://caosity.org/ http://warewulf-cluster.org/ _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@caosity.org http://www.caosity.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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