[CentOS] Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL

Matthew Miller mattdm at mattdm.org
Wed Jul 29 18:37:32 UTC 2015


On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 06:20:44AM -0500, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> > You (and others) are misunderstanding my off-the-cuff remark.
> > It was purely an observation about the lack of statistics.
> > I rarely if ever see a statement of the kind
> >   "Among Fedora users 37% use KDE and 42% Gnome".
> > Or (after the remark I was responding to)
> >   "83% of CentOS machines are in datacenters, and 7% are home-servers".
> > (Or "x% of Fedora users have turned SELinux to permissive".)
> > 
> > I'm not saying that Fedora or CentOS should work on democratic principles.
> > I welcome Johnny Hughes unambiguous statement that CentOS follows RHEL.
> > This saves a lot of time arguing about things that cannot be changed.
> > 
> > But I hold the (old-fashioned?) view that before expressing an opinion
> > one should get the facts.
> 
> We can't gather facts about people .. people go bat shit crazy if their
> machines report stuff back.
> 
> At CentOS, we can't even tell you how many users we have, because we
> can't possibly buy all the mirrors that are required to give out updates
> to all users.
> 
> Instead, we have a couple hundred mirrors JUST to distribute CentOS to
> external mirrors run by the community (currently 624 mirrors in 85
> countries) when we do a release.  We don't have the ability to gather
> statistics on servers we don't own.
> 
> Fedora is in the same boat.

Yeah, pretty much, although I might be less... direct about the
language. :) We are very sensitive to user privacy concerns. And
gathering this kind of information accurately in other ways is
expensive.

I can tell you some ad hoc numbers from F21, which come with tons of
caveats. This is based on ISO download numbers from the master mirror,
which is very imprecise and does not reflect installations — someone
might have downloaded the cloud image once and installed a million
nodes. Or downloaded it a million times and never actually booted it.
But, anyway, from this:

 * About 70% Fedora Workstation (our GNOME-based desktop primarily
    targetted at software developers and technical users.)
 * About 20% Fedora Server
 * About  5% Fedora Cloud
 * About 2% KDE Desktop Spin
 * About 2% Xfce Desktop Spin
 * About 1% other spins and images

-- 
Matthew Miller
<mattdm at fedoraproject.org>
Fedora Project Leader



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