lejeczek via CentOS wrote: > On 01/07/2019 18:38, mark wrote: >> lejeczek via CentOS wrote: >>> >>> does anybody here runs on HPE ProLiant? I was hoping you can tell >>> whether HPE support Linux Vendor >>> Firmware Service and you actually get to upgrade ProLiants' >>> BIOS/firmware via fwupdmgr? >>> >> Dunno 'bout "Linux Vendor Firmware Service", but HPE support, ah, >> yeah... let's not go there. And they *really* want you to use MS DOS to >> update the firmware. Oh, and when we had support in to do repairs about >> 6 or so >> months ago on our small SGI supercomputer (they bought SGI), the techs >> were worried, because HPE was spinning off support to Unisys, and how >> they were going to get parts.... >> >> mark "at least it's not Oracle/Sun support is all I can say" >> > hi, thanks for the info. And you have tried fwupdmgr and no positive > results? Which Gen your ProLiants are? I don't remember if I ever used that. Only had one HP Proliant, and did not like it - a gen 5, I think it was, and, on boot, 70 sec *before* the logo even appeared. That system was my "why I don't care about systemd SEE HOW FAST WE BOOT!!!", when it took almost five MINUTES before it ever got to the grub screen. <snip> > Dell, which I have had for many years, do their own OMSA > which is better than nothing but this too is flaky at times. I also a few > years ago got Dell's tech support telling me to do MS-DOS stuff in order > to update BIOS. As I just said in another post, I've never had tech support tell me that. They give me a link for a .BIN, which I run, and it's an shell script with embedded binary software. > > I'm thinking & hoping that maybe IBM, since they are now > Redhat, will supply us with premium grade software support > for their hardware. Although IBM is a bit like Intel in my opinion - they > do not innovate that much, are old and struggle to understand the end > users like us. I dunno 'bout that. IBM hardware has always been really solid, in my experience. And you have to understand, they do a lot of service/consulting. Understand us? IBM's been seriously big in Linux from very early. Hell, around 18 years ago, one of their folks had the use of a Z-series mainframe, and maxed it out, using IBM's VM (which goes back to the seventies, really), with 48,000 separate instances of Linux, and it ran fine on 32,000 VMs.... Hell, I wasn't happy, a few years ago, when I found out that RH's CEO since a few years ago was a former exec at... Delta Airlines. I'm sure he know soooo much about Unix, Linux, or o/s's in general.... mark