Re: Hardware upgraded but performance still ain't good
От | Steve Atkins |
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Тема | Re: Hardware upgraded but performance still ain't good |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 9157C32A-0C41-4805-884B-CE3FEEE8CF30@blighty.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Hardware upgraded but performance still ain't good ("Joshua D. Drake" <jd@commandprompt.com>) |
Список | pgsql-performance |
On Aug 9, 2006, at 5:47 AM, Joshua D. Drake wrote: > Alex Turner wrote: >> First off - very few third party tools support debian. Debian is >> a sure >> fire way to have an unsupported system. Use RedHat or SuSe (flame >> me all >> you want, it doesn't make it less true). > > *cough* BS *cough* > > Linux is Linux. It doesn't matter what trademark you put on top of > it. As long as they are running a current version of Linux (e.g; > kernel 2.6) they should be fine. That's really not the case, at least to the degree that makes a difference between "supported" and "unsupported". > > With Debian that may or may not be the case and that could be an > issue. > To get the best luck, I would suggest (if you want to stay with a > Debian base) Ubuntu Dapper LTS. Different Linux distributions include different shared libraries, put different things in different places and generally break applications in a variety of different ways (SELinux would be one example of that commonly seen here). If I don't QA my application on it, it isn't supported. I can't necessarily replicate problems on Linux distributions I don't have installed in my QA lab, so I can't guarantee to fix problems that are specific to that distribution. I can't even be sure that it will install and run correctly without doing basic QA of the installation process on that distribution. And in my case that's just for user space applications. It's got to be even worse for hardware drivers. Our usual phrase is "We support RedHat versions *mumble* only. We expect our application to run correctly on any Linux distribution, though you may have to install additional shared libraries." I'm quite happy with customers running Debian, SuSe or what have you, as long as they have access to a sysadmin who's comfortable with that distribution. (I'd probably deny support to anyone running Gentoo, though :) ) We've never had big problems with people running our apps on "unsupported" problems, but those users have had to do some more diagnosis of problems themselves, and we've been less able to support them than we can users who use the same distribution we QA on. (It's not just Linux, either. We "support" Windows XP, but we run just fine on 2000 and 95/98.) Cheers, Steve
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