When deciding on Linux you decide which kernel to use. Linux IS the kernel part. After that it's what tools you're most comfortable with. That's where distros vary. In a biz environment you won't probably won't use a GUI. At home (less users) you may want it as a dual function server/ end user pc. So for a most reliable system find the most reliable kernel version. Also, the most reliable version of asterisk would be a more appropriate queston. To sum, there is no magic asterisk linux distro. All have the requisite components at their disposal ( well don't use linspire since they run as root for that ease of use/ hack).
On Mon, 2004-08-16 at 09:25, Johannes van Hulst wrote: > How has experience in Asterisk voip provider? > > > > I am trying to setup a reliable Linux system with Asterisk for a voip > provider. > > Therefore I got two more or like identical systems. > > > > System 1 > > AMD Atlhon XP 2200 > > Asus A7V600-X bios 1002 > > 1Gb memory 333 Mhz > > Asus 7100 videocard > > 120GB harddisk > > > > System 2 > > AMD Atlhon XP 2200 > > Asus A7V600-X bios 1005 > > 1Gb memory 400Mhz > > Geforce MX 4000 64MB > > 40 GB Harddisk > > > > At both systems I have problems with installing Linux. > > I tried Redhat 9.0 but there the systems has badblocks all the time on > the ext3 partitions and segmentation errors > > After that I tried Suse 9.1 and there the system is working perfect > only when I compile Asterisk I get compile errors all the time with a > warning internal error. I tested the partitions and the memory there > is no problem. > > > > Can somebody help me out how to get a stabile system? > > > > Best regards, > > > > Han van Hulst > > > > _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
