On 5 Apr 2009, at 6:32 pm, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
On Sat, Apr 04, 2009 at 01:50:59PM -0500, Matt Lawrence wrote:
On Sat, 4 Apr 2009, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
Interesting. Since I'm stuck using Red Hat and IBM, I've been hit by
this on a 10TB storage shelf. Red Hat will only offer me ext3 and
8TB.
IBM storage on a Megaraid card which handles the disks as one
physical
volume
I'm using CentOS and the centosplus repository includes kernels that
support xfs. Still wind up installing to ext3, but big data
filesystems
can easily be xfs.
Red Hat _only_ - support, you know :(
Tim Cutts and the Sanger Inst. aren't enough to convince senior
management
that Debian is workable, even though HP and IBM will both support it.
Hehe. I'd be very worried if my reputation *were* considered big
enough to swing that sort of decision. :-)
But you know what really gets me is that so many companies we've dealt
with don't officially support Debian or Ubuntu, but when you talk to
their engineers, you discover that they do their actual development on
it, and port to RHAS/SLES afterwards.
HP's support for Debian has been extremely good though, behind the
scenes, even if it doesn't often make it through to the front desk.
Large chunks of Debian's infrastructure are hosted in HP datacentres
(notably in Fort Collins). Sadly the support does not extend to their
workstation product lines; getting Debian to run smoothly on their
business desktops is a royal PITA.
Tim
--
The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute is operated by Genome Research
Limited, a charity registered in England with number 1021457 and a
company registered in England with number 2742969, whose registered
office is 215 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE.
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