Linux is not distribution but the kernel itself.
There is no answer to that question. 
I run it on RedHat myself.
The reason for that is simple, RedHat is commercially suported and that's what big 
companies need. 
Commercial support is importand for them in case something happens to me.
My favourite when it comes to linux is gentoo but I also used debian for a while.
Personlally I use FreeBSD for any of my servers that I do not run for external 
customers.

My advice is: 
If you have a fresh start and want to make things fast, use debian for simplicity.
If you want to run the newest freeradius compiled from sources then use whatever you 
already know the best.

If you want the best there is for servers, run BSD.

Cheers, 
YazzY


On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 10:06:04 -0500
"Michael Melanson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> HI folks
> 
> I am new to linux as well as free radius.
> 
> I am involved in a project to create an open network architechure.
> 
> I envision radius and eap to accomplish this
> 
> Please advise what is the best Linux to use with free radius
> 
> Thanks
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-- 


"I've heard if you play the Windows-CD backwards, you get a satanic message."
"That's nothing, if you play it forward, it installs Windows."

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