Lucas Halim wrote:
>>From the beginning of our apps development, we tried not to use too much vendor specific feature so
> PL/SQL is not a biggie but it's definitely good to know.
>
> We are in the process of getting in new boxes and will try out Fedora
>
> Thanks guys for the responses. Just keep it coming.
>
> Lucas
>

postgresql is indeed nice, but please read the following about Fedora.

I am a Fedora developer and personally use it myself on all of my servers (and desktops, and thin clients... etc.), I wouldn't recommend it for something that needs to remain at the same version for several years, like you probably want for an important database server.

While the software in each Fedora distribution is generally very stable, each Fedora distribution is only supported for maybe 7-9 months after release. There is the chance that the Fedora Legacy Project [1] may continue security updates beyond the company's EOL, but the project needs more community developers to make that a reality. For these reasons, Fedora it is only really suitable for servers if you know Linux well and you don't mind upgrading the servers once or twice per year. For example if you have extra hardware you can do validation testing of the newer distribution and deploy it before the old Fedora goes EOL.

Long story short... Fedora is not a great long term server solution. You may want to look at the alternatives like Debian, SuSE or RHEL.

http://www.redhat.com/solutions/industries/education/
Be warned that I am totally biased in recommending this, but Red Hat Enterprise Linux for academic institutions seems to be very reasonably priced and may suit your needs well. Red Hat is supposed to maintain security updates for each version of RHEL for something like 5 years, meaning you have plenty of time before EOL. The pages above says $50/yr for academic institutions, which appears a bit smaller than $1499/yr for RHEL AS. Something like every 1.5 years they plan on releasing a new version of RHEL, and the subscription allows you to download and upgrade to the latest version at no additional cost.

[1]
http://www.fedoralegacy.org

Warren Togami
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