Hey, I get a 404 when going to the page..is that the right link?
I have used fedora off and on for years and with like the new direction they are going to. I read that Matt Miller the fedora project leader is taking considerations for an lts release a community derivate of sorts. On Mon, Jul 6, 2015 at 7:40 PM, Ben Stoutenburgh <[email protected]> wrote: > Judging from recent articles ( > https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Fedora-Fedup-Being-Replaced), > I wouldn't trust FedUP for a couple more releases. > > On Mon, Jul 6, 2015 at 7:37 PM, Chris Knadle <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> On 07/06/2015 03:39 PM, Allen wrote: >> > On Monday, July 06, 2015 11:18:42 AM japuzzo wrote: >> >> If you want to be a Linux pro you need to know RHEL 7.x and beyond. >> >> You can get a free/open version of RHEL via CentOS ( There latest >> release is >> >> binary compatible with RHEL 7.1 ), I suggest installing it in a virtual >> >> machine. Then get ALL RHEL 7 docs here => >> >> >> https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/7/in >> >> dex.html >> >> These docs are good to know about. Thanks for posting this Joe. :) >> >> >> They are available a html but also in offline versions of pdf and >> >> epub ( for light reading on your tablet ) The good news is that these >> doc >> >> are the real thing, not some watered down dummy guide. If you learn >> from >> >> these docs then you can pass exams and interview questions. >> >> >> >> >> > >> > Another free/open version of the *future* RHEL, i.e. RHEL as it will >> be in >> > five years is Fedora. Fedora is community-based and is largely >> independent of >> > Red Hat but it does serve as a testbed for future RHEL releases. >> > Fedoraproject also provides a comprehensive set of documentation. >> >> >> Fedora releases are only supported for 1 year, so I don't personally >> consider Fedora as a good option for servers, even though some places >> offer it. Whereas RHEL and CentOS releases are supported for 10 years, >> Debian is now supporting its stable releases for 5 years, Ubuntu Desktop >> LTS releases for 3 years and Ubuntu Server LTS releases for 5 years, and >> so on. >> >> Where this all comes to a head for me is a distribution that supports >> upgrade-in-place. RHEL and CentOS don't officially support this, though >> there are instructions available to do so "at your own risk". Debian >> officially supports upgrade-in-place, which is what attracted me to it >> in the first place. I've read that Fedora now supports this via their >> new "FedUP" utility, but I haven't actually tried that to see how it >> works; wondering if you've tried it perhaps, Allen. >> >> -- Chris >> >> -- >> Chris Knadle >> [email protected] >> _______________________________________________ >> Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group http://mhvlug.org >> https://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug >> >> Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm) Vassar College * >> Jul 8 - Mad Science Fair V @ Lourdes >> Aug 5 - Minimal Openstack @ Lourdes >> Sep 2 - Let'S Go Phishing >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group http://mhvlug.org > https://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug > > Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm) Vassar College * > Jul 8 - Mad Science Fair V @ Lourdes > Aug 5 - Minimal Openstack @ Lourdes > Sep 2 - Let'S Go Phishing > >
_______________________________________________ Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group http://mhvlug.org https://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm) Vassar College * Jul 8 - Mad Science Fair V @ Lourdes Aug 5 - Minimal Openstack @ Lourdes Sep 2 - Let'S Go Phishing
