Hi all,

I'm sure this comes up every so often.

I'm in the process of repurposing an older desktop machine I have lying around 
and turning it into a NAS. I would like to do as little system administration 
as possible once it is set up. I would like relatively recent packages too, but 
I do NOT want to use a rolling release system.

I haven't decided on which distribution to use. My top three choices:

1. Debian Stable (presently 9.2)
2. Ubuntu LTS (presently 16.04, soon will be 18.04)
3. Others

Debian Stretch was recently released, and so the packages are newer than what's 
found in Ubuntu 16.04. However, Ubuntu 18.04 is just around the corner and will 
contain newer packages than Debian Stretch.

Anoption is also to install Ubuntu 17.10, upgrade to 18.04 in April, and keep 
it on the LTS path going forward, but I feel that could be a recipe for 
disaster. Not terribly comfortable with running non-LTS Ubuntu on this machine, 
though.

I'm most comfortable with Debian-based distros, but I'm open to using other 
distros if they do the job well, such as CentOS, OpenSUSE, and the like. I'm 
open to using a BSD (like FreeNAS) if it does the job and my hardware works for 
it.

What's everyone's experiences? For my use case, what is the preference?

Cheers,

-Matt
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list - [email protected]
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss

Reply via email to