Any mainstream linux should work fine... and if you keep it to mainstream then you can probably find others running it on that as well... so you can get some level of support.

SUSE
Ubuntu
Fedora
RedHat

Those seem to be the biggest names on this list.

Jake

On 9/1/06, Michael Klishin <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:
On Fri, 2006-09-01 at 10:42 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Yes, that's Sun's mantra.. write once, run anywhere.. but anyone who
> has been coding Java since day one knows it's a lie.   Java compiles
> and runs on every os with an equivalent jvm version... but doesn't
> always run precisely the same way.  Issues can surface at the os level
> ie. jvm compatibility/availability, drivers, etc.
>
> It's still possible to write code that compiles and runs differently
> on another platform.


I've never heard of OS dependent problems with red5. All the bugs we have are in streaming logic. It's not a question of JVM behaviour.
--
Michael 'Antares' Klishin

novemberain.com | flexwiki.novemberain.com | osflash.org/red5 | rubyonrails.ru


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