My group did not, and I do not, need the cradle-to-grave pinocchio support that is provided by some (many?) support contracts. SL was ported and maintained by professionals who are paid staff of the entities that provide the distro (Fermilab from which this list is housed, and funded and collaborated by CERN), not by volunteers and amateurs. For commercial (typically for profit) and some government entities, using the products of and the (cradle to grave) support and training (not intellectual education, but technical training) from a "certified" vendor (such as IBM RH), including your entity, use that avenue for critical infrastructure. For many "academic" researchers, who nonetheless require "rock solid" infrastructure, the SL (not amateur) solution was fine. A volunteer based level of porting and support typically fails to meet this need, particularly as the number of lines of source code of the systems have grown enormously in most recent systems. It essentially is impossible for a single human (included a well educated and experience computer science practitioner professional) to maintain the details of the entire system (each statement, "line of source code") in her/his expert memory. Software engineering has not kept up with the real complexity of current systems, one of the causes of the number of software defects (and compromise vulnerabilities) we all now face. Amateurs and part-time professional volunteers typically exacerbate this situation.

On 12/10/20 8:18 PM, ~Stack~ wrote:
On 12/10/20 4:47 PM, Yasha Karant wrote:
Again, my own needs are such that it is unacceptable to have a volunteer (and in many cases, amateur) developer/support arrangement for "mission critical" systems and applications software.


Greetings,

Well, there is Red Hat for professional support. Or if you don't like that option, Oracle Linux.

For our critical infrastructure, it will probably remain Red Hat proper for that reason. However, my small team and I will probably continue to pursue RH training classes then feel comfortable enough to maintain the hundreds of non-critical servers with a community backed variant.

Give it a month or so. I heard about another project starting up to be yet another variant today. I have a feeling that there will be more. And the better ones will emerge and I think we will all be able to make a more informed decision on our own directions in January when the initial excitement has died down. I do believe it is wise that you are following and keeping informed about the variants.

~Stack~

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