I will be setting up a server for Cadence chip design software, and that company specifies Enterprise Linux 5 from "The Upstream Vendor" for the OS, accept no substitutes. The cost of [T.U.V.] EL5, with support, is miniscule compared to the CAD tool licenses, so I have no problem with running that.
The other half dozen existing machines are SL5 (and one CentOS5), and will not be running Cadence, so they will stay with SL5. I am assuming that these machines will coexist peacefully; I will keep them separate, and not ask TUV tech support any SL5 questions. With my SLx experience, I probably won't need any tech support at all. I assume Cadence specifies an EL5 support contract so that Cadence isn't saddled with OS vendor questions from newbies. So, the question is, does anyone know of any technical or legal or business reasons why mixing SL5 and "TUVEL5" is difficult? Or is this going to be very easy, like I expect? Keith -- Keith Lofstrom [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voice (503)-520-1993 KLIC --- Keith Lofstrom Integrated Circuits --- "Your Ideas in Silicon" Design Contracting in Bipolar and CMOS - Analog, Digital, and Scan ICs
