What Linux Are You Running
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@momurda said in What Linux Are You Running:
Ubuntu, Debian, Centos 6.x/7, one SUSE
I want to see more Suse. Maybe soon.
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CentOS7 mostly, a couple Ubuntu Server for things like XO.
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CentOS 7 on everything except:
- My UniFi controller (Ubuntu)
- FreePBX (CentOS 6)
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Just getting my feet wet with CentOS 7, but nothing in production except for a Cisco firewall (SourceFire).
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I'm assuming you mean only servers:
CentOS 5 - 7
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS & 10.04 LTS
FreeBSD 10.3 & 11 -
RHEL 7 & 6 (ws and server), Fedora 25, CentOS 7, Oracle Unbreakable 7, some pretty old Solaris 9 boxes on SPARC, and a few of our appliances are running Debian. Dell KACE boxes are on FreeBSD but we never get down to that level on them.
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Ubuntu - For Ubiquiti Servers. Video or for my Unifi Controller.
CentOS 7
openSuse
Fedora 25 Cinnamon Desktop for my laptop -
Ubuntu and debian for XO and a internal wiki server., fedora for fog (don't ask), centos for some lab stuff,
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Probably around 700-ish CentOS 7 boxes, a few hundred CentOS 6, and 50-ish CentOS 5 boxes running some legacy applications we hope to phase out soon. I have heard mentions of some Ubuntu boxes somewhere, but not in production.
I work off of OS-X.
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@RamblingBiped said in What Linux Are You Running:
Probably around 700-ish CentOS 7 boxes, a few hundred CentOS 6, and 50-ish CentOS 5 boxes running some legacy applications we hope to phase out soon. I have heard mentions of some Ubuntu boxes somewhere, but not in production.
I work off of OS-X.
1-up!
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@RamblingBiped said in What Linux Are You Running:
Probably around 700-ish CentOS 7 boxes, a few hundred CentOS 6, and 50-ish CentOS 5 boxes running some legacy applications we hope to phase out soon. I have heard mentions of some Ubuntu boxes somewhere, but not in production.
I work off of OS-X.
I think you just trumped in total quantity all the non-Unix machines here
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I have no clue how many non-Unix boxes we have here... I avoid anything Microsoft related and make sure I give disapproving glares to all the Windows Admins in meetings. I'm sure we have thousands of MacBooks floating around in the wild and probably 2/3 that number of Windows laptops.
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@RamblingBiped That number of systems is insane.... what are they used for?
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CentOS6, CentOS7 in production. CentOS6, CentOS7, and Ubuntu running in the lab
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Ubuntu, CentOS, SuSE and Mint.
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For work use as a server:
CentOS 7, Debian 8, and Ubuntu 16.10For home use as a server:
CentOS 7, Debian 8 and Ubuntu 16.10For home use as a desktops/laptops:
I tend to jump back and forth between Ubuntu, elementaryOS, Linux Mint, and SolydXK and whatever else that looks interesting. -
Mainly CentOS7 but a couple of Ubuntu's
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CentOS 7.
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Korora 25 xfce on the laptop, CentOS on the Raspberry Pi and VPS.
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@DustinB3403 We have four environments for each application's stage of development (DEV, QA, Stage, and Production). Each application server has a different component of a product running on it; usually a Java-based micro-service. Some products take 2 or 3 servers, and some take 30+. And each of these systems are by no means hefty. A lot of them are 1 vCPU 512M-1024M builds. The number of systems in DEV varies depending on experimentation and any new products being worked on.
We actually just started work on building out our Stage environment so we can fully implement CI/CD across all of our products. Myself and a few of my fellow Admins spun up 198 servers in a single sitting last week.
We manage everything using Chef.