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for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

 
srinivassin
Occasional Contributor

for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

Any suggestion to built own Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4. If you know any other distribution(GNU), plz. refer me.


thankz in advance...
4 REPLIES 4
xyko_1
Esteemed Contributor

Re: for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

Hi Srinivassin,

If I understood your question, the best option is to chose one that is officialy supported by HP to your server model. Go to the model page and see what are the options.
Red Hat AS and SUSE Enterprise Edition are both good choices.

Regards,
Xyko
Rick Beldin
HPE Pro

Re: for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

There are a couple of 'lookalike' distributions for Red Hat AS. Look for a distribution called White Box Linux.

http://www.whiteboxlinux.org/

The big caveat. NO SUPPORT. Not from HP, Not from Red Hat, perhaps from White Box. Not a big deal if you know what you are doing.
Necessary questions: Why? What? How? When?
NiCK_76
Respected Contributor

Re: for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

CentOS
http://www.centos.org/

http://www.centos.org/modules/smartfaq/faq.php?faqid=5
Why does CentOS exist?
CentOS exists to provide a free enterprise class computing platform to anyone who wishes to use it. CentOS 2 and 3 are fully compatible rebuilds of RHEL 2 and 3 respectively. CentOS 2 and 3 are reproduced from RHEL sources that are freely distributed by RedHat. Redistributed packages and sources comply fully with RedHat's redistribution requirements. CentOS 2 and 3 are designed for people who need an enterprise class OS without the cost, support, certification, or brand name of RedHat.
just for fun
Ted M Johnson_1
Frequent Advisor

Re: for Hp prolaint (Dual intel), need Enterprise linux, like RHEL 2.4

Of course there is Debian, which you can get support for (depending on the ProLiant model).

Also, since its not mentioned here yet - get a distro that is supported by the application you wish to run. HW support is nice, but in reality I haven't seen a problem with hw compatibility among the major Linux distros (Debian, RH, Suse, Gentoo, LFS). Application compatibility is much more important that HW compatibility for newer server calss Intel boxes, since you'll be hard pressed to find a distro that wont support your CPU, chipset, network card, or I/O card on a newer PorLiant.