Feb 26
Around the Distros
A quick look at some popular distros and what they’re up to:
SLES
SLES (SUSE Linux Enterprise Server) is Novell’s enterprise Linux distribution targeted at the business market.
It is a common mistake (which I sometimes make myself) to refer to both SLES and openSUSE as just “SUSE”, but these are different distros. See below for openSUSE.
There is also a SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED), based on the same codebase as SLES.
Current stable release: SLES 10 (SP2). ReiserFS is the default file system. ext3, XFS and JFS are also available.
Next release: SLES 11 some time in 2009. (March 2009 was mentioned but later deleted on one Novell webpage).  ReiserFS will be replaced by ext3 as the default filesystem in SLES 11.
openSUSE
The openSUSE project is a community program sponsored by Novell.
Current stable release: openSUSE 11.1. Uses 256byte inodes. ext3 has been the default filesystem since this was changed from ReiserFS for openSUSE 10.2.
Next release due: openSUSE 11.2 planned for September 2009.
RHEL
RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) is Red Hat’s enterprise Linux distro. It is the most common Linux distro used in business.
There are also several other distros which are rebadged versions of RHEL such as Oracle Enterprise Linux, CentOS (Community ENTerprise OS), and WBEL (White Box Enterprise Linux).
Current stable release: RHEL 5.3. RHEL 5.3 includes GFS2 (Global File System) clustered file system for storage area networks.
Next release: RHEL 5.4 due in August 2009. RHEL 5.4 will standardise on KVM for virtualization although Xen will still be supported.
Fedora
Fedora is Red Hat’s community Linux distro. Originally Red Hat used to produce just the one distro “Red Hat Linux”, but they decided they needed to reserve their trademark for the enterprise market. So Fedora was split off for the community and RHEL for the enterprise. A large number of businesses and many of our customers use Fedora not RHEL though. New Linux features appear first on Fedora before being adopted by RHEL.
Current stable release: Fedora 10. Fedora 10 defaults to creating 256byte inodes and using LVM. XFS and ext4 are available.
Next release: Fedora 11 due for 26 May 2009. ext4 is the default file system for Fedora 11, Btrfs will be introduced as experimental, ext3 and XFS will still be available.
Ubuntu
Ubuntu is a community distro, but Cannonical also sells Ubuntu support for business customers. Ubuntu is a fork of Debian, but is much easier to use and administer. Motto is “Linux for Human Beings”.
Current stable release: Ubuntu 8.10. Ubuntu 8.10 defaults to creating 256byte inodes.
Next release: Ubuntu 9.04 due for 23 April 2009. The default file system for Ubuntu 9.04 will still be ext3 with ext4 available at installation as an option.
Thinstation
Thinstation is a small, simple yet very powerful Open Source “thin client” operating system. It was designed as a thin client Linux distribution turn a PC a full-featured thin client.
Although no one is employed to work on Thinstation it has reasonably active development. There are currently three branches of Thinstation being worked on.
Thinstation 2.2.2 is the stable version and was a bug fix release to 2.2.1.
Thinstation 2.3 is Beta. I tried this out , but didn’t have much luck with it (pcnet32 wouldn’t work), so instead I upgraded the kernel in 2.2.1. Thinstation 2.3 will have kernel 2.6.24.7.
Thinstation 2.4 is in Alpha. With this branch Trevor has changed the build process from running jailed inside another Linux to running on a virtual machine. Thinstation 2.4 works just fine for me, but Trevor hasn’t yet made the build VM available, he says it is a “little large at the moment (6Gb)”. I’m eager to get a copy of this.
Mandriva
Mandriva Linux (formerly MandrakeLinux) was once the popular “Linux for the masses” distro. (Mandrake Linux est un système d’exploitation convivial.) Then came Knoppix, then Ubuntu. It still has a loyal following though. We have customers using Ghost with Mandriva so I have done support for it.
Current stable release: Mandriva 2009. Mandriva has used 256byte inodes since 2008.1.
Next release due: Mandriva 2009.1 planned for 29 April 2009. This release will have ext4 available, but not the default. ext4 is not yet supported for /boot file system.
Debian
The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system.
Current stable release: 5.0 lenny.
Next release due: testing squeeze.
Asianux
Asianux is an enterprise Linux distribution developed by the Asianux Consortium consisting of: Red Flag Linux from China, Miracle Linux from Japan, Haansoft from Korea, VietSoftware from Vietnam, and WTEC of Thailand.
Current stable release: Asianux 3.0.
Next release due: unknown.




February 27th, 2009 at Friday, 2:14 pm
What about LinuxMint, it’s minty fresh!
February 27th, 2009 at Friday, 2:35 pm
I haven’t tried LinuxMint. Are you running it? I see it’s a fork of Ubuntu with the non-free stuff included?
March 1st, 2009 at Sunday, 4:09 am
[...] is another small comparison that includes SLE and OpenSUSE. A quick look at some popular distros and what they’re up [...]