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Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Can Ubuntu be used as a decent server? Post 302456670 by Neo on Saturday 25th of September 2010 04:10:05 AM
Old 09-25-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by jastanle84
Can Ubuntu be used as a decent server? Say a web server, a file server, or a mail server? Also, does Ubuntu play nice with virtualbox? Or should I use another brand of Linux to accomplish these things?
Yes, Ubuntu is great. We use it for at least 5 difference production web servers, and works just fine for web, file, and mail servers.

It is not possible nor accurate to say one Linux distribution is better or worse than another, especially based on the very tiny bit of information you provided.

All Linux versions use the Linux kernel, and kernels can easily be built, rebuilt or modified. The rest is just organization, configuration management, etc.

Don't be fooled by opinions based on favorites and personal choices.

In addition, there are more factors to consider when choosing a distribution, including supportability, maintainability and how the distribution fits into your organization, if you have one.

Finally, it is against forum rules to provide opinions of one OS or distribution over another, especially based on such small requirements and knowledge of the problem, skills of the user, the organization, the budget, the purpose, etc.

Ubuntu is a fine distribution and will work as well as any other for this simple application you vaguely describe.

---------- Post updated at 08:10 ---------- Previous update was at 06:11 ----------

OBTW, you might find our poll on Linux distributions useful:

https://www.unix.com/linux/27764-what...-distro-8.html
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

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REQUESTSYNC(1)						      General Commands Manual						    REQUESTSYNC(1)

NAME
requestsync - helper to file sync requests for Ubuntu SYNOPSIS
requestsync [-d distro] [-nse] [-k keyid] <source package> [target release] [base version] requestsync --lp [-nse] <source package> <target release> [base version] requestsync -h DESCRIPTION
requestsync looks at the versions of <source package> in Debian and Ubuntu and prompts for an explanation of why the Ubuntu changes (if there are any) should be dropped. The changelog entry is then downloaded from packages.debian.org, and the sync request bug is filed in launchpad. Alternatively, the sync request can be filed by GPG-signed email (option --email). requestsync checks if you have the permissions to request the sync from the archive administrators directly by checking if you have upload permissions for that package through package set permissions or component permissions. If you don't have upload permissions, the script will subscribe the necessary team with approval rights to the bug report for you. This check is only performed if requestsync is allowed to use the LP API (not email submission). In the other case requestsync relies on that you answer the question about upload permissions honestly to determine if a team with approval rights is to be subscribed to the bug. If you have permission to upload the package directly, then you may prefer to use syncpackage instead to copy the package using the Launch- pad API. At some future point, requestsync will be changed to do this automatically. requestsync uses launchpadlib authentication to file its requests. OPTIONS
Listed below are the command line options for requestsync: -h Display a help message and exit. -d Specifies which Debian distribution a package should be synced from. Default is testing in LTS cycles, otherwise unstable. -n Specifies that the package is a new package, and requestsync should not attempt to look it up in Ubuntu since it will not exist. -k <keyid> Specifies your GPG key. This is only used if the sync request is mailed to Launchpad. --email Use GPG-signed email to file the bug, rather than launchpadlib. -s Specifies that you require sponsorship. You need this option if you don't have upload permissions for that package. This disables the upload permissions check described above. -C Allow changelog to be manually filled in when missing. requestsync gets Debian changelogs from packages.debian.org, which isn't in sync with the Debian archive. To request a sync before the changelog is available, pass this option, and provide the changelog entries yourself. -e Use this flag after FeatureFreeze for non-bug fix syncs. requestsync will subscribe ubuntu-release team instead of sponsorship team. -l INSTANCE, --lpinstance=INSTANCE Use the specified instance of Launchpad (e.g. "staging"), instead of the default of "production". --no-conf Do not read any configuration files, or configuration from environment variables. <source package> This is the source package that you would like to be synced from Debian. <target release> This is the release that you would like the source package to be synced into. This should always be the latest development release of Ubuntu. [base version] In some cases, the base version (where the Ubuntu package started differing from the Debian package) cannot be automatically deter- mined. Specify this option in this case. ENVIRONMENT
requestsync uses the following variables which should be set in your shell's configuration by adding export VARIABLE= lines, where VARIABLE is one of the following: UBUMAIL, DEBEMAIL Specifies which email should be used when sending to Launchpad. All of the CONFIGURATION VARIABLES below are also supported as environment variables. Variables in the environment take precedence to those in configuration files. CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
REQUESTSYNC_SMTP_SERVER Set which SMTP server to use when sending mail. If unspecified this defaults to launchpad's SMTP servers (the eventual destina- tion). REQUESTSYNC_SMTP_PORT Sets which port of the SMTP server to use. Default is 25. REQUESTSYNC_SMTP_USER and REQUESTSYNC_SMTP_PASS Sets the username and password to use when authenticating to the SMTP server. REQUESTSYNC_USE_LPAPI Setting this to no is equivalent to running with --email. REQUESTSYNC_LPINSTANCE, UBUNTUTOOLS_LPINSTANCE The default value for --lpinstance. REQUESTSYNC_KEYID, UBUNTUTOOLS_KEYID The default value for -k. SEE ALSO
rmadison(1), syncpackage(1), ubuntu-dev-tools(5) AUTHOR
requestsync and this manual page were written by the Ubuntu MOTU Team. Both are released under the GNU General Public License, version 2. ubuntu-dev-tools 19 January 2008 REQUESTSYNC(1)
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