01-25-2018
I'm not disagreeing with you, per se, but your claim that "updates have habit of breaking stuff? Debian doesn't do that." seems about as, how did you put it, constructive, as the question.
I'd always recommend CentOS or RHEL, but it doesn't matter. What matters, is what has already been pointed out: there's really no right answer to this question. It's horses for courses: you pick an OS / distribution based on what you want it for. I've even stopped using VMs, for the most part, in favour of Docker containers as much of what I need them for is ephemeral in nature, and I don't need them clocking up my hard drive.
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
tpm_getpcrhash
GET TPM PCR
HASH(8) GET TPM PCR HASH(8)
NAME
tpm_getpcrhash
SYNOPSIS
tpm_getpcrhash [-r HOST] [-hv] UUID-FILE HASH-FILE PCR-VALUE-FILE PCRS
DESCRIPTION
The program returns the signed data produced by a TPM quote in the file HASH-FILE and the list of Platform Configuration Register values in
the file PCR-VALUE-FILE. PCRS is a sequence of integers that specify the Platform Configuration Registers used to produce the signed data.
The key used for the operation is the one registered under the UUID in UUID-FILE. The nonce used while quoting is unpredictable. The
nonce field in the signed data is ignored when using the signed data to verify a quote.
-r HOST
Perform operation on remote HOST.
-h Display command usage info.
-v Display command version info.
SEE ALSO
tpm_quote_tools(8), tpm_loadkey(8), tpm_getquote(8), tpm_verifyquote(8), tpm_updateprchash(8)
Oct 2010 GET TPM PCR HASH(8)