We have had great success running it on both RedHat AS 3 and Fedora Core 4
in a production environment under moderate load (10's of millions of
queries/day). I see no real difference (from MySQL's perspective) on running
it on either of those distros, unless you really need the support contract.
/Garth
>From: Stewart Smith <stewart@stripped>
>To: "Cory @ SkyVantage" <lasso@stripped>
>CC: cluster@stripped
>Subject: Re: Best Linux Distro for MySQL-Cluster
>Date: Mon, 16 Jan 2006 10:10:18 +1100
>
>On Sun, 2006-01-15 at 03:09 -0700, Cory @ SkyVantage wrote:
> > I'm looking for the best linux distribution to run MySQL-Cluster on.
> > Any idea's? We're 'playing' with it on Fedora Core 4, but that's most
> > likely not the best solution for a production-level environment.
>
>Some people indeed do deploy on Fedora.
>
>Otherwise, common big name linux distros should work fine (and indeed,
>do!).
>
>Personally, I love Ubuntu - but haven't used it on a server. Anything
>sanely based on Debian has a good chance of being good. But then again,
>I'm a huge Debian fan (I had to re-install when changing CPU
>architectures... but that's it)
>
>SuSE, RedHat Enterprise Linux - both have their fans - and they
>certainly have support contracts if that's what you're concerned about.
>--
>Stewart Smith, Software Engineer
>MySQL AB, www.mysql.com
>Office: +14082136540 Ext: 6616
>VoIP: 6616@stripped
>Mobile: +61 4 3 8844 332
>
>Jumpstart your cluster:
>http://www.mysql.com/consulting/packaged/cluster.html
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