<div dir="ltr">I like looking at this: <a href="http://imgur.com/8yHC8">http://imgur.com/8yHC8</a> and thinking about how many millions of lines of code and thousands of developers and contributors that represents. <div><br></div><div>I once got some good gardening tips from a person who believed woodland fairies came out at night and tended his garden. You can get a lot of opinions about OS distributions in a place like this list, but that guy had as much chance at catching one of those fairies as any person, group, company, project, [insert_entity_here] has at *ever* producing a STABLE release of a linux distro. My suggestion is to set aside any advice that hinges on stability, long term release cycles, support matrixes, etc. and try a few flavors, evaluate the available tools for deploying and managing a cluster, look at what any proprietary packages you use choose to support and pick the distro which makes you the most comfortable and causes the least amount of pain. For me and the environment I support those distros today are CentOS 6 & 7. This is continually re-evaluated and when another distro proves to actually be less painful (as opposed to having more powerful woodland fairies), I'll happily switch. My criteria may have no relation to your criteria and if so, my choice is irrelevant to you. As with performance, your application is the best benchmark.</div><div><br></div><div>To stretch my analogy, when getting any advice on Linux or technology in general, it's extremely important to know when people are talking about woodland fairies and when they are actually passing on solid advice ("sales engineers" tend to talk about woodland fairies a lot). In the realm of OS choice, topics like "stability", "package managers", "desktop usability", "long term releases", etc. are all woodland fairies. </div><div><br></div><div>jbh</div><div><br></div><div>Disclaimer: Apologies to any woodland fairies on the list who are offended by this, I simply use this group for the analogy and it was not intended to anger anyone.</div></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 6:20 AM, Jonathan Aquilina <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:jaquilina@eagleeyet.net" target="_blank">jaquilina@eagleeyet.net</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div style="font-size:10pt;font-family:Verdana,Geneva,sans-serif">
<p>Good Morning,</p>
<p>I am just wondering what distribution of choice would one use for their cluster? Would one go for a source based distro like gentoo or a precompiled one like Centos7?</p>
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