James B. Byrne
2015-Dec-09 13:54 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On Tue, December 8, 2015 11:05, Matthew Miller wrote:> >> I have been bitten by things done in Fedora that only have any use >> on >> a laptop and that should never have been allowed into a server >> distribution. But I cannot see how I would have been aware of them >> until they manifested themselves on equipment under my care. By >> which > > ^ right, this. > >> time it is rather too late to influence the decision to include >> them. > > Well, not if you get involved early. That's the point. > > If you don't *want* to, that's fine, but there's only so much > complainy cake that you can have and eat at the same time. >So, the implication of your suggestion, if I understand it aright, is that I should audit all of the communication forums in use by Fedora developers and then point out whenever any of the many dozens or hundreds of contributors introduces something that in my opinion may impact a server installation. To do this I am required to obtain such intimate personal knowledge of the internal workings of the distribution as to be able to identify these items as soon as they are introduced. naturally, I am also supposed to be able to immediately identify the negative impact of these things and prepare and present a cogent argument against their adoption or propose patches to correct the deficiencies that I believe that I have detected. I am to do this whilst running a CentOS installation that will not allow Fedora onto the premises. SO, no doubt, the intent is that I should run Fedora on my home systems and work diligently in my off hours to protect any future version of CentOS from that vantage. And of course, if I miss something then it is my fault for not having paid enough attention to that item. Am I correct? -- *** e-Mail is NOT a SECURE channel *** Do NOT transmit sensitive data via e-Mail James B. Byrne mailto:ByrneJB at Harte-Lyne.ca Harte & Lyne Limited http://www.harte-lyne.ca 9 Brockley Drive vox: +1 905 561 1241 Hamilton, Ontario fax: +1 905 561 0757 Canada L8E 3C3
Matthew Miller
2015-Dec-09 16:10 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On Wed, Dec 09, 2015 at 08:54:56AM -0500, James B. Byrne wrote:> So, the implication of your suggestion, if I understand it aright, is > that I should audit all of the communication forums in use by Fedora > developers and then point out whenever any of the many dozens or > hundreds of contributors introduces something that in my opinion may > impact a server installation. To do this I am required to obtain such > intimate personal knowledge of the internal workings of the > distribution as to be able to identify these items as soon as they are > introduced. naturally, I am also supposed to be able to immediately > identify the negative impact of these things and prepare and present a > cogent argument against their adoption or propose patches to correct > the deficiencies that I believe that I have detected.Yes, that's basically how it works ? but you don't actually have to go to that elaborate scale to make a difference. That's why I suggested getting involved with Fedora Server, not "auditing all of the communication forums". We (Fedora) also work hard on making sure that proposed and planned changes are communicated. Following the Devel Announce list https://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/devel-announce/ is a relatively low-traffic, low-effort way to stay informed of major things. Focus on something you're interested in. When enough people do that, it adds up.> I am to do this whilst running a CentOS installation that will not > allow Fedora onto the premises. SO, no doubt, the intent is that I > should run Fedora on my home systems and work diligently in my off > hours to protect any future version of CentOS from that vantage.Working with your employer to fix the "will not allow Fedora into the premises" part seems like a good start. Of course, if you don't like all of this ? and from your tone, it sounds very much like you don't ? there's another obvious path where you can have an impact. That's to pay for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and to submit feedback and problems through the official channels that provides.> And > of course, if I miss something then it is my fault for not having paid > enough attention to that item.I don't think _fault_ comes into it. It's not about blame; it's just that when no one does something, that something doesn't happen. -- Matthew Miller <mattdm at fedoraproject.org> Fedora Project Leader
m.roth at 5-cent.us
2015-Dec-09 16:54 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
Matthew Miller wrote:> On Wed, Dec 09, 2015 at 08:54:56AM -0500, James B. Byrne wrote:<snip>> Working with your employer to fix the "will not allow Fedora into the > premises" part seems like a good start.<snip> Why? Fedora is a development, rapid change distro. I just bugged one of my users yesterday that I'm *GOING* to update and reboot his system, since it hasn't been rebooted in about a year and a third. And we've got cluster members that they won't *let* us update, because it might break the software that's running on them. Around 6.3, I think, one user found an issue with the results from an updated system, and reran a completed job, and the update did *not* give the correct results. We had to downgrade - I forget what packages. And some of these users have jobs that on bare metal (forget VMs, we can't spare the cycles) run one to two *weeks*... and that's on clusters with 512 or over 1100 cores, or the boxes with *two* Tesla cards. Yes, we are talking very serious scientific computing. Absolute stability is what matters. For production machines, I worked out a once a month maintenance window, to update and reboot. In an environment like this, why would we want to do fedora, with its how-many-updates in the last two days? This is why we're on CentOS, which is *stable*. mark
Gordon Messmer
2015-Dec-09 19:42 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On 12/09/2015 05:54 AM, James B. Byrne wrote:> So, the implication of your suggestion, if I understand it aright, is > that I should audit all of the communication forums in use by Fedora > developers and then point out whenever any of the many dozens or > hundreds of contributors introduces something that in my opinion may > impact a server installation.I would offer that you could visit the Fedora ChangeSet page once every six months and see what's coming. For the release of 24 (changes not yet final): https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/24/ChangeSet But generally, Free Software is a participation culture, where "Free" refers to liberty, not commerce. You don't get to consume the goods for free, and also dictate your needs to the developers. If your employer needs features that the developers aren't currently working on, it needs to participate in development. Maybe that means paying a developer.
Lamar Owen
2015-Dec-09 21:07 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On 12/09/2015 11:45 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:> I'm sure it's *far* too much work for, say, the fedora development team to > put out once a quarter a notice to upstream, and maybe CentOS, Scientific > Linux, and whatever other main user groups to inform them of major > changes, and see the feedback....Someone just needs to spend the time to do it. So who is that someone? The Fedora team already has their hands full; or is the Fedora team supposed to allocate already scarce volunteer resources to handle the needs of CentOS users? (Red Hat likely already has one or more liaisons of this sort with the needs of Red Hat's customers in mind). No, it seems to me that a suitably motivated CentOS user needs to scratch this itch; and, no, I am not volunteering, as I've followed Fedora before......and just simply cannot give the time to it at this point in time in my life. So I shouldn't really complain, either, when a feature I use was removed way back then or a feature I would never use was added way back then, when I am getting many thousands of man-hours worth of work for free. If I want the right to complain, I need to ante up, either with money (and I did purchase and do annually renew my RHEL subscription) or with time (and I have done that, too, both as a Red Hat beta tester (prior to the Enterprise Linux / Fedora Core 'split') and by maintaining the PostgreSQL RPMs as a volunteer for five years, which is a far costlier thing to do!). IMHO, of course. So who wants to be the CentOS-Users to Fedora liaison, likely to be one of the most thankless jobs on the planet?
James Hogarth
2015-Dec-09 21:50 UTC
[CentOS] wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On 9 Dec 2015 9:07 p.m., "Lamar Owen" <lowen at pari.edu> wrote:>> No, it seems to me that a suitably motivated CentOS user needs to scratchthis itch; and, no, I am not volunteering, as I've followed Fedora before......and just simply cannot give the time to it at this point in time in my life.><snip>> > So who wants to be the CentOS-Users to Fedora liaison, likely to be oneof the most thankless jobs on the planet?> >I'm an active Fedora packager and yet I dare say Mark would hate me as liaison for I find the changes in EL7 most refreshing and look forward to bring able to make better use of them in due course ;) But I really do question whether someone in this industry is really not able to spend 30 minutes or so every six months checking changes for anything interesting. And frankly if one isn't willing to get either get a subscription and feedback as a paying customer or to get involved with the upstream sources then no one does not have say in direction and one shouldn't be surprised by that. If it was a democracy with a vote on every possible choice then we'd never get anywhere given the time to carry out such a survey and the vast differences in opinions. No, as the Debian folks say it is a meritocracy instead and those who get stuck in and actively discuss at the right time provide the influence on what happens next.
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