This machine I visited yesterday in our data center... it is running Ubuntu 14... I would say this is a pretty stable platform :) Cheers, j On 12/9/20 5:00 AM, Dmitry Melekhov wrote:> 09.12.2020 13:20, Frank Vanoni пишет: >> On Wed, 2020-12-09 at 11:03 +0400, Dmitry Melekhov wrote: >> >>> what is best choice ? Oracle? Ubuntu? >> I'm running Asterisk since several years on Ubuntu without any issues. >> >> Debian should be fine too. >> >> > Thank you. > > This gives me just about 3-4 years of support, considering 2 years > between LTS, > > and upgrading remote server can be pain. > > Anyway, this is good option... > > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20201209/979b7346/attachment.html> -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: aemkbmlbacippnlf.png Type: image/png Size: 8552 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20201209/979b7346/attachment.png>
09.12.2020 16:52, Jeff LaCoursiere пишет:> > > This machine I visited yesterday in our data center... it is running > Ubuntu 14... I would say this is a pretty stable platform :)Ubuntu 14... It is not supported for years now. This is not our method, we are replacing Centos 6 servers now...
On Wednesday 09 December 2020 at 13:52:24, Jeff LaCoursiere wrote:> This machine I visited yesterday in our data center... it is running > Ubuntu 14... I would say this is a pretty stable platform :)Let's just say that there can be a big difference between "stable" and "secure" as well as between "stable" and "supported". On Wednesday 09 December 2020 at 14:17:17, Jeff LaCoursiere wrote:> Ya, I wouldn't say this is our normal behaviour - to complete ignore a > running production system for four years, but if it ain't broke...I think you have the wrong definition of "broke/n". It may continue to be running the same way as it has for years, but during that time people have discovered ways in which the software on that machine turns out to be broken (which they didn't know at the time you installed it). Therefore your machine is in fact "broke/n"; it's a state it's got into gradually over a period of time as people have found more and more bugs & vulnerabilities in its code. Antony. -- "Life is just a lot better if you feel you're having 10 [small] wins a day rather than a [big] win every 10 years or so." - Chris Hadfield, former skiing (and ski racing) instructor Please reply to the list; please *don't* CC me.