I’ve seen a lot of different enterprise and personal use distros for servers, but what do you guys use?

I’m planning on using Debian but was wondering if there are any other good free options to consider.

  • stewie410
    link
    13 days ago

    We’re primarily a CentOS (6/7, kill me) and Rocky 8+ shop at work, with Debian handling our webservers. My Boss We like Rocky so much, it’s even our base image for all of our containers (ugh).

    My experience so far is that RHEL (and derivatives) are pretty solid, and not a bad choice. Though, I’d generally want to avoid the complexity that is SELinux in selfhost endeavors.

    • qprimed
      link
      fedilink
      English
      187 days ago

      creative is great, but sometimes you really just want your fleet of servers to do their fleet of servers thing. no fuss, no hassle. 100% solid and stable. learn the “debian way” and life is grand.

      debian saved my marraige and raised my kids - ok, not really, but almost.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    257 days ago

    Debian. When I have time to mess about with server stuff, I want to be doing the thing I want to do rather than fixing whatever broke in the most recent set of updates

    • haui
      link
      fedilink
      137 days ago

      I switched from ubuntu to debian on 2 machines recently and the difference is drastic. No bloat (snap), no asking for pro membership, just works.

  • Kuadhual
    link
    fedilink
    16
    edit-2
    7 days ago

    What we use in my office, depends on the type of servers:

    • For virtual server (we made a golden template of it) we use Debian 12
    • For virtualization host/ganeti cluster we use Debian 11
    • For NAS, we use OpenMediaVault (based on Debian)
      • Kuadhual
        link
        fedilink
        36 days ago

        I would like to default to debian 12 if I have to start fresh.

        The Ganeti Cluster was installed on Debian 10 then when 11 launched, I upgraded it. It’s a 10 nodes cluster and I just don’t have time to upgrade it yet. The last update to 11 took me a week to troubleshoot.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      67 days ago

      I did this, for flexibility and to tinker without screwing myself.

      But then my first install was Debian to run my docker containers sooooo

  • qprimed
    link
    fedilink
    English
    147 days ago

    lots of debian. its debian all the way down.

  • fmstrat
    link
    fedilink
    English
    45 days ago

    Debian, with containers for each app based on Alpine linux.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    56 days ago

    Debian is a great choice. I’m on Debian and it is solid.

    I do have one I like better: I’m transitioning to Fedora IoT from Debian for my homelab stuff. I like using their atomic desktop distros, I want to understand them better, and it seems like a great combination of recent kernel and system stability.

    • @FizzyOrange
      link
      25 days ago

      Interesting I hadn’t heard of these “atomic” distros. There isn’t really much description of what exactly is atomic about them though - all you get is “The whole system is updated in one go”. Can you explain it?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        35 days ago

        It works similarly to Android and iOS. The system partition is read-only, and each new system update is applied as a new system partition image. All user apps are kept separate from the system and are sandboxed.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        25 days ago

        I believe the “atomic” action is updating the kernel and all the base packages together such that either the whole thing succeeds or the existing system is unchanged. If the system update is atomic, you cannot be stuck in a partially updated state with new versions of some packages and previous versions of others. Naturally something like that lends itself to making rollbacks easier if it does break, much easier than trying to undo an update on a more traditional distro where they do the update in place.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    56 days ago

    I literally once rented a VPS, installed Debian 12, configured automatic updates, installed tor, set the max limit to the VPS limit, enabled the tor relay server.

    And now I am unable to login and that thing is just running lol. For the good of the Tor network?!