First of all, thanks to everybody for sharing your experiences, very helpful information indeed, specially now that i need some guidance. For now, the conclusion i can reach is that Gentoo is perfectly adequate to use on a server with the only downside of the need to have special care with updates. Ricardo, i find really encouraging the fact that your lab uses Gentoo for their servers. Nevertheless it would be great if you could tell us a little about your lab's experience with updates, which seems to be the only issue when using Gentoo on a server. Another thing i noticed is that some of you recommend to have a secondary server to perform tests, i totally agree with this. Unfortunately i do not think that having such thing will be possible since the server will be charged to a client and i do not think they will agree to buy a second server (even if its the right thing to do, which i believe so), in such case, would you still recommend Gentoo?. Again, thanks to everybody for the information. 2007/11/29, Billy Holmes <billy@gonoph.net>: > > Robert Spahr wrote: > > I have been running these gentoo servers since 2003, with very few > > problems. Although I am conservative in doing my updates. > > > > I've run gentoo on several servers from dual intels running dns, squid, > routing, to web servers, to quad opterons running as terminal servers. > > The secret to all of that is what Robert said.. update conservatively. > > The update from apache 1.x to 2.x broke some things (good idea to follow > the update faqs, or as I did, rebuild the config files by hand), as did > when the gentoo apache package managers decided to change the config > file layout to better match other distros. > > Also, beware of some of the library updates. They can break other things > that revdep-rebuild will have to fix. > > It's a good idea to look up via google or whatever to figure out what's > being updated and why (read the changelog). > > It will take a bit to get used to, but after awhile you'll just eyeball > it and know which packages are non-issues, and which should be looked > closely. > > It's also a good idea to have a staging server where you can test the > updates and trash it if you need to (virtualization will help with this > a lot). > > Also, some updates don't fully manifest themselves till you restart all > the processes or restart the machine. Processes that were running before > a library update still have an internal image of the previous version's > library. > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > >