By Brian Proffitt
Managing Editor
Linux is about choice. We all know that. You choose one distro,
I choose another. You choose vi, I choose emacs. Some like Pepsi,
some like Coke, I like Dr. Pepper. And so on.
A while back, I chose to start using Red Hat. I moved to it from
SuSE Linux, mostly because I wanted to use Ximian GNOME, and it
seemed easier to just shift over to Red Hat, which had better
support for Ximian at the time. (Of course, that’s all about to
change, isn’t it?)
I grew to like Red Hat, because of Ximian GNOME, because of the
Red Hat Network which kept me up-to-date without having to actively
seek out security updates, and because of all of those ephemeral
things that make for a satisfying experience. When Red Hat 9 came
out, I downloaded the Shrike ISOs, burned them, and happily
upgraded.
I have quite a bit of work invested into my system, mostly
tweaking and tuning to deliver content to Linux Today in an
efficient manner. It goes a bit beyond this system, too. Having Red
Hat on my main box and Yellow Dog on my laptop made it very easy to
mirror files and tools on either system.
This is not about me giving a plug for Red Hat. I like what I
like, you like what you like, and we’re all cool. Except now things
have changed and I am not sure what the future holds.
In April, 2004, Red Hat will officially drop support for Red Hat
9, which leaves me with making a choice on what to do next. Do I
shift to Fedora? Or move to another distro altogether? Because as
of last week, I am one of those Red hat users that’s about to be
orphaned from their distro.
A lot of people have pointed out to me that this is really no
different than any other end-of-life. If I was using Red Hat 6.0, I
would have long since upgraded to something with actual support,
unless of course I chose to live without it.
But this really is a different situation, because there isn’t
anything to upgrade to. There is no Red Hat 10 down the line. Now
there’s Fedora. Or the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) line. I can
rule out the latter right away, because even on the company’s
nickel, I am not sanguine about spending that kind of money.
Fedora is the planned successor to Red Hat Linux and I sincerely
hope this turns out to be the case. But it is never going to be
exactly like Red Hat.
This is not me speculating based on one or two reviews. This is
me after hearing it straight from the horse’s mouth, when
executives from Red Hat told me directly that Fedora will indeed
serve as the testbed for much of the enterprise line of Red Hat.
Fedora is their chance to try things on the bleeding edge and get
the kinks worked out before they bring some new functionality into
RHEL.
This is all well and good for Red Hat, but it is not really what
I need. I like cutting edge stuff just as much as the next user,
but I have web sites to run. Software to examine. I don’t have the
time or the inclination to play around with glitches. I need
something that works, is stable, and when I absolutely can’t figure
it out on JustLinux, LinuxQuestions.org, or my network of guru
friends, something that offers technical support.
Am I being too lazy? Perhaps, considering my background and
experience. But it’s for sure that my concerns are shared by other
users who don’t even have the technical background I do–people who
just want to turn their boxes on and use them. People who
need live support.
I realize I sound grossly unfair to the Fedora developers by
making the presumption that there will be problems. Maybe
there won’t be and maybe I am worrying for nothing. But when I hear
terms like “testbed” being bandied about by Red Hat itself, I tend
to get concerned. Over time, I am confident that any issues that do
crop up in Fedora will be handled just as well as they are in any
other big OS project, like Debian, OpenOffice, or Mozilla, just to
name a few.
My problem is, do I want to wait?
So here I am, humming the lines to The Clash’s “Should I Stay or
Should I Go?” in may head. Fedora could be the upgrade path for my
needs, but SUSE, Mandrake, Gentoo, and Debian each offer attractive
options as well. Debian especially, since there seems to be a
resurgence in getting it ready for the enterprise.
In terms of life’s crisises, this one is really very small and I
am sure that be the end of the proverbial day all will be well
again.
What still bothers me is not that I have all these choices but
that after I finally made a choice I was happy with, I might have
to do it all over again.