Re: wotaskd reliability
Re: wotaskd reliability
- Subject: Re: wotaskd reliability
- From: Pascal Robert <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 04 Dec 2015 03:29:01 -0500
> Le 2015-12-03 à 22:09, Samuel Pelletier <email@hidden> a écrit :
>
> Hi,
>
> I never use a system provided apache, php or other sensitive software for a server, I recommend to build from source, this allows to control when the update are applied and locate your config files where you want them.
>
> I even have multiple apache on the same server, some with php other without for example. This is also useful to support legacy thing that no longer work with newer versions of XYZ...
>
> My situation may be a bit odd because I tend to host many small sites and apps on a single server instead of having to manage multiple servers for a single site... Virtualization is cool but it also create a huge overhead by running multiple instances of complete OS. I prefer managing multiple environments on a single server, it is a less common and less easy to setup but works well.
Containers is the way to go. I use LXC and OpenVZ to create multiple containers for Apache, MySQL, etc. for our dev/tests/staging environment. Less overhead than creating multiple virtual machines, while having control, like running Apache 2.4 on a container while running 2.2 in another.
> Samuel
>
>> Le 2015-12-03 à 14:31, Klaus Berkling <email@hidden> a écrit :
>>
>>
>>> On Dec 3, 2015, at 8:44 AM, Ramsey Gurley <email@hidden> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On Nov 29, 2015, at 1:09 PM, Michael Kondratov <email@hidden> wrote:
>>>
>>>> What makes Linux better than OS X?
>>>
>>> Where do I start? :) In no particular order:
>>>
>>> Number of knowledgeable administrators.
>>> Server software packages (openstack, docker, etc)
>>> Targeted at power users (doesn’t F up /usr/local, has bash completions, etc)
>>> Uptime.
>>> Virtualization.
>>>
>>> And let’s just face it... OS X has been a hostile platform to Java since Steve Jobs made his “heavyweight ball and chain” comment.
>>> _______________________________________________
>>
>> And you never know when Apple decides you don’t need some particular feature and simply deletes it.
>> Or, an update rewrites your apache/httpd.conf file.
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
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