Friday, June 26, 2009

CentOS Server Install

I know I’m an old-school system administrator, who doesn’t want a X session running on his servers.

The Console and the CLI are the ultimate tool for a sysadmin (In the Begining was the Command Line), and I don’t like the extra stuff, specifically when you have to update the system: desktop applications have frecuently security updates, as other applications, but I’m not using them in a server so I feel it’s a waste of time and bandwith.

I tend to say base system as synonymous for bare minium install, and yesterday I had a little problem with a partner and a CentOS install.

We requested just base and the IT guy did a default install, that includes all the Gnome desktop and associated applications. That’s not a big deal, but it’s not the optimal situation.

What do you think? Are you OK with a desktop installed in a server?

Monday, December 15, 2008
The Ubuntu Server has always had a command-line only interface, and has never included a graphical desktop, such as Gnome, KDE, or XFCE. We differ quite a bit from other Linux distributions in this respect.

The Ubuntu Server already includes a Window Manager? by Dustin Kirkland.

Don’t get me wrong: I understand that some people is happy with a GUI on the server (it helps the average Windows administrator to use Linux), but I don’t need it.

And please: don’t waste my resources on my server with a X-Window session running, thanks you (in fact I like to deploy CentOS with a ‘command line only interface’ interface).