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LinkedIn Migrates Their Servers From CentOS To Azure Linux

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  • Mavman
    replied
    Originally posted by Ironmask View Post

    I don't think dogfooding counts as EEE.

    Originally posted by darkonix View Post

    Ah, now that you mention it, no.

    nice XD​​

    Leave a comment:


  • NotMine999
    replied
    Originally posted by Weasel View Post
    Maybe because Windows Server is so inferior they can't justify it in the slightest.
    I think they can't justify it due to the licensing costs and need to purchase a CAL for every user that accesses each server.

    Leave a comment:


  • darkonix
    replied
    Originally posted by Mavman View Post
    Anyone else seeing the M$' EEE strategy here?
    Ah, now that you mention it, no.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ironmask
    replied
    Originally posted by Mavman View Post
    Anyone else seeing the M$' EEE strategy here?
    I don't think dogfooding counts as EEE.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mavman
    replied
    Anyone else seeing the M$' EEE strategy here?

    Leave a comment:


  • toves
    replied
    I am curious what for Linkedin would be the need software raid on Azure.

    The virtual disk devices their VMs would be using would presumably already be redundant and snapshot and archived.

    The blog reference conjoins the reference to XFS with the reference to software raid.
    AFAIK XFS on Linux doesn't have any raid capability - I vaguely recall XFS on Irix 6.5 might have had some volume management capability (probably only projected and mentioned in the SGI man page.)

    So I assume the raid is from LVM (lvcreate) or MD (mdadm.)

    Leave a comment:


  • pWe00Iri3e7Z9lHOX2Qx
    replied
    Originally posted by danger View Post
    There is nothing interesting about Azure Linux. It's still CentOS-based. Packages are rpm. Package manager is dnf. The structure closely resembles CentOS, only with much fewer packages. You can check available packages here: https://packages.microsoft.com/azure...3.0/prod/base/
    Except that isn't accurate at all.

    A Build attendee asked what distro Azure Linux was based on. “Azure Linux is its own distribution. We didn’t fork Fedora or anything like that. We have borrowed code from them, it’s an RPM-based distro,” said Perrin. “The reason we chose not to fork a different distro … Microsoft has kind of a history with Linux. … I think the Balmer quote is from 2001, but a lot of the sentiment still lingers even today. Part of the reason we did not choose to start with a distribution and then fork it for our needs is we didn’t want to be seen as doing the embrace and extend thing again, we didn’t want to wake any of that up, we figured, build it from scratch, we can tailor it to our needs … we’re scratching an itch we had and offering the solution back to the community.”
    SUSE (and other distros) use RPM and you can even optionally use dnf there. That doesn't mean they are based on CentOS.

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  • danger
    replied
    There is nothing interesting about Azure Linux. It's still CentOS-based. Packages are rpm. Package manager is dnf. The structure closely resembles CentOS, only with much fewer packages. You can check available packages here: https://packages.microsoft.com/azure...3.0/prod/base/

    Leave a comment:


  • timrichardson
    replied
    This is a milestone moment for Microsoft: LinkedIn was at the time Microsoft's largest acquisition and it remains the second largest. This is a sign that Azure and Microsoft's linux support on azure is ready for anyone, I would say. Clearly a lot of work has gone into it. The cost of migrating to Windows would have been ridiculous and I doubt it had ever a moment of serious consideration. Also, it probably would have failed anyway, which would be humiliating. And to what benefit? I doubt it would change sentiment about Windows Server. It's a legacy technology and it will be around for a long time. But a lot of the investment in the Windows tech stack seems to be better interop with Linux, or reimplementing Linux technologies. Search for "windows server innovations since 2010" is pretty sparse reading. Yes, you can run kubernetes for all your windows container requirements (has anyone ever seen a windows container?), and windows server has a headless mode now. And there is COW filesytem too, somewhere or other.

    Leave a comment:


  • cjcox
    replied
    Red Hat: We need to end the whole community clone RHEL thing.

    World: Do you think that will cause any problems?

    Red Hat: No.

    Leave a comment:

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