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Oracle Linux 7 Update 4 Brings UEFI SecureBoot, USBGuard Added & Btrfs Supported

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  • bug77
    replied
    Originally posted by Delgarde View Post

    Ouch. Yeah, that's exactly the kind of reason why our third-party vendor doesn't want to support them... their view is that while the software should work on any reasonably-current Linux platform, providing commercial support for more than two or three major distros is just too much hassle.
    Luckily these days docker will take care of that

    Leave a comment:


  • Delgarde
    replied
    Originally posted by bug77 View Post

    Eh, it could have been worse. At one point we had a client that said they were using RedHat, but they were actually using Oracle Linux. Our C/C++ guys had so much fun chasing down the segfaults
    Ouch. Yeah, that's exactly the kind of reason why our third-party vendor doesn't want to support them... their view is that while the software should work on any reasonably-current Linux platform, providing commercial support for more than two or three major distros is just too much hassle.

    Leave a comment:


  • bug77
    replied
    Originally posted by Delgarde View Post

    One of our clients wanted it recently – I think because they have an existing enterprise license for it – but it turns out we can't support it because one of the third-party tools we depend on aren't willing to do so either. So it looks like we'll be sticking with Redhat...

    So happily, that's one less piece of Oracle technology in our stack. Unfortunately, the others are somewhat harder to avoid...
    Eh, it could have been worse. At one point we had a client that said they were using RedHat, but they were actually using Oracle Linux. Our C/C++ guys had so much fun chasing down the segfaults

    Leave a comment:


  • Delgarde
    replied
    Originally posted by bug77 View Post
    Raise your hand if you're willingly using Oracle Linux. Willingly = not because that's what someone else decided your project should be using.
    One of our clients wanted it recently – I think because they have an existing enterprise license for it – but it turns out we can't support it because one of the third-party tools we depend on aren't willing to do so either. So it looks like we'll be sticking with Redhat...

    So happily, that's one less piece of Oracle technology in our stack. Unfortunately, the others are somewhat harder to avoid...

    Leave a comment:


  • PuckPoltergeist
    replied
    Originally posted by darkcoder View Post
    Support for Btrfs? For how long? Is on its way to be deprecated (aka Removed) in the future by upstream (RH).
    I doubt Unbreakable Kernel comes from RH.

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by darkcoder View Post
    Support for Btrfs? For how long? Is on its way to be deprecated (aka Removed) in the future by upstream (RH).
    Oracle will likely bring it back as it's also their baby now.

    At least Oracle Linux won't just be a reskin of RHEL.

    Leave a comment:


  • bug77
    replied
    Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
    I've yet to use something "willingly" at work.
    I'm using Java willingly, Netbeans unwillingly, Kubuntu willingly, svn unwillingly. And so on

    Leave a comment:


  • darkcoder
    replied
    Support for Btrfs? For how long? Is on its way to be deprecated (aka Removed) in the future by upstream (RH).

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by bug77 View Post
    Raise your hand if you're willingly using Oracle Linux. Willingly = not because that's what someone else decided your project should be using.
    I've yet to use something "willingly" at work.

    Leave a comment:


  • bug77
    replied
    Raise your hand if you're willingly using Oracle Linux. Willingly = not because that's what someone else decided your project should be using.

    Leave a comment:

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