I am about to set up a cloud instance with linux operating system, and the common choice here normally would be ubuntu. But since they failed their newest release, and I have the option of going fedora or debian. What would you guys recommend for server?

  • consequential@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    Do yourself a favor and go with Nixos. Dive head first into to the rabbit hole and set up a repeatable and immutable system. You’ll thank yourself later when so many maintenance tasks become a GitOps workflow: update config, commit, push, build, deploy, rollback if it fails

  • Dingaling@lemmy.ml
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    16 hours ago

    SME here, moving around 300 vms from Rocky to Debian.

    But your question is really too vague. Our workflows are quite traditional, but the world is a big place and there is no single right answer here.

  • SpicySquid@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Best fit is always dependent on how you’re planning to use it. Find out what your requirements before you set up a server.

    Generally Debian is chosen very often, but I’d wager pretty much any distro will do. Your own experience goes a long way in making a distro a good choice.

  • tirateimas@lemmy.pt
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    1 day ago

    Debian would be the most obvious choice. Perhaps Alma is also a good option. If you would like a european option, OpenSUSE leap can also do the job.

  • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    24 hours ago

    Rhel if you are using professionally. Their enterprise support staff are wizards when it comes to finding the cause of random issues.

  • placebo@piefed.zip
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    1 day ago

    Professional as in an organisation? You should probably start by gathering functional and non-functional requirements from stakeholders.

  • Arcanoloth@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    I personally favour Alpine Linux for its minimalism, but Devuan or Debian are fine, and more familiar choices, too. Depending on what you intend to run, especially appliance-like things, OpenBSD might be a good alternative.