Centos 8 is EOL in 2021, what will xcp-ng do?
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@jefftee I prefer Alpine Linux.
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@indyj ok
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@indyj said in Centos 8 is EOL in 2021, what will xcp-ng do?:
@jefftee I prefer Alpine Linux.
+1
Low resource footprint, no bloatware... They even have a pre-built Xen Hypervisor ISO flavor
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Xen and Linux kernel inside XCP-ng are completely custom, so it's pretty different than the those shipped in CentOS or even Alpine.
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I've always used Debian LTS for many, many years. Just curious if Debian is anywhere on the radar for the replacement?
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The thing is: everything is RPM based now. Switching to DEB will involve a LOT of work (not only to rebuild everything, but also the build system, now based on Koji etc.)
Note: I like Debian and it's my main server operating system.
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@olivierlambert said in Centos 8 is EOL in 2021, what will xcp-ng do?:
The thing is: everything is RPM based now. Switching to DEB will involve a LOT of work (not only to rebuild everything, but also the build system, now based on Koji etc.)
Note: I like Debian and it's my main server operating system.
Got it. Thanks!
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IMHO, CentOS Stream might do it, alternatively Rocky, but this will be probably a "common" decision with Citrix so we can keep our fork small and contribute to each project easily (and move faster!)
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@olivierlambert said in Centos 8 is EOL in 2021, what will xcp-ng do?:
IMHO, CentOS Stream might do it, alternatively Rocky, but this will be probably a "common" decision with Citrix so we can keep our fork small and contribute to each project easily (and move faster!)
I forgot about Citrix. In that case it makes sense to work together. Anything else is double work
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Indeed, there's no reason to reinvent the wheel. We always prefer to work together, there's too many things to do
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Any news what will happened here?
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CentOS 7 will continue to be supported with patches and so on up to June the 30th 2024, so it's not really a priority as we speak. But I'm sure the topic will be discussed during the next Xen summit in June
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Any updates here? We're 8 months away and its worrisome installing new nodes with less than 1 year lifetime.
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As I already explained in different places, what matters is the hypervisor, kernel, OVS and such important packages. We can still backport security fixes ourselves on various packages inside the OS.
XCP-ng is only partially based on CentOS, only using non-critical CentOS packages (NOT the kernel, NOT Xen, NOT OVS, SMAPI/XAPI aren't packaged in CentOS etc.).
XCP-ng is NOT your regular distro, it's an appliance where we backport relevant security fixes.
Be sure that next major version won't even have SSH access enabled by default.