SLES9 vs. Windows Server 2003 In A Windows Network 21
Gsurface writes "Can SLES9 be a viable server solution as an answer to using a Windows 2003 Server? This article compares these two server products in a small to medium sized Windows network environment. The comparison covers areas such as reconfigurability, basic administration tasks, server tasks, file system performance, overall cost and user/computer management. These are basic functionalities that every network server needs to provide. Overall, makes for a good Saturday read." (That's "Suse Linux Enterprise Server," if you're not up on your acronym soup.)
Emulating Windows Server is the wrong approach. (Score:5, Informative)
A major issue not mentioned in this article is the prevelence of Windows-only server-side software. Besides easier administration using AD, this is another significant reason why people stick with Windows Server in real life. They absolutely need their custom departmental business apps, so the choice of operating system becomes secondary. NOTE: This is why we need a strong focus on real-world F/OSS database applications. This is without question the killer app of Open Source in the enterprise. (Hint: big money here, and think Java)
One last thing not mentioned is the fact that the Windows server environment is not just about sharing files. Group policies, MSI, etc. are powerful tools for administering a Windows network that Samba does not provide. After all, Samba is only one piece of the puzzle. That's not to say that these solutions are ideal, but if you're stuck with a Windows environment, they become a valid factor to consider.
All things considered, we as the Open Source community should not be focusing on emulating Windows Server as the key to the enterprise. This is an endless game of catch up to unstable, proprietary standards. We need to aim higher. We should be innovating and re-thinking the current office computing paradigm. We need to make it attractive not only to replace Windows on the server but also on the desktop as a direct result of the benefits of a purely non-Windows environment. Those benefits can only materialize if we create our *own* enterprise solutions instead of trying to just become compatible with the status quo.
Re:Emulating Windows Server is the wrong approach. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Emulating Windows Server is the wrong approach. (Score:2)
That being said-- Linux allows you do to things with your network that you couldn't even dream of doing on Windows. For a place to start, look up Project Athena..... And Linux allows you to mix and match these ideas to your heart's content. For example---
Microsoft's complaint with the Athena approach is "how do you read your email when you are not in the offic
Re:Emulating Windows Server is the wrong approach. (Score:2)
That being said-- Linux allows you do to things with your network that you couldn't even dream of doing on Windows.
Yeah, I wasn't discounting the need for emulation as an aid in migration. What concerns me is that too often the focus seems to only be on emulation when there is so much more possible.
Re:Emulating Windows Server is the wrong approach. (Score:2)
You have a point. The issue is that Microsoft really pushed this server/workstation model and now everyone feels compelled to fit into it. If you are going to make Linux appeal to PHB-types, you are going to have to use this model, unfortunately. This is worrysome and troubling. But there is hope.
As Linux continues to gain marketshare, we will hope to continue to see people really start to u
Lack of decent LDAP single sign on UI is a mystery (Score:5, Insightful)
I've gone through the trouble of getting everything I needed to get LDAP sign ons working in Linux, samba and Zope, but in the end the process was ugly as sin. It turned out to be waste of time because I couldn't delegate managing this system to non-technical people without giving them a course in things like Unix UIDs, LDIF, and LDAP schema.
With all the tremendous work being done on the Linux desktop, the lack of a cross machine/cross application sign on front end, when a robust and scalable back end already exists, is utterly mystifying to me.
Novell is LDAP. (Score:3, Insightful)
Why doesn't some Linux distro ship with LDAP configured with everythign it needs including the appropriate schema and a decent front end for setting up Unix and Samba logins?
Dude, if Novell can't do Directory Services, then no one can.
Re:Novell is LDAP. (Score:1)
Better yet, why can't $DISTRO?
Performance Charts (Score:2)
SuSE vs Windows 2003 Performance [flexbeta.net]
At 60 users SuSE has 2.5 time the performance
of Windows 2003 server.
Not to sound like an M$FT apologist, but... (Score:2)
That diagram is for NetBIOS/NetBEUI/NetBT/NetWhatever file sharing, which is maybe one one-hundredth of one one-hundredth of one one-hundredth of the possible things that a Windows 2003 server can do.
Re:Not to sound like an M$FT apologist, but... (Score:1, Insightful)
You sound like an M$FT apologist.
Re:Not to sound like an M$FT apologist, but... (Score:1)
Let's see what SLES9 will do for you if you want to replace your MS2kServer box:
Running Oracle? Check.
Running Toy SQL Server? If you can live with upgrading to MySQL, Check.
Running web server? Check.
Running Apache/Tomcaet or IBM Websphere for Java Enterprise apps? Check
Storing your roaming profiles? Check.
Unless you are talking about some obsolete cline-tserver arch application, I can't think anything that an SLES box can't do.
Kudos to SuSE & Samba, but that's not my point (Score:2)
Oh, also one more thing: Ha ha, SUSE whips NT's anus on their home turf, on one of their flagship server capacities - SMB/CIFS file sharing. Samba basically has to reverse engineer the entire (massive) protocol, and do a decent amount of hard work to convert UNIX permissions and names to NT ones. I'd like to see how badly NT gets shat on when Linux isn't so hamstrung.
Look, if a properly configured SuSE Server beats a properly configured Windows Server at NetBIOS/NetBEUI/NetBT/NetWHATEVER file sharing, th
Gee, what do I know? (Score:2)
What do you mean by COM & DCOM functionality? You're just pulling shit out your ass.
My bad - I was wrong: There's no such thing as "DCOM functionality" in the greater sphere of applied computer science, and you certainly wouldn't find such a thing wandering around in the bowels of a Microsoft product.
Re:Performance Charts (Score:1)
If his experiment is repeatab
Linux + Samba twice as fast as Windows 2003 (Score:2)
Citations in the article (Score:1)