Split Linux Distros In Two?
Desktop workloads and server workloads have different needs, and it's high time Linux consider a split to more adequately address them,
writes Deep End's Paul Venezia. You can take a Linux installation of
nearly any distribution and turn it into a server, then back into a
workstation by installing and uninstalling various packages. The OS core
remains the same, and the stability and performance will be roughly the
same, assuming you tune they system along the way. Those two workloads
are very different, however, and as computing power continues to
increase, the workloads are diverging even more. Maybe it's time Linux
is split in two. I suggest this possibility last week when discussing systemd
(or that FreeBSD could see higher server adoption), but it's more than
systemd coming into play here. It's from the bootloader all the way up.
The more we see Linux distributions trying to offer chimera-like
operating systems that can be a server or a desktop at a whim, the more
we tend to see the dilution of both. You can run stock Debian Jessie on
your laptop or on a 64-way server. Does it not make sense to concentrate
all efforts on one or the other?
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