--- On Sun, 11/14/10, Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Patrick Bartek wrote: > > [snip] > > > > That's okay as long as the OS is "current" when it is > installed and will be supported for those 5 years or > so. (I'm not a cutting edge type of person. It > matters little to me whether something is new or old as long > as it works and satifies my requirements.) I wouldn't > install, say, CentOS 5, on a new or old system today and not > expect problems, either today or later. That's why I'm > waiting for CentOS 6 or Debian 6, etc. to be released before > doing anything to my current 4 year old system--Fedora 12 > 64-bit. > > > I will probably be using CentOS-5.5 or later until CentOS-7 > comes out. RHEL6 is > dropping xen, and the little utility boxes I seem to build > for firewall or > similar don't have HVM and can't support KVM. Hopefully xen > will be back in > mainline soon, and people will have a choice how they want > to run things. I think you're SOL expecting XEN to be reinstated after being so resoundingly dropped in favor of KVM by Redhat. I vaguely remember reading a press release about it. Wait for CentOS 7? Going to be long wait. 5 years(?), at least. But patience _is_ a virtue. ;-) B -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines