debian 10 ubuntu
By default, Ubuntu (17.10 and onwards) comes with the GNOME desktop environment. The Debian website’s advice is the opposite what you so luckily found easy as in -default- modes. However, Ubuntu LTS versions tend to stabilize from this point of view fairly quickly after release. Using the same software is not the same as using the same repository. All the editions can run on the computer alone, or in a virtual machine. (Full transparency, I use and love both Ubuntu and Debian), Ok, so it’s obvious we needed to add more disclaimers and warnings now. Expert mode is not default. (/ispconfig.ai.php:15). For example, Ubuntu uses the apt command to install software, while SUSE uses zypper and Fedora uses dnf. > are options like --no-web or --no-dns still relevant. Generally, Ubuntu is considered a better choice for beginners, and Debian a better choice for experts. If you are not savvy on Linux partitions setting up your own Linux drives can be a nightmare. So it is not difficult to install Debian. physics and computer codes and engineering. Mentally vacant. Ill be diching unbuntu on my 16 systems shortly for Debian redhat or suse enterprise . Why do I read everywhere that you can’t? There are new Ubuntu LTS releases every 2 years. If you deploy an application for government running Debian Desktop and Ubuntu Desktop more than 1000 PC, updating too frequently on a lib might make your app need a re-compile and re-deploy. for ftp, for servers on eg aws, or digitalocean, the EIP / floating IP is not visible in any way directly from the vps, i see we can set the passive ports using the --use-ftp-ports option, is there any similar option for setting the ForcePassiveIP or does that still need to be done manually after install? Also, Ubuntu is buggy. Ubuntu PPAs”. [ERROR] Exception occured: ISPConfigOSException -> Installing packages failed. [INFO] Installing roundcube. Sorry my english is bad. Ubuntu’s support lasts for 5 years for servers and 5 years for desktop. However, they still have differences. will behave as you expect them to with no changes over time. If it works, why fix it? We went through all the differences and similarities as objectively as we could. Your not stuck with the default on any distro. Yes, they are relevant with --interactive as --interactive is only for the ISPConfig part, not which packages will/won't be installed. If you want support for a longer period of time, you should go with Ubuntu LTS, instead of Debian Stable. Indians are precise thinkers. So now I am back where I was haha. Ubuntu is not good option for anything, let it be a lab.. I’m beginning to use Ubuntu on my desktop, I’m a beginner in Linux, but sins last update of Ubuntu 18.04, a nightmare happen, the system stock, freezes and at the end do not start at all, even when I try to reinstall, problems emerge. choose between Apache and Nginx webserver and which services shall be installed on the system. The biggest deciding factor on whether or not a distro is lightweight is what desktop environment is used. Always go with Debian. Granted, you can still install non-free software on Debian, but it will not be as easy to do as it is on Ubuntu. Yeah, only after you followed all the steps and finished installing everything, and then, apache.Dude, that stuff should be in the begining so people won't finish the install only to be greeted by apache when they want nginx. You wrote:”The biggest deciding factor on whether or not a distro is lightweight is what desktop environment is used. On Ubuntu, by default, all choices are made for you and everything works out of the box. This for both the stable, old-stable and development branches (currently 11, 12 and 13). Everything is stable, never crashes, solid as a rock. You can configure both distros to have pretty much the same features and software. Alternatively, you can use Debian LTS which will extend the support to 5 years. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has regular and LTS releases. I kind of agree, the frequency of upgrades will increase chances of messing up existing config scripts, but more updates mean more patches security and feature wise, and since it is a community that tests things vigorously you may avoid bugs. I think some people running Debian systems and hang in the forum should work on their social skills. Even distributions based on Unstable or Testing offer better stability and performance. As you cal tell, I take exception with the vagueness of the terms, and the fact that there is no in-between. Is there a way to install nginx instead of apache? A PPA makes not much sense as the auto-installer is just a script that is run once to install and configure your server, it is never run again and it would even damage the system if you would permanently install it to run it again. Actually, you can still get the Unity desktop simply by typing “sudo apt-get unity-desktop”. You can put any one you like on any distro you want to run. Ubuntu will be the comfortable pick for users of Debian-style distributions (like Mint), while users with more experience using RPM-based distributions may pick Fedora or SUSE. I think the author should use a search engine, irc, official sites, and research why you shouldn’t use ubuntu .debs or PPA’s in debian. First, you should check the hostname in /etc/hosts and change it when necessary.
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