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For the one billion, two hundred, seventy third time Slackware.
Debian, thx
Devuan, thx (mostly)
Centos 7
Slackware or Debian. Plus some BSD VMs. I have one centos storage ox as it was better than the other templates lol.
Centos 7 and Ubuntu. Minimal installation.
low end services: centos.
Production services: Ubuntu
Ubuntu or debian
Debian or OpenBSD. I like the latter but the easier is far easier for web serving.
mostly Centos, but some debian machines. Debian is often easier to "just get stuff working"
Debian. Fool proof.
I run mostly webservers on my VPSes so I usually go with FreeBSD - because I like that the OS is separate and everything I install is put in /usr/local and all the config files in /usr/local/etc, easy maintenance and updating, pkg tool is easy to use and you have the choice to go with ports too, I like switching between ipfw and pf for firewalls, zfs-on-root, fantastic documention, etc.
debian for my own production and for client some using centos.
CentOS all the time, except for virtualization hosts (Proxmox/Debian)
Debian Stable. Or Ubuntu LTS if I cant be bothered to do a custom install and the provider only has Debian 7.
I think I have a Centos 7 vps lying around somewhere and I actively try to forget that it exists.
This, but hoping that Devuan catches up so I can get rid of the systemd virus. Also, a smattering of FreeBSD for ZFS storage.
Variously, Slackware, NetBSD, and Debian. (I may try Devuan once the next version appears.)
CentOS for OpenVZ (sometimes Debian for little LES boxes), Freed-ora for KVM.
I'm going to create a fork of OpenBSD and name it SystemBSd with systemd as the init system. I'll credit you as inspiration and include you in the beta test.
Also debian, thx.
You could just use OpenRC, and call it TRUEOBSD.
never used anything expect centos 7 lol
Ubuntu.
(Millennial)
centos/debian
CentOS 7 mainly these days with some CentOS 6.
https://bsd.slashdot.org/story/14/09/08/0250207/gsoc-project-works-to-emulate-systemd-for-openbsd
Windows 95.
$7
On kvm's Slackware and FreeBSD depends what the project is, rarely debian for vpn only. On openvz centos 6
60% Debian, 30% Ubuntu, 10% Centos, 10% other (oops, maths wrong!)