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Debian vs CentOS what's the difference? is there a vmpanel for debian?
Hello again all,
ive been using debian for a while now and im pretty comfortable with it. Im wanting to setup some virtual machines and from what i gather and have used before solusvm is the best panel to use but, it requires centos which ive not used before.
Whats the difference between them? would there be a big learning curve?
Comments
Commands are different, i.e. you can pretty much use the same commands across Debian and Ubuntu, but the same won't work with CentOS.
I started with CentOS, ended up liking Debian and Ubuntu a lot more
Both are good distro's though, you could just mess around a bit with CentOS?
its the same for me! messing with ubuntu as a kid and now using debian. does anyone know a good vm panel i could use with debian?
The syntax for a number of commands are different but often close enough to pick up very easily, e.g. yum install pkg vs. apt-get install pkg, service servicename start vs. /etc/init.d/servicename start, etc.
Debian uses a little less memory from my experience so far, which could be a consideration for small vps (128 MB RAM). You may find some packages are not available in the main CentOS repos, easily remedied by adding additional repos (EPEL). There are more under-the-hood differences that others would be better able to explain, but from an end-user perspective, there's not much learning curve switching between the two.
@souen
is the file structure essentially the same? my plan is to have whmcs with solusvm for virtual machines and have a shared hosting option also (ispconfig3 for example)
@ginner159: For the most part, with some differences, e.g. /etc/sysconfig contains config files for things like iptables and network. (This page has the file structure overview, section on /etc/sysconfig here.) Another example is Apache, /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf (CentOS) vs. /etc/apache2/apache2.conf (or something like that for Debian)
CentOS is well-supported though, there are a lot of guides and such out there so it shouldn't be a problem.
Proxmox is free and works with debian, and I think Feathur support for Debian might be possible soon,
As @linuxthefish said, Proxmox VE is what you need, go for its ISO install, everything will be ready out of box including webmanagement and so..
However, if you are going to make few VMs then you can go plain vanilla, without any panel.. works good unless you don't have lots of node to manage, then you need solus or Proxmox like to make life easier.
Use Debian, naked.
My dedi provider has an option to install proxmox. What's it like for billing? Can it be set to auto creation if a client signs up? The website isn't that great at explaining that sorta stuff
Yes, it's possible with WHMCS and I think a few hosts have used it here before. http://www.whmcs.com/appstore/517/proxmox-full-automation.html
Its about yum and apt