On 1/5/21 5:25 AM, Jonathan Aquilina wrote: > Is Fedora a rolling release so to speak? I remember they used to call > fedora the bleeding edge distro not really geared for production > environments is that still accurate. I have only used it as a work > station desktop with KDE installed.
It has a release about every 6 months [1], so I wouldn't call it a rolling release. You can use DNF System Upgrade to move up to the next release pretty easily with a bit of downtime. I have used Fedora a lot in production and I find that it works great. I don't consider it bleeding edge at all unless you run Fedora Rawhide [2]. If you are looking for a rolling release Fedora, checkout Fedora CoreOS [3], but that comes with some changes on how you use it since it is a container-focused operating system. The kernel that ships in Fedora has WireGuard included and the wireguard-tools package is in the main repo. IMO if you want to use a Red Hat variant of Linux with WireGuard, Fedora Server, Fedora Cloud [4], or Fedora CoreOS are your best choices. I use Fedora Server at home and Fedora CoreOS at work with WireGuard everyday. Joe [1] https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases [2] https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/Rawhide [3] https://getfedora.org/en/coreos?stream=stable [4] https://alt.fedoraproject.org/cloud/ -- Joe Doss j...@solidadmin.com