LinuxWorld
Subscribe to this site with RSS

A closer look at OpenSUSE 10.1

Novell's attempt to keep Linux available to open source community.

OpenSUSE 10.1, Novell's attempt to keep a general-purpose version of its Linux freely available to the open source community, is both aided by and suffers from the lack of attention from Novell.

In our tests of OpenSUSE, we found several items that made this version feel more like a set of experiments rather than a coherent project with which the public should try to work seriously. For example, Xen, new server virtualization software, was especially frustrating to use, and AppArmor, a tool that's supposed to help lock down applications running on the OpenSUSE machine, was more like a puzzle than a working security application.


How we tested OpenSUSE
Archive of Network World tests
Subscribe to the Network Product Test Results newsletter

OpenSUSE in most ways is to Novell as Fedora Core is to RedHat. Both are community versions of their commercial cousins. Ostensibly, these versions receive contributions as hand-me-downs from the commercial releases and aren't supported by the shipping vendor except via community IRCs and forums. So far, these community versions are similar to the commercial versions, though Novell says there are commercial version-specific improvements to the kernel, device drivers and other components. We did find that the kernel for the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) performed slightly better in our performance tests.

OPENSUSE 10.1

OpenSUSE 10.1

3.75
Price: Free, or $60 for a bundled version with 90 days installation support
Pros: Solid core services; Well-constructed administrative interface.
Cons: Xen virtualization software needs work; AppArmor application security tool needs automation and instrumentation.
The breakdown
Installation/Compatibility 25% 4.5 Scoring Key:
5
: Exceptional
4
: Very good
3
: Average
2
: Below average
1
: Subpar or not available
Administration 25% 3.5
Security 25%
3
Performance 25% 4
TOTAL SCORE 3.75
Invalid query - session: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/tmp/mysql.sock' (2)
Newsletter sign-up

Sign up for one of Network World's newsletters compliments of Linux World

Linux & Open Source News Alert
Web Applications Alert
Video and Podcast Alert
Security Alert
Virtualization Alert

Email Address: