LWN.net Logo

OT: CyanogenMod, Debian, etc.

OT: CyanogenMod, Debian, etc.

Posted Jun 27, 2012 21:07 UTC (Wed) by SEJeff (subscriber, #51588)
In reply to: OT: CyanogenMod, Debian, etc. by debacle
Parent article: CyanogenMod 9.0-rc1 available

Call me crazy, but there are a LOT more than 2.4 million debian servers on the internets if you count the derivatives like *buntu and how it basically rules this "cloud computing" phase.


(Log in to post comments)

OT: CyanogenMod, Debian, etc.

Posted Jun 28, 2012 1:40 UTC (Thu) by man_ls (subscriber, #15091) [Link]

I am not so sure: Amazon has most of the market for cloud computing, but its 0.5M servers run a Red Hat derivative (I assume it is Amazon Linux). Also, apparently there are less than 1M servers on the intertubes, and sadly not all of them are running Debian.

I don't know how many machines running Ubuntu are there; I seem to recall another million of desktops. But it is difficult to characterize those as Debian, really.

Then there are virtualized servers which are certainly Debian but they are not so easy to compute. I can create 10 instances at the push of a button; do they count?

It is indeed a tricky question. I am sure that the Debian people must have stats of how many updates they see per day, and it would not be too hard to finger-print them, but I think nobody does.

OT: CyanogenMod, Debian, etc.

Posted Jun 28, 2012 8:51 UTC (Thu) by debacle (subscriber, #7114) [Link]

> I am sure that the Debian people must have stats of how many updates they see per day, and it would not be too hard to finger-print them, but I think nobody does.

I don't believe Debian could say how many downloads there are. Debian is distributed by a network of FTP/HTTP mirror servers, most of them outside any control by Debian. http://www.debian.org/mirror/list shows 50 primary and 400 secondary mirrors.

But some people don't even use them. E.g. if one has a root server at a hoster such as Strato, they use by default their own mirror server to save on traffic. In my company we produce an embedded product that runs Debian and of course the installation is done using our own partial mirror. Setting up a Debian mirror is so easy (much easier than it was for me to install CM on my phone) that one can assume that there are many thousands of them in universaties, companies and even private households.

Copyright © 2013, Eklektix, Inc.
Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds