Best distro for Cacti?

Post support questions that directly relate to Linux/Unix operating systems.

Moderators: Developers, Moderators

Post Reply
techguru69
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Jul 07, 2005 9:06 pm

Best distro for Cacti?

Post by techguru69 »

Hi all,
I'm a long-time MRTG admin looking to switch to the much improved and impressive Cacti (Kudos to all the developers!). I currently run Debian but am interested in what your opinions are for the best (easiest install? best package maintained? etc.) distro for a new Cacti install. I'm open to any distro as I have tried a few with MRTG. I have noticed in my research so far that there isn't alot of "customized" install info for different distro's (i.e. Google "debian cacti install" returns almost nothing meaningful).

Let's hear the thoughts, opinions and grumblings!

Thanx!
rdilallo
Posts: 17
Joined: Sun Jun 05, 2005 4:22 pm
Location: St. Louis, MO

Post by rdilallo »

Without sounding too much like a lemming, I have great success with both Fedora 3 & 4. I've also set up cacti with slackware, but had more trouble with that over Fedora. Gentoo has a pretty smooth install as well. Everyone's going to have their own flavor... I chose Fedora because of the community's support for the OS.
User avatar
Linegod
Developer
Posts: 1626
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 10:16 am
Location: Canada
Contact:

Post by Linegod »

Personally, I use Mandriva and the Mandriva RPMs of Cacti. Works like a charm...
--
Live fast, die young
You're sucking up my bandwidth.

J.P. Pasnak,CD
CCNA, LPIC-1
http://www.warpedsystems.sk.ca
Frances
Cacti User
Posts: 60
Joined: Sun Apr 10, 2005 11:26 pm
Location: west coast

Post by Frances »

I've had fairly good luck with CentOS 4.0, which is essentially RHEL repackaged free of charge. The product has the same EOL as RHEL, so security updates, et al, will be released for seven years. Most of the 'RHELx' or 'ELx' packages are compatible with CentOS 4.0 (like the ones Dag builds -- many of the dependencies of Cacti). I'd install the deps from Dag's RPM's and Cacti from the tarball, since it'll get you used to the upgrade process, which is important. I'd say CentOS is dramatically more suited to a production environment than FCx, which is essentially a testbed.
Wido
Posts: 3
Joined: Mon Jul 11, 2005 6:34 am

Post by Wido »

I run cacti on Debian Sarge without any troubles at all.

Installed cacti (just untarred the files) en run it with cactid.

Runs like the sun!
spoonman
Cacti User
Posts: 305
Joined: Tue May 03, 2005 8:54 am
Location: GA

Post by spoonman »

I also run Cacti on Debian Sarge, I had issues at first, but it was just permissions, but once I figured them out no problems!! Cacti is the PIMP!!!
ahumado
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2005 12:57 am
Contact:

Post by ahumado »

Ran into trouble with Mandrake 10. Glad to hear Mandriva is working well.

Running fine on Fedora 3
andrew2
Cacti User
Posts: 64
Joined: Mon Jul 26, 2004 2:50 pm
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Contact:

Post by andrew2 »

You really shouldn't have trouble with most any distro. As long as you can get PHP, NetSNMP, and apache going, everything should work fine with just about any flavor of Linux.

Andrew
User avatar
stevew
Posts: 26
Joined: Tue Aug 17, 2004 12:39 pm
Location: London
Contact:

Post by stevew »

And it also works very well with FreeBSD.
[url=http://www.welham.net/]Steve W[/url]
krzn
Posts: 3
Joined: Wed Nov 23, 2005 9:33 am
Location: Moers, Germany

Post by krzn »

Hey!

I'm running Cacti on a virtual SLES 9-Machine! Work's fine!
And you can create weekly backups easiely! Very important! ;-)

KRZN
User avatar
rony
Developer/Forum Admin
Posts: 6022
Joined: Mon Nov 17, 2003 6:35 pm
Location: Michigan, USA
Contact:

Post by rony »

There isn't a distro I haven't had cacti working on.

But, to add, I develop on a Suse 9.2 box.
[size=117][i][b]Tony Roman[/b][/i][/size]
[size=84][i]Experience is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]There are only 3 way to complete a project: Good, Fast or Cheap, pick two.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]With age comes wisdom, what you choose to do with it determines whether or not you are wise.[/i][/size]
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest