Best non Enterprise Linux for Cadence IC 6.1.X

Discussion in 'Cadence' started by Bernd, Jul 27, 2009.

  1. Bernd

    Bernd Guest

    Hi,

    I'm curious about your actual experience with non Enterprise Linux
    distributions for Cadence DFII 6.1.X
    Which distribution works best:
    - Debian
    - CentOS
    - Ubuntu
    - Fedora
    - openSuse

    Any inputs are appreciated.

    Bernd
     
    Bernd, Jul 27, 2009
    #1
  2. Bernd wrote, on 07/27/09 13:17:
    Bear in mind that Cadence do not test on ANY of these distributions. Only the
    distributions listed in
    http://www.cadence.com/rl/Resources/release_info/Supported_Platforms_Matrix.pdf
    are "supported".

    Bernd, I know you know that, but just making sure everyone else realises that...

    Regards,

    Andrew.
     
    Andrew Beckett, Jul 27, 2009
    #2
  3. Bernd

    Bernd Paysan Guest

    Just a bit background:

    CentOS is RHEL without support, it is supposed to be binary compatible (and
    since it is built from the same sources, it very likely really is). So since
    Cadence does not test on community distributions like Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora
    and OpenSuse, CentOS is probably the distribution with minimal amount of
    fuzz to get Cadence running (if there is any fuzz to be expected - my
    experience is that old, no longer or just barely supported Cadence programs
    have problems on community distributions, not new ones; and they have those
    problems on the community distributions *first*, because the enterprise
    distributions are based on community distributions, especially Fedora and
    OpenSuse).

    The pros and cons for using enterprise distributions are the following:

    + The support is long, you can get security updates for the same software
    running basically unchanged for years and years
    + Software vendors don't have moving targets
    - The software you run is soon outdated, given the pace of development
    - Support for new hardware is backported for some time, but not for the
    whole lifetime of the enterprise edition - so you are stuck with outdated
    hardware
    - All those backports are done outside the actual development process of the
    base software, by employees of the enterprise Linux distributors, outside
    the usual review path (the patches themselves are reviewed, the backport
    isn't).

    The problems I've so far seen with community distributions were all related
    to when those distributions pulled the plug to some ancient backward
    compatibility stuff (usually 10 years old), and in turn broke a similarly
    old Cadence program. Therefore, my advice is: Don't run old Cadence programs
    on new distributions.

    I personally prefer OpenSuse, because that's a distribution sufficiently
    similar to SLED/SLES not to cause big troubles (just the unavoidable
    troubles two years earlier - so you are warned), and it is well prepared for
    desktop use, so the designers don't need another computer for e-mail and
    web-browsing. Fedora is also similar to RHEL, but RedHat frequently puts too
    untested stuff inside so that Fedora users are beta testers. I like the
    Factory in OpenSuse and Testing in Debian better - there you *know* that you
    are testing hot new stuff.
     
    Bernd Paysan, Jul 27, 2009
    #3
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