I'm once again looking at the list on apps.yunohost.org/ , and seriously, considering the sole existence of @yunohost , all companies having an IT service should just ask their system admins this question: "How much can you scale this many apps on our infrastructure?".
All the rest is just providing infinitely useful tools for the company.
abeorch
in reply to Alex Rock • •Alex Rock likes this.
Alex Rock
in reply to abeorch • • •That's exactly the kind of project that makes me excited in the future of libre software usage in companies π
@coopcloud @yunohost
abeorch
in reply to Alex Rock • •Alex Rock
in reply to abeorch • • •Years ago, I tinkered with it on an RPI3 and it was just fine, though slow (but RPI, so obvious), and I tried on a small VPS I rented for a few months to check the capabilities, and it was definitely good-looking!
The issue I encountered back then was handling multiple PHP versions, and configuring custom projects.
I wanted to host both Yunohost apps, but also my own projects, and I wasn't good at configuring everything properly together, it was quite a mess π
@coopcloud @yunohost
Alex Rock
in reply to Alex Rock • • •I still didn't check about the current state of multi-php versions handling, but what I'm sure is that at some point I have to make a choice: do everything manually, like I do now (no UI, no webmin, no plesk, no cpanel, etc.), or doing everything from the UI, even if it's sometimes using some annoying things.
For instance, something that really annoys me so far is that it doesn't use Caddy as HTTP server, and I wish it used it, because configuring it is easier
@coopcloud @yunohost
abeorch
in reply to Alex Rock • •Alex Rock
in reply to abeorch • • •Yeah but it means having to maintain a template for one app.
I'm hosting several instances of Redmine, and I have lots of "custom" projects, from PHP to nodejs to "simple static websites", that's too much diversity, and back then it was too much hassle for me.
But I'm really wishing to go forward about this.
@coopcloud @yunohost
Alex Rock
in reply to Alex Rock • • •@abeorch
A customer of mine is willing to enhance its autonomy towards my dev skills, and I think installing Yunohost with a roundcube connected to their email provider so they could handle all their own mails without going on OVH, but also a multi-tenant Wordpress instance, as well as different databases, a NextCloud instance, etc.
So far, they are using lots of "external" stuff and centralizing on their own system would be great. And possibly easier to maintain too.
@coopcloud @yunohost
abeorch
in reply to Alex Rock • •Alex Rock likes this.
Alex Rock
in reply to abeorch • • •For backups, it's not that easy. I'm still hesitating on professional use because dropbox and gdrive are really reliable, though expensive, and I don't know how much one would need to scale a NextCloud instance (and its data) to be safe from data loss, which is my biggest concern so far π
@coopcloud @yunohost
abeorch
in reply to Alex Rock • •Alex Rock likes this.
Mathieu W.
in reply to Alex Rock • • •@abeorch
Even if it is not exactly what you try to achieve, I thought you would be interested in those two projects:
* Towerify: to efficiently manage a fleet of #YunoHost servers (github.com/computablefacts/towβ¦)
* World Wild Welsh: a resilient multi-site infra with YunoHost made by #raoull β€ (wiki.raoull.org/resume-techniqβ¦)
Cc @coopcloud @yunohost
GitHub - computablefacts/towerify: Manage fleet of YunoHost servers.
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abeorch
in reply to Mathieu W. • •like this
Alex Rock, Mathieu W., YunoHost :disability_flag: and lps like this.
YunoHost :disability_flag: reshared this.