Hi!
From time to time, I've sorely wished that current commercial control panel options would support Debian-based distributions. There's ISPConfig, VestaCP, Webmin with Usermin/Virtualmin for web-hosting needs...
What do they have in common? Support for RHEL-based distros and Debian-based distros.
It's 2016. Such things should be a non-issue, these days. Additionally, if updated things're a concern, just use the LTS branch if you're going to go with Ubuntu Server Edition. Heck, you could control updates similar to what you guys do on RHEL-based servers.
What's really stopping InterWorx from supporting Debian-based distros other than the initial porting requirements?
I'd personally love to use Debian-based distros over that of RHEL-based ones because I really dislike dealing with yum's inability to detect dependency issues... though I think that's less of an issue with CentOS 7, but I haven't had an opportunity to install things like that to see if it's still borkenated as it ever was on CentOS 6.x.
Also, why not have customers who're eager to see such support become a reality enroll to test the platform? I know for one that I'd roll up a server JUST to help test and provide feedback.
From time to time, I've sorely wished that current commercial control panel options would support Debian-based distributions. There's ISPConfig, VestaCP, Webmin with Usermin/Virtualmin for web-hosting needs...
What do they have in common? Support for RHEL-based distros and Debian-based distros.
It's 2016. Such things should be a non-issue, these days. Additionally, if updated things're a concern, just use the LTS branch if you're going to go with Ubuntu Server Edition. Heck, you could control updates similar to what you guys do on RHEL-based servers.
What's really stopping InterWorx from supporting Debian-based distros other than the initial porting requirements?
I'd personally love to use Debian-based distros over that of RHEL-based ones because I really dislike dealing with yum's inability to detect dependency issues... though I think that's less of an issue with CentOS 7, but I haven't had an opportunity to install things like that to see if it's still borkenated as it ever was on CentOS 6.x.
Also, why not have customers who're eager to see such support become a reality enroll to test the platform? I know for one that I'd roll up a server JUST to help test and provide feedback.