At my home office, I've been doing TurnKey development work on a Dell PowerEdge 2950 server running ProxMox VE software. It has served me well for several years, but when I decided to take the show on the road, it was not a practical solution for development. I started searching for a way to do development on my Dell Inspiron laptop without the burden of running VirtualBox. I liked what I saw in LXD, the second version of Linux Containers (LXC). I became convinced it was possible, but found there were significant challenges as discussed in this
Canonical, the company that makes Linux distro Ubuntu, has re-released its Meltdown update for Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Xenial users after the first attempt tripped up machines.
Canonical managed to get its fix for the Meltdown CPU bugout on Tuesday as scheduled, but was forced to issue a new release after discovering some 16.04 LTS Xenial users couldn't boot their machines once the update was installed.
Also, what is your decisioning/reasoning on being so far behind in perl modules of OTRS at v3.3.18 when the current version is v6.0.3?
Not being a linux GURU, I love the fact that I can come here and have something already pre-configured - but is there no concern on being vulnerable to current attacks?
I would like to know how the creation of new images works in this project. I would like very much to have an image on the forum with such a configuration: Magento 2 + PHP7 + nginx + mysql5.6. What the creation of new images looks like here. Possibly, I could also get involved in creating such a picture, but where to start? Currently, the lxc Magento image is quite old version 1 and old php, which will not be supported soon.
It's been a while since I discussed my server. Well, I have upgraded. And still, I use vintage- Dual CPU PIII running Turnkey Core Debian Jessie. So far so good. Added a GB Lan card to it as well. Now, thanks to Webmin, I can access it from anywhere in the world. So Cool! Infact, I show it off to my clients on how such a powerful system can run on vintage hardware. I love it when their laughter turns into shock - oh so priceless!
So far, my clients enjoy it. Infact, I prefare it to FreeNAS. FreeNAS is great but requires a lot. Sometimes, a little is required.