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A LAMP stack with a web face?
Are there any Linux servers with a web face today?
The question was prompted by the fact that once again the second day we are treating the site after hacking.
Cause 200 updates. Nobody updated the server.
Today there is android, macbook, ubuntu and other environments where there is a software catalog and central management. I went in, saw the updates, clicked and everything was updated. In the web world, there is also an analogue - WordPress.
Isn't there something like this for Linux?
I would like to install it on the server and go not through the monitor but through the web. And put all the components from there and configure them from there.
Maybe there is such a thing?
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webmin.
I have nothing against visibility, but it’s more convenient to edit configs in the terminal.
As far as I remember, even webmin can do this, which can be installed anywhere, I assume analogs like ajenti, all the more so.
Uh ... I'm sorry if they break it, then it's certainly not about updates. And in... well... er... hands.
In order not to break, or rather, break, but painlessly, use virtual machines / containers, firewalls, proxies ... Well, roll out updates as they come out.
When hacked, the policy is this - restore the latest in read-only mode, manually roll up updates.
Well, go to something more secure, hack-on-rails there or django, or something.
Well, webmin has already been advised to you. There is also CPanel and other joys.
And yes, it is a pleasure to treat a site with containers/virtuals.
As an option, I suggest:
A server with three virtual machines, one for muscle, the second for nginx, the third for php-fpm. We configure the server itself to forward all http to nginx, close it to the very eggs and connect to it in two or three IPs.
The virtual machine with nginx works only with static and gives the rest to php-fpm.
php-fpm connects to the muscle base.
If something is broken, then we simply restore the last snapshot in read-only mode. Well, always keep the virtual machine with the static "Work in progress"...
The same thing is done on LXC or docker if the virtual machines are straining...
Well, it would be nice to keep all php files in read-only mode.
There is one problem with web muzzles - they are also a little more than full of holes.
The same webmin, when I last watched it a year or two ago, broke down with a bang.
Rather than add an extra hole to the system, isn't it better to put the update script in the crontab?
1. Hire an administrator.
And let him deal with updates and everything else ....
pgostite, but when installing one of me, Ubuntu asks whether to roll security updates automatically?
Of course, it is not a super-idea, but in any case, there are exactly 2 options - roll on automatically or roll on by hand. Hands - you need to somehow receive alerts about the release of updates.
and running apt-get update / upgrade by hand or through the web face is a matter of laziness.
even having a super-convenient "update ALL" button - you have to guess to press it.
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