I'm old and stuck in my ways. But I recently took a challenge to try to do everything in Webmin on some new servers I set up. I quickly realised this is the way forward. You can leave bookmarks for filesystem or configs etc. so you don't need to faff with 10 different terminal windows open etc. I found there wasn't anything I couldn't do and it has a very confident terminal window in the browser so that there is really no excuses.
Greetings and Salutations …. Still on the bandwagon of seeing you use Rocky Linux and Alpine Linux more in your demos 😎 Thanks for your time and continued sharing of your skills and knowledge.
@@KeepItTechie I am about to install Leap 15.5 for my server to run Incus on it. I would have went RHEL but things just changed too much for me to rock with it. Alpine is still new to me so I need to understand more what I am getting myself into with that as my host OS.
Absolutely, Webmin is a classic! It's pretty impressive how it has evolved since the 90's, adapting to new tech while keeping its core functionality. A true testament to its longevity and usefulness.
Thank you! Have you ever installed Cloudmin? Are there any videos about it? I currently have 30 websites running on one Webmin server with Virtualmin installed to handle the virtual sites. Now I want to start balancing the load. I've installed another VM and created another Webmin instance. Before I go too far down the rabbit hole, I read that Cloudmin will allow me to manage multiple virtual webservers (I already have my Webmin systems clustered), but that seems to give me only the basics. Do you have any experience with Cloudmin? Would you recommend heading in that direction? If so, does anyone have an instructional RUclips link?
I'm old and stuck in my ways. But I recently took a challenge to try to do everything in Webmin on some new servers I set up. I quickly realised this is the way forward. You can leave bookmarks for filesystem or configs etc. so you don't need to faff with 10 different terminal windows open etc. I found there wasn't anything I couldn't do and it has a very confident terminal window in the browser so that there is really no excuses.
just fired up my server and I love this man. thank you so much!
Great to hear!
Greetings and Salutations ….
Still on the bandwagon of seeing you use Rocky Linux and Alpine Linux more in your demos 😎
Thanks for your time and continued sharing of your skills and knowledge.
I'll definitely consider featuring them more in future demos. Thanks for being part of the journey! 😎
@@KeepItTechie I am about to install Leap 15.5 for my server to run Incus on it.
I would have went RHEL but things just changed too much for me to rock with it. Alpine is still new to me so I need to understand more what I am getting myself into with that as my host OS.
Whoa, Webmin has changed a lot looks wise since the last time I used it years ago. Good video, thanks, :)
It's amazing how much Webmin has evolved, right? Glad you enjoyed the video and found it useful. Thanks for watching, and stay tuned for more!
Nice tool. Thanks for sharing. I hope you start feeling better.
Thanks for the kind words! Glad you found the tool useful. And thanks for the well wishes! Take care!
Thanks man, from UK, super entertaining overview. 😊
Keep it coming, good content and very informative.
Thanks for the encouragement! I'm glad you're finding the content informative and enjoyable. More good stuff is on the way, so stay tuned!
You got me spawning a new Debian 12 VM to try it 😎
(work related, we're mostly using Debian)
💥💯💥 Love the content.
Thanks bro! Salute!
That's useful and very fun, as well.
You are great, god bless you man! : )
That's what I use for my remote servers.
webmin has been around since the 90's :D - it looks a little different today though.
Absolutely, Webmin is a classic! It's pretty impressive how it has evolved since the 90's, adapting to new tech while keeping its core functionality. A true testament to its longevity and usefulness.
Thank you! Have you ever installed Cloudmin? Are there any videos about it? I currently have 30 websites running on one Webmin server with Virtualmin installed to handle the virtual sites. Now I want to start balancing the load. I've installed another VM and created another Webmin instance. Before I go too far down the rabbit hole, I read that Cloudmin will allow me to manage multiple virtual webservers (I already have my Webmin systems clustered), but that seems to give me only the basics. Do you have any experience with Cloudmin? Would you recommend heading in that direction? If so, does anyone have an instructional RUclips link?
good video and easy to explain. it would be nice if the commands were copy&paste greetz from germany 👍
Webmin is dope, I use it to manage most of my remote servers. But why not mention Virtualmin? Like peas in a pod :P.
I cover it in another vid! Thanks for stopping by bro!
Thanks!
No problem!
thank you so much
You're welcome!
cool man
thanks
Does it have easy backup and restore of individual websites?
You have to set this up manually. I've don't videos on backups in the past.
It does. It has automated backups that you can setup of all sites including their databases. Or just one site at a time.
Good video man keep it up
Whats wrong, specifically? So I'll know what to improve on in the future.
@@KeepItTechie I'm so sorry bro, this is good but my anger after 10 hours of searching for something with webmin came after me
@@georgesnow_ so? it's not a bad video you were taking your frustration out on someone else's work. right...
Why do you always copy and paste but we can't? Where are the commands?
Sorry, I'm a one man operation. I need help keeping up with the site.