Jesus Ritchie Christ, can we de-normalize 'run anonymous superscript as root' bullshit? It's dumb when Oracle does it, it's dumb when SuSE does it. It's dumb all the time.
I could never get the AIO setup to work well for some reason. It was also a couple versions behind it seemed.
I...uh...know it's not popular on the fed, but I use the nextcloud snap package and it's been rock solid. It's always up -to-date and they have a backup/export feature too.
I was about to ask why this is better than the docker installation, but I see step one is to install docker haha.
I've been running the docker container for a long time, it works very well. It is a bit more complicated if you try and use extensions that require seperatw containers (like setting up collabora), but that can be done as well. It's just more complicated.
I do remember needing to know how to access the internal terminal a few times, but I don't remember why. If I think of it I'll come back and add instructions.
I appreciate the simplicity, but giving such broad permissions makes me unease and the main reason why I'm putting off moving to Nextcloud AIO. Am I the only one who thinks like this?
Love me some docker compose! I switched from a manually built VM over to the AIO setup about a year ago and never looked back. It's been rock solid for me and my ~10 users so far.
It containerizes all the subcomponents under a mastercontainer, and even has support for community containers of things like pihole, caddy and dlna. So you have image control over each component, as well as codespace separation.
After 7 or 8 years of various forms of Nextcloud, I have to say this is the easiest one to maintain, upgrade and backup outside of my VM snapshots.
I'm still using the self hosted docker image, the all in one is too bloated for me and my computing resources are quite limited. Why would I like an antivirus? Or a backup solution different than the one I use to backup the rest of my containers?
Cool initiative anyway for other kind of users though.
I wish I could've like next cloud more, but it seemed bloated as all hell and was slow regardless of what machine I tried running it on :(. I might give it another go one day.
One of the first services on my server was nextcloud in docker container from lsio. Never had problems so there was no need to try AIO, but so many people recommend that, it will be my next setup if this one fails me
I decided to go with this one because it's now the official distribution channel and supported by the devs. But the lsio one looks pretty solid as well.