Yes I run AIO on Fedora server with no issues and very little tweaking needed since it’s all built in and optimized.
Same for me.
The only issue I had was with the SMTP configuration. I went as far as writing a simple SMTP program, copy it into the container in order to be really sure SMTP messages could go through.
So at the end I found the PHP file responsible for setting the SMTP configuration and I modified one line of code. Now everything is working like a charm
I've been running AIO for over a year. It's been solid.
I've been using it for few months now, and my friend has been using it ever since it came out.
I can say, migration with borg aio to aio is easy, updates come a bit later than non AIO but once they come, it is literally press of a button upgrade.
Never had an issue keeping everything up to date. I still do vm snapshot just in case, but never needed it.
Been on AIO for almost 2 years. Not a single complaint. By far the most reliable and easiest way to run Nextcloud.
I use AIO on OpenMediaVault, which is Debian, and it’s been my smoothest NC experience so far.
try proxmox and make a LXC container with Nextcloud aio in it
Biggest problem (show stopper for me) is that it must be root in the system. To have full control of the Docker socket is one of the many way to access root privileges without password or any other authentication.
Yes I run AIO on Fedora server with no issues and very little tweaking needed since it’s all built in and optimized.
Same for me.
The only issue I had was with the SMTP configuration. I went as far as writing a simple SMTP program, copy it into the container in order to be really sure SMTP messages could go through.
So at the end I found the PHP file responsible for setting the SMTP configuration and I modified one line of code. Now everything is working like a charm
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I've been running AIO for over a year. It's been solid.
I've been using it for few months now, and my friend has been using it ever since it came out.
I can say, migration with borg aio to aio is easy, updates come a bit later than non AIO but once they come, it is literally press of a button upgrade.
Never had an issue keeping everything up to date. I still do vm snapshot just in case, but never needed it.
Edit: formating
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Been on AIO for almost 2 years. Not a single complaint. By far the most reliable and easiest way to run Nextcloud.
I use AIO on OpenMediaVault, which is Debian, and it’s been my smoothest NC experience so far.
try proxmox and make a LXC container with Nextcloud aio in it
Biggest problem (show stopper for me) is that it must be root in the system. To have full control of the Docker socket is one of the many way to access root privileges without password or any other authentication.
More replies