It walks you through setting up SSH with keys and then git entirely via the command line. Maybe they plan on writing more?
01189998819991197253@infosec.pub
on 28 Jul 02:55
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That’s what I was thinking, but I wasn’t sure. I figured I’d ask op, since the post seems to be theirs.
As I’m writing this, I’m thinking maybe it’s because Server is generally cli-first, and this post is geared towards a more noob audience, so they’re going gui-first? If so, I appreciate the forethought.
AnIntenseMoist@lemmy.world
on 28 Jul 03:43
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Then do something like Fedora Server, which gives you a web GUI after a guided graphical setup. More user-friendly than ssh and managing everything through the terminal (though you can certainly still do that)
01189998819991197253@infosec.pub
on 28 Jul 12:33
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True, but OP’s guide is for Ubuntu, so newcomers will be lost with Fedora following this guide, since they are vastly different.
pulsewidth@lemmy.world
on 28 Jul 06:23
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Unless you wanna run headless and do everything via SSH then desktop is better, its essentially identical to server, but with a GUI and some apps bundled by default - both of which new users and infrequent server admins generally need.
01189998819991197253@infosec.pub
on 28 Jul 23:18
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Right, but if I don’t care for gui and am good with cli, would this guide still be followable? That’s kind of what I was trying to ask, I guess.
Thanks for pointing that out, I’ll update it. I was looking for blog post material and posted a guide I previously wrote it for someone. I don’t remember why exactly I wrote that at the time. To be honest I wasn’t even sure if anyone would read it haha.
01189998819991197253@infosec.pub
on 28 Jul 23:17
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Don’t sell yourself short. This guide has the very real potential to be invaluable to someone just starting out! It’s a great guide! Just needs a little more of the “why” factor, is all : ) keep it up!
threaded - newest
Thanks.
Np!
Any reason why not use Server when setting up a home server?
It walks you through setting up SSH with keys and then git entirely via the command line. Maybe they plan on writing more?
That’s what I was thinking, but I wasn’t sure. I figured I’d ask op, since the post seems to be theirs.
As I’m writing this, I’m thinking maybe it’s because Server is generally cli-first, and this post is geared towards a more noob audience, so they’re going gui-first? If so, I appreciate the forethought.
Then do something like Fedora Server, which gives you a web GUI after a guided graphical setup. More user-friendly than ssh and managing everything through the terminal (though you can certainly still do that)
True, but OP’s guide is for Ubuntu, so newcomers will be lost with Fedora following this guide, since they are vastly different.
Unless you wanna run headless and do everything via SSH then desktop is better, its essentially identical to server, but with a GUI and some apps bundled by default - both of which new users and infrequent server admins generally need.
Right, but if I don’t care for gui and am good with cli, would this guide still be followable? That’s kind of what I was trying to ask, I guess.
That guide looks like it has all steps explained with terminal commands, so it should be fine to go for Server version to follow the guide.
I’m also pretty sure you can install the desktop GUI for Server later if you decide you need it for whatever reason, just in case.
Thanks for pointing that out, I’ll update it. I was looking for blog post material and posted a guide I previously wrote it for someone. I don’t remember why exactly I wrote that at the time. To be honest I wasn’t even sure if anyone would read it haha.
Don’t sell yourself short. This guide has the very real potential to be invaluable to someone just starting out! It’s a great guide! Just needs a little more of the “why” factor, is all : ) keep it up!
Edit: stupid autocorrect
Thanks :D!