Gene Steinberg
Regular Pleskian
I'm sorry that you think that a simpler tool is for "children." That's the old Mac OS versus DOS argument of the 1980s repeated all over again. We don't need to go there.
I believe Plesk 10 requires SiteBuilder (why is beyond me), which brings in a php5-ioncube-loader package from Plesk which only works with 'php < 5.2.0'. So yeah, Plesk seems to block using PHP 5.2+ indirectly this way...
I would add for those in environments where compliance (PCIDSS, NIST-800-53, Reg 5.71, etc) is an issue, Cpanel's approach to recompiling core packages (openssl notably) causes you to loose your certification for FIPS-140-2. The managed update approach, using tools like yum or apt are IM(not so)HO considerably superior given that you have rollbacks, 3rd party support, no vendor lockin, *remove capabilities* , etc.
I agree with you on a nice pretty web gui for it though, which is why I wrote one Its a front end to yum for plesk called atomic-yum: http://www4.atomicorp.com/channels/source/atomic-yum/ (GPLv3). PS- I'd love to see apt support built into this, if any debian/ubuntu folks want to give it a shot.
yum and apt make the features of easyapache a look like a rounding error
I would add for those in environments where compliance (PCIDSS, NIST-800-53, Reg 5.71, etc) is an issue, Cpanel's approach to recompiling core packages (openssl notably) causes you to loose your certification for FIPS-140-2. The managed update approach, using tools like yum or apt are IM(not so)HO considerably superior given that you have rollbacks, 3rd party support, no vendor lockin, *remove capabilities* , etc.
I agree with you on a nice pretty web gui for it though, which is why I wrote one Its a front end to yum for plesk called atomic-yum: http://www4.atomicorp.com/channels/source/atomic-yum/ (GPLv3). PS- I'd love to see apt support built into this, if any debian/ubuntu folks want to give it a shot.
yum and apt make the features of easyapache a look like a rounding error
Not that I hate command lines, but I have better things to do with my time. Once the initial configuration is done, and the Web host usually takes care of that, your EasyApache upgrade process is just clicks away.
Yes, Plesk has a prettier interface, but I'm surprised this capability isn't present.
In all fairness, Plesk is a powerful web deployment tool. Sure there are some basic features that cPanel offers that are redundant in Plesk, but Plesk is powerful to an extent that a user who wants to extend off a solid platform can use Plesk to do so - that's the beauty of CLI and Plesk. cPanel offers an idiot-proof GUI, and has all the snippets to make any button-lover melt on-site. If your needs don't require any complexity or simplicity, but purely ease-of-use then perhaps cPanel is a recommendation. IMHO, that is all.
Haha, yes thats exactly what it is. Its an open source (GPLv3) plesk module