NextCloud and PHP 7
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@scottalanmiller said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
That's why I decided to just make the leap. Once I was not going with 5.4 it just didn't feel like any of it made sense.
It works beautifully on F25.
That is not even on their supported list BTW. I mean I know what Fedora is, but it is specifically not listed.
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I don't think that there is an end to end supported option. Either the OS or the PHP is going to be outside of support. No way to get every vendor to consider it supported for their portion.
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@JaredBusch said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@scottalanmiller said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
That's why I decided to just make the leap. Once I was not going with 5.4 it just didn't feel like any of it made sense.
It works beautifully on F25.
That is not even on their supported list BTW. I mean I know what Fedora is, but it is specifically not listed.
Yeah that's frustrating. I actually opted to stay with Nextcloud 10 this time around because when I attempted to upgrade to PHP 7 and install Nextcloud 11 with my test server I ran into a lot of problems.
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Almost exactly one year ago btw on the first shit storm on this..
https://mangolassi.it/topic/8433/adding-remi-s-rpm-repository-to-centos-7-and-updating-to-php-5-6
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@wirestyle22 said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@JaredBusch said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@scottalanmiller said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
That's why I decided to just make the leap. Once I was not going with 5.4 it just didn't feel like any of it made sense.
It works beautifully on F25.
That is not even on their supported list BTW. I mean I know what Fedora is, but it is specifically not listed.
Yeah that's frustrating. I actually opted to stay with Nextcloud 10 this time around because when I attempted to upgrade to PHP 7 and install Nextcloud 11 with my test server I ran into a lot of problems.
I am looking to perform a new install.
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@JaredBusch said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@wirestyle22 said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@JaredBusch said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@scottalanmiller said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
That's why I decided to just make the leap. Once I was not going with 5.4 it just didn't feel like any of it made sense.
It works beautifully on F25.
That is not even on their supported list BTW. I mean I know what Fedora is, but it is specifically not listed.
Yeah that's frustrating. I actually opted to stay with Nextcloud 10 this time around because when I attempted to upgrade to PHP 7 and install Nextcloud 11 with my test server I ran into a lot of problems.
I am looking to perform a new install.
Right--that's what I was doing, but I still needed to upgrade to PHP 7 to get Nextcloud 11 working and never could
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Is NextClouds business model to offer support for people who install this themselves?
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NethServer 7 has NextCloud built in. Maybe they are the official install
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And @jospoortvliet still seems as clueless as last year. I get he is marketing and not technical. But FFS, just get a technical lead to post an officially recommended repo for acquiring PHP 5.6+
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@JaredBusch I know you favor CentOS, and I do too, but what about Ubuntu 16.04?
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For those CentOS 7 users. You can use IUS repo. When installing SnipeIT with their script, it use EPEL (required) and IUS.
yum install php71u
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@black3dynamite Thanks for that
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@black3dynamite said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
For those CentOS 7 users. You can use IUS repo. When installing SnipeIT with their script, it use EPEL (required) and IUS.
yum install php71u
Yeah, someone from the ownCloud team had finally posted a recommendation last year, for a source and I believe they used IUS.
I had already went forward with using Remi by that point though.
Again, right now, I want the official recommendation from NextCloud.
SHould be dead simple, but it is apparently not.
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I understand the perspective of both sides on this. I see Jared's frustrations and I see the NC team's frustrations.
From Jared's side of it, I do believe you are owed an answer.
I can also see the frustration from the NC team. They make a really nice, capable product and probably 98% of users are using it for free. They need to sell support to keep their doors open.
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@IRJ paid support for a basic install though?
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@IRJ said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
I understand the perspective of both sides on this. I see Jared's frustrations and I see the NC team's frustrations.
From Jared's side of it, I do believe you are owed an answer.
I can also see the frustration from the NC team. They make a really nice, capable product and probably 98% of users are using it for free. They need to sell support to keep their doors open.
But at the same time their recommendations and such need to be accurate.
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@IRJ said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
I understand the perspective of both sides on this. I see Jared's frustrations and I see the NC team's frustrations.
From Jared's side of it, I do believe you are owed an answer.
I can also see the frustration from the NC team. They make a really nice, capable product and probably 98% of users are using it for free. They need to sell support to keep their doors open.
As someone who only sells his time, I very much understand that. But they need to provide a working installation method for the listed operating systems or remove them. If CentOS 7 was not listed, I would either do it myself on CentOS 7 and accept that risk, or I would switch to a different operating system.
As many of you know I prefer CentOS, but I have nothing against running something else when it is the only supported method. Hence, I run Ubuntu for my UniFi controller.
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@IRJ said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
I can also see the frustration from the NC team. They make a really nice, capable product and probably 98% of users are using it for free. They need to sell support to keep their doors open.
I think having a fully enterprise ready, recommended install path is really important, though. I get both sides and at a high level, it makes sense. What I would be happy with is a change of recommendations, for example. Make Fedora or Tumbleweed the recommended way to go.
The issue that I have, which is a little different than Jared's but not much, is that even if I pay for NextCloud support, I'm still left on an unsupported platform. CentOS 7 doesn't have a supported PHP 7 option. There is a moderately good option in IUS, but it is not considered a really enterprise approach. So I'm caught in that middle ground. There is no vendor willing to cover the whole installation and no one stands behind the final product. There is a gap in the stack, and a pretty big one. But one that would not be that hard to fix and has been an issue that is well known for a long time.
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I just happened to write this four weeks ago, but really applies here.
https://mangolassi.it/topic/12477/supported-mismatch-can-you-call-that-supported
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@scottalanmiller said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
@IRJ said in NextCloud and PHP 7:
I can also see the frustration from the NC team. They make a really nice, capable product and probably 98% of users are using it for free. They need to sell support to keep their doors open.
I think having a fully enterprise ready, recommended install path is really important, though. I get both sides and at a high level, it makes sense. What I would be happy with is a change of recommendations, for example. Make Fedora or Tumbleweed the recommended way to go.
The issue that I have, which is a little different than Jared's but not much, is that even if I pay for NextCloud support, I'm still left on an unsupported platform. CentOS 7 doesn't have a supported PHP 7 option. There is a moderately good option in IUS, but it is not considered a really enterprise approach. So I'm caught in that middle ground. There is no vendor willing to cover the whole installation and no one stands behind the final product. There is a gap in the stack, and a pretty big one. But one that would not be that hard to fix and has been an issue that is well known for a long time.
And to clarify, I am looking for exactly that type of information. We all know that PHP 5.6+ is not available on CentOS 7. We all know there are many ways to get it.
All they have to do is either remove CentOS as an option or say we support X method of PHP 5.6+ installation.
Personally I prefer the Remi approach because adding his repository adds only PHP related items for the most part. That is the only reason the repository exists. Remi also works with upstream, so often what is in his repo gets added eventually to core or extras.
Others like IUS approach because it keeps things separate.