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    • bbigfordB
      bbigford @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

      @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

      @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

      The cost of hosted Windows is extremely high compared to anything else. Generally around double, just for apples to apples, and often quadruple once you account for the additional resources often needed to accommodate Windows systems. In some cases, the licensing cost of Windows alone can exceed the cost of the VPS hosting.

      I've been doing some web searching and have found very few helpful things about the migration. Just lots of migration tools for convenience, but nothing that is manual so I can actually understand what is needed should I not have a convenient tool. More importantly, to fully understand how the process works.

      Welcome to Windows, IIS and .NET. All three are hard and complicated for reasons no one knows. Having worked with many alternatives to all three, it is always shocking that any of them can be has complicated as they are. There is a reason that we warn so heavily against companies writing in house code using any of these, even when it isn't strictly locking them into the tech, it effectively does so. Add to this the tendency to disastrously choose MS SQL Server as a datastore and the problems just skyrocket.

      I've wondered why some companies choose to limit themselves right off the bat.

      The sunk cost fallacy hits from day one, and emotions drive everything.

      That's scary to think about.

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        We had this happen recently. Company wanted to hire Java people. Java was the one development name that the owners of the company knew. They couldn't identify Java if their lives depended on it, they couldn't write it, they weren't sure what it did, but they knew the name and knew that that was what they had to have. To make matters worse, the owners had Comp Sci degrees, so were extremely prideful about their technical expertise, even though they could not read code (yes, universities give out CS degrees to people who aren't even clear what programming is.)

        So they just hired random, cheap "Java people". Of course, no part of the project needed any Java at all, it made no sense. Likewise they hired "Oracle people" to handle the data aspects, even though no data support was needed and no relational data existed. They knew names, they hired based on those names, nothing more.

        bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @bbigford
          last edited by

          @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

          The cost of hosted Windows is extremely high compared to anything else. Generally around double, just for apples to apples, and often quadruple once you account for the additional resources often needed to accommodate Windows systems. In some cases, the licensing cost of Windows alone can exceed the cost of the VPS hosting.

          I've been doing some web searching and have found very few helpful things about the migration. Just lots of migration tools for convenience, but nothing that is manual so I can actually understand what is needed should I not have a convenient tool. More importantly, to fully understand how the process works.

          Welcome to Windows, IIS and .NET. All three are hard and complicated for reasons no one knows. Having worked with many alternatives to all three, it is always shocking that any of them can be has complicated as they are. There is a reason that we warn so heavily against companies writing in house code using any of these, even when it isn't strictly locking them into the tech, it effectively does so. Add to this the tendency to disastrously choose MS SQL Server as a datastore and the problems just skyrocket.

          I've wondered why some companies choose to limit themselves right off the bat.

          The sunk cost fallacy hits from day one, and emotions drive everything.

          That's scary to think about.

          This is the 98% case for the SMB market. Nearly all businesses fall prey to this emotional problem.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • bbigfordB
            bbigford @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

            @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

            @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

            @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

            @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

            The cost of hosted Windows is extremely high compared to anything else. Generally around double, just for apples to apples, and often quadruple once you account for the additional resources often needed to accommodate Windows systems. In some cases, the licensing cost of Windows alone can exceed the cost of the VPS hosting.

            I've been doing some web searching and have found very few helpful things about the migration. Just lots of migration tools for convenience, but nothing that is manual so I can actually understand what is needed should I not have a convenient tool. More importantly, to fully understand how the process works.

            Welcome to Windows, IIS and .NET. All three are hard and complicated for reasons no one knows. Having worked with many alternatives to all three, it is always shocking that any of them can be has complicated as they are. There is a reason that we warn so heavily against companies writing in house code using any of these, even when it isn't strictly locking them into the tech, it effectively does so. Add to this the tendency to disastrously choose MS SQL Server as a datastore and the problems just skyrocket.

            If they have a mashup of Windows, IIS, and .NET ... I'm guessing there is no easy way to do this. At least not in the sense of simply copying folders out to a VPS instance...

            It's not that easy even if you are sticking to Windows. "Not easy" is part of the design. But figuring out how to deploy this is critical regardless of your end needs here. If this system gets old and can't be supported, what's the support game plan if no one knows how to support this software?

            Also, we should ask... why is a business relying on software that they can't support? What happens if the code breaks or something?

            If they are indeed using a mashup of Windows, IIS, .NET, and MS SQL, the only answer I have is vendor support. If that is not there, the knee jerk reaction is 'not good'.

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • bbigfordB
              bbigford @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

              We had this happen recently. Company wanted to hire Java people. Java was the one development name that the owners of the company knew. They couldn't identify Java if their lives depended on it, they couldn't write it, they weren't sure what it did, but they knew the name and knew that that was what they had to have. To make matters worse, the owners had Comp Sci degrees, so were extremely prideful about their technical expertise, even though they could not read code (yes, universities give out CS degrees to people who aren't even clear what programming is.)

              So they just hired random, cheap "Java people". Of course, no part of the project needed any Java at all, it made no sense. Likewise they hired "Oracle people" to handle the data aspects, even though no data support was needed and no relational data existed. They knew names, they hired based on those names, nothing more.

              Yikes... that is more emotional than I've worked with. You can have all the crazies.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • thwrT
                thwr @bbigford
                last edited by

                @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • bbigfordB
                  bbigford @thwr
                  last edited by

                  @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                  @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                  Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                  I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                  Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                  I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                  thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • thwrT
                    thwr @bbigford
                    last edited by

                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                    @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                    Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                    I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                    Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                    I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                    Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                    bbigfordB scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • bbigfordB
                      bbigford @thwr
                      last edited by

                      @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                      @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                      Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                      I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                      Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                      I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                      Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                      Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                      thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @bbigford
                        last edited by

                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                        The cost of hosted Windows is extremely high compared to anything else. Generally around double, just for apples to apples, and often quadruple once you account for the additional resources often needed to accommodate Windows systems. In some cases, the licensing cost of Windows alone can exceed the cost of the VPS hosting.

                        I've been doing some web searching and have found very few helpful things about the migration. Just lots of migration tools for convenience, but nothing that is manual so I can actually understand what is needed should I not have a convenient tool. More importantly, to fully understand how the process works.

                        Welcome to Windows, IIS and .NET. All three are hard and complicated for reasons no one knows. Having worked with many alternatives to all three, it is always shocking that any of them can be has complicated as they are. There is a reason that we warn so heavily against companies writing in house code using any of these, even when it isn't strictly locking them into the tech, it effectively does so. Add to this the tendency to disastrously choose MS SQL Server as a datastore and the problems just skyrocket.

                        If they have a mashup of Windows, IIS, and .NET ... I'm guessing there is no easy way to do this. At least not in the sense of simply copying folders out to a VPS instance...

                        It's not that easy even if you are sticking to Windows. "Not easy" is part of the design. But figuring out how to deploy this is critical regardless of your end needs here. If this system gets old and can't be supported, what's the support game plan if no one knows how to support this software?

                        Also, we should ask... why is a business relying on software that they can't support? What happens if the code breaks or something?

                        If they are indeed using a mashup of Windows, IIS, .NET, and MS SQL, the only answer I have is vendor support. If that is not there, the knee jerk reaction is 'not good'.

                        If there is a vendor, they should be able to help you with the migration.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @thwr
                          last edited by

                          @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                          @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                          @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                          @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                          Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                          I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                          Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                          I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                          Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                          Pretty much if software is written in .NET, it has also been abandoned. .NET is the platform for abandoning software.

                          thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • thwrT
                            thwr @bbigford
                            last edited by

                            @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                            @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                            @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                            @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                            @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                            Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                            I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                            Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                            I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                            Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                            Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                            It's not just a new framework version, it's Microsoft's take on cross platform without compromises.

                            bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • thwrT
                              thwr @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                              @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                              @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                              @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                              @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                              Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                              I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                              Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                              I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                              Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                              Pretty much if software is written in .NET, it has also been abandoned. .NET is the platform for abandoning software.

                              I've seen so many abandoned Python / Perl / Ruby / Java / Whatever projects... it's not just a matter of the language or the ecosystem.

                              But I do not want to de-rail this thread

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • bbigfordB
                                bbigford @thwr
                                last edited by

                                @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                                I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                                Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                                I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                                Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                                Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                                It's not just a new framework version, it's Microsoft's take on cross platform without compromises.

                                I just logged in and checked, that app uses ASP.NET

                                thwrT scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • thwrT
                                  thwr @bbigford
                                  last edited by

                                  @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                  Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                                  I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                                  Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                                  I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                                  Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                                  Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                                  It's not just a new framework version, it's Microsoft's take on cross platform without compromises.

                                  I just logged in and checked, that app uses ASP.NET

                                  There it goes, your chance of a docker container 😉 Sorry.

                                  bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • bbigfordB
                                    bbigford @thwr
                                    last edited by

                                    @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                    Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                                    I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                                    Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                                    I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                                    Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                                    Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                                    It's not just a new framework version, it's Microsoft's take on cross platform without compromises.

                                    I just logged in and checked, that app uses ASP.NET

                                    There it goes, your chance of a docker container 😉 Sorry.

                                    The goal here, is to make this as difficult as possible. Quit trying to make things easy!

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @thwr
                                      last edited by

                                      @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                      Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                                      I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                                      Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                                      I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                                      Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                                      Pretty much if software is written in .NET, it has also been abandoned. .NET is the platform for abandoning software.

                                      I've seen so many abandoned Python / Perl / Ruby / Java / Whatever projects... it's not just a matter of the language or the ecosystem.

                                      But I do not want to de-rail this thread

                                      Yes, but I also see those that aren't abandoned all of the time. But .NET... other than SC, find me anything that isn't abandoned.

                                      Especially when we are talking internal bespoke software. It's almost as if .NET was designed for code to be abandoned.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @bbigford
                                        last edited by

                                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @thwr said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        @bbigford said in IIS on prem to hosted migration:

                                        Re: How would you move an IIS workload from on site to a VPS

                                        I'd honestly have to gather more info before I say one way or another. Slowing down and thinking about it, I believe this app only exists in inetput and is asp.net... I'd have to jump into their server and take a look.

                                        Is it by any chance .NET Core? Runs great as Docker on Linux, for example.

                                        I'm not sure off the top of my head to be honest. I would guess no, just based on some characteristics of the client. But I will be gathering more details.

                                        Damn. How old is the application? .NET Core is relatively new (approx. 2 years or so)

                                        Ah, I didn't know it was a newer version. I thought it was just different. Know that I do not know a lot about .NET/ASP.NET/.NET Core. I haven't had a need to support many web services, so learning the exact underlying differences is something I have on my continuing list of things to master.

                                        It's not just a new framework version, it's Microsoft's take on cross platform without compromises.

                                        I just logged in and checked, that app uses ASP.NET

                                        Those are not competing things.

                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASP.NET_Core

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          .NET Core is a competitor to .NET and Mono. All three are implementations of the .NET runtime environment. All three come from Microsoft today.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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