ISPConfig
ISPConfig is a widely used Open Source Hosting Control Panel for Linux, licensed under BSD license and developed by the company ISPConfig UG.[1] The ISPConfig project was started in autumn 2005 by Till Brehm from the German company projektfarm GmbH.
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Developer(s) | ISPConfig UG |
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Stable release | 3.1.15p2
/ 16 October 2019 |
Written in | PHP |
Operating system | Linux |
Available in | 22 languages |
Type | Web hosting control panel |
License | BSD license |
Website | ispconfig |
Overview
ISPConfig allows administrators to manage websites, email addresses, MySQL and MariaDB databases, FTP accounts, Shell accounts and DNS records through a web-based interface. The software has 4 login levels: administrator, reseller, client, and email-user. ISPConfig supports the Linux-based operating systems CentOS, Debian, Fedora, OpenSUSE and Ubuntu. [2]
Operating Systems
ISPConfig can be used on these Linux Operating Systems.
- CentOS
- Debian
- Fedora
- OpenSuSE
- Ubuntu
Features
The following services and features are supported [3]:
- Manage single or multiple servers from one control panel.
- web server management for Apache HTTP Server and Nginx.
- Mail server management (with virtual mail users) with spam and antivirus filter using Postfix (software) and Dovecot (software).
- DNS server management (BIND, Powerdns).
- Configuration mirroring and clusters.
- Administrator, reseller, client and mail-user login.
- Virtual server management for OpenVZ Servers.
- Website statistics with Webalizer and AWStats.
See feature list reference[4]
gollark: I treat Discord messages and reddit posts as "basically public" anyway.
gollark: Connections to websites themselves run over HTTPS, which I'm mostly trusting of (MITM attacks are a thing and the government does realistically have access to a cert I'll trust, but that's detectable), and my DNS resolution also runs over HTTPS.
gollark: I figure that if the government here actually wants to see the content of my internet traffic, they probably could individually muck with my connection/devices/whatever somehow, but also probably do not do this generally or particularly often.
gollark: Sure! But that doesn't mean they're actively being exploited all the time.
gollark: Also, it is possible that you are overestimating the reach of random intelligence agencies, inasmuch as a lot of communication is now cryptographically secured.
References
- http://www.ispconfig.org ISPConfig UG
- "Documentation". https://web.archive.org/. ISPConfig. 23 January 2019. Archived from the original on 23 January 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2019. External link in
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(help) - "ISPConfig Services and Functions". https://web.archive.org/. ISPConfig. 17 February 2019. Archived from the original on 17 February 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2019. External link in
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(help) - "ISPConfig features". https://web.archive.org/. ISPConfig. 18 February 2019. Archived from the original on 19 February 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2019. External link in
|website=
(help)
External links
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