A list of Cloudron-like services/ competitors
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https://installatron.com/?s=fef37c3b1835b8fa8b78cf5ccd8c50a7
Installatron ?
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Here's 2 websites that lists Cloudron like services even if most of them are already included here.
https://thehomelab.wiki/books/helpful-tools-resources/page/awesome-selfhosted-self-hosting-solutions
I preferred not to post direct links because I wanted the list to be up-to-date
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This felt relevant here in this thread too:
@djxx said in From NethServer to Cloudron:
I wrote a blog post to share my journey of migrating my self-hosted NethServer to Cloudron. Overall I've been quite happy with the experience and wanted to share it here in case anyone else is considering the same thing, or if I might be able to answer questions for people experiencing some of the same pains during migrations.
If at least one poor soul considering the move from NethServer to Cloudron finds this post and it helps them, it'll make me happy.

As they note, most other Cloudron-like solutions don't include a full email server and/ or don't have as many good apps packaged.
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Repocloud is nice. I just deployed Perplexica and GPT Researcher on Repocloud.
I am not sure about the pricing though. Added about 10 USD to test it out.
233 Apps available as of date. -
Repocloud is nice. I just deployed Perplexica and GPT Researcher on Repocloud.
I am not sure about the pricing though. Added about 10 USD to test it out.
233 Apps available as of date.@jagan Looks interesting, but can't see a way to deploy to your own VPS. Interesting for testing FOSS apps, but doesn’t seem very open as a Delaware LLC, and can’t see how you’d control your data on your own VPS, so I wouldn’t recommend for anything you care too much about.
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Cosmos, already in the list, recently had an interesting milestone:
link: https://github.com/azukaar/Cosmos-Server/All in one secure Reverse-proxy, container manager with app store, integrated VPN, authentication provider, and Monitoring, now with Multilingual support, completely reworked VPN, mDNS, and many improvements
Wow, what a trip! 6 months ago I started working on this update, and boy, was that an adventure! The main culprit: Constellation (The VPN)! I always envisioned Constellation to be this one solution to all networking issues when selfhosting (Tunneling/VPN allowing you to use your server in any circumstances without even opening any port). And while there are some technologies that exist that gives you the networking part like Tailscale, no solution come close to the level of end-to-end support Constellation provides, as it integrates directly into the reverse-proxy and other features such as the user managements for a complete seamless experience. That level of novelty, is what made Constellation this hard to design and implement. After all this work thought, while it is nowhere near perfect (yet ;p) it is in a place where it can work and cater for many of the uses cases, and much easier to use than it has ever been.
Aside from this, Cosmos 0.16 has a lot of exciting improvements, such as Multi-language, mDNS support, which gives you automatic *local domains out of the box! As well as great improvement to compose import. But I will expand on those individually.
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Hi Guys,
@jdaviescoates, there is something called dokploy that is similar to coolify.
Dokploy - An open-source & self-hostable Heroku / Netlify alternative.
https://dokploy.com/
https://docs.dokploy.com/en/docs/core/get-started/introduction
https://github.com/dokploy/dokployBut hey, Cloudron is the best

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A friend just told me about Start9, which makes both hardware and an OS for self-hosting:
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A friend just told me about Start9, which makes both hardware and an OS for self-hosting:
@ntnsndr said in A list of Cloudron-like services/ competitors:
A friend just told me about Start9, which makes both hardware and an OS for self-hosting:
https://start9.com/
https://github.com/Start9Labs/start-os
Nice!

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I was curious if people have any additional thoughts or experiences with these platforms. I tell everyone they should use cloudron and I am very much a devotee. But I am curious about other services.
When voting for apps to be added on cloudron I often feel at a loss because I have not tested the app so it is about imagining it utility based on videos etc elsewhere. So a platform where I could test might be nice. Additionally an platform where people could get their feet wet.
Backups are important and cloudron does more on that front than others based on when I searched many years ago. Not perfect but it used to be better than the alternatives.
I stumbled upon this article which got me thinking about the state of alternatives. https://www.xda-developers.com/runtipi-raspberry-pi-guide/
If I had more money I would just loan out rasberrypi(s) with something set up so people can experiment.
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I was curious if people have any additional thoughts or experiences with these platforms. I tell everyone they should use cloudron and I am very much a devotee. But I am curious about other services.
When voting for apps to be added on cloudron I often feel at a loss because I have not tested the app so it is about imagining it utility based on videos etc elsewhere. So a platform where I could test might be nice. Additionally an platform where people could get their feet wet.
Backups are important and cloudron does more on that front than others based on when I searched many years ago. Not perfect but it used to be better than the alternatives.
I stumbled upon this article which got me thinking about the state of alternatives. https://www.xda-developers.com/runtipi-raspberry-pi-guide/
If I had more money I would just loan out rasberrypi(s) with something set up so people can experiment.
So a platform where I could test might be nice. Additionally an platform where people could get their feet wet.
Yeah, I think lots of people here use other platforms just to test out/ use apps that aren't on Cloudron yet.
Backups are important and cloudron does more on that front than others based on when I searched many years ago. Not perfect but it used to be better than the alternatives.
Yeah, I've not looked at it in much depth, but I think that's still the case. The way Cloudron works makes backups, restores, updates, and migrations mostly Just Work.
Additionally, afaik none of the other offerings have a full email server (that apps are pre configured to use) either. Whereas not only does Cloudron have Haraka built-in, but I tihnk @girish is one of the top contributors too.
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