Coolify - An open-source & self-hostable Heroku / Netlify alternative
-
Played around with this in a VM and this would be absolutely perfect in cloudron just to be able to spin up various DBs and have a more dev friendly web app deployment system. Currently the method I found works for a Nuxt.js app is to build the app right into the same repo as the cloudron app, or two different repos.
My use case for more dev friendly apps is 1) only 1 server with cloudron running bare metal, 2) I have 1 IP address and 3) I want to avoid a VPS
-
I wonder if it's even practical to expect this to be integrated into Cloudron, as it feels a bit conflicting...
-
@ this rate, the "self hosting" docker-based market will catch up to all of the "no-code" app builders, lol...Exciting times to be a nerd 🦾
-
I wonder if we had Coolify whether it would make it easy for us to create an Astro website
https://astro.build/Or a next.js one
https://nextjs.org/There is also Dokku, which specializes in deploying applications in Docker containers.
https://dokku.com/
https://astro.build/ -
-
there's also https://github.com/taubyte/tau
-
I don’t understand how this can be packaged for Cloudron.
Can those asking for it explain how ?TBH Coolify wasn’t that good when I tried it, but maybe it’s improved
-
-
Nah, nobody needs to upvote this. It is essentially another type of Cloudron. It also manages an entire server, so it would constantly be clashing with Cloudron. I'm not saying it's useless, just that it doesn't fit. Just delete the entire thread even!
@scooke said in Coolify - An open-source & self-hostable Heroku / Netlify alternative:
delete the entire thread
I say just move to discuss as I pondered on the OP