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Exactly my thoughts lol.
I would recommend Ubuntu for it's ease of use and it's cutting edge package updates.
However I am currently using CentOS on 2 of my boxes. Only because the main dedi is running cPanel and its accompanying VPS is running cPanel DNS Only and both require CentOS.
no debian 7 with openvz (since most providers are still using old ovz deb 7 template which crashes when dist-upgrade)
anything else should be fine, which is easiest for you
RamNode doesn't use that one, but that has happened to me in the past and it was a nightmare to "fix."
If I was gonna start a Wordpress site tomorrow I would:
I've become a huge fan of the nginx fastcgi_cache. The cache purging module for Wordpress is excellent. The dotdeb repo provides nginx pre-built with the necessary third-party module for purging. The native build of nginx on Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS and the official nginx build does not provide this capability. There's no PPA providing it for Ubuntu. PITA.
Deb 7 + dotdeb provides a ready-to-go solution and a superb nginx, php-fpm, wordpress platform. All on a responsive, 512MB KVM for $18 annual. You can't beat it
are you an employee of FAPVPS ?
If you are newbie just order openvz and then use centos or ubuntu.
@sleddog would you care to share your nginx config for wordpress?
@Sander I recommend KVM/Xen better for beginner. OVZ has some surprises - better for more experienced people
No. A client.
/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
/etc/nginx/sites-available/example.org
The better question to ask is which one are you more familiar with, what linux distro are you "learning linux" on?
@sleddog sorry if this question is dumb. how would nginx know if a page has been updated already and cache copy is not valid anymore?
Via the nginx helper plugin: http://wordpress.org/plugins/nginx-helper/
Page about it (by the plugin author): https://rtcamp.com/wordpress-nginx/tutorials/single-site/fastcgi-cache-with-purging/
Warning: ignore the Ubuntu setup -- the nginx PPA referenced (brianmercer) is out-of-date/abandoned. Just use Deb 7 + Dotdeb
thanks boss!
I know, when you see:
The system is going down to maintenance mode NOW! shutdown: timeout opening/writing control channel /run/initctl init: timeout opening/writing control channel /run/initctl
It drives you crazy
@sleddog: Thanks for the config. I tried a few different things in testing before I pushed it to production, but I always ran into problems where nginx wouldn't run any php in the admin area if I had an IP restriction on it. I couldn't figure it out.
@kyaky: Indeed. It takes a minute for it to sink it and then it's full on rage mode
For lowend and everything else, I recommend Alpine Linux!
Yeah i agree with this. openvz does not follow all the rules of LINUX since the host can do some funny things to get more peromance for the rest of the customers.
Did you get it working?
One of the best OS's for webhosting is FreeBSD. Very easy, user friendly and powerful. I ran several sites with FreeBSD as base OS and they were fast as hell. Also for installing software FreeBSD should be your choice. You will love the ports and package system!
for beginner you would want to run apache/mysql/php setup, its easier to config with apache than nginx
Haven't had a chance to look into it. I'll see if I can dig up my nginx config and see how it matches up with the one you posted. I'm also using varnish in front of nginx, so that might be part of the problem, but I doubt it as the same issue occurred over http and https.
EDIT: Found it, put it up on owncloud:
https://dl.charlesauer.net/public.php?service=files&t=6949839e1c0a8a42dfd43a4ddeab9765
Oracle Solaris SPARC is fast and reliable, try it.
Just a teeny tiny bit hypocritical? cough
You tell others to explain why they have recommended the OS yet you do not do so yourself?
As you've gathered by now, asking which OS is the best is sort of like asking which religion is the best. It can lead to all sorts of nastiness.
My suggestion is to flip a coin. You can't go wrong with either centos or ubuntu. More important than the choice of OS is sticking with it when the going gets tough. Good luck.
Look up the meaning of irony
I know, right?
What I told Brad
But seriously to the OP, use whatever OS you're comfortable with. That's what really counts in the end.
Made some Virtualmin guides and I belive they might help OP.
http://lowendtalk.com/discussion/17915/basic-virtualmin-installation-and-configuration-guide-20-images
http://lowendtalk.com/discussion/18133/virtualmin-security-guide-part-one-22-images
http://lowendtalk.com/discussion/18136/virtualmin-security-guide-part-two-7-images