What OS to use, when installing xenforo?

farber

New member
I want to install xenforo on my vps but I am not sure of what OS to use and what panel I should go with.
Right now my vps is on centos 7 and I want to go with VestaCP but I don't know if it's good.
Any recommendations?
 
Those specs for a new site are wayyyyyyyyyyy too much; many sites don't even get to the point where they're active enough to need 8-16GB after a year or two. Even most medium sites don't need that much.
As I said before:
...to be able to cope with high loads and to be operated with relatively little administrative effort

and in connection with the topic title...
What OS to use, when installing xenforo?
:D

Of course you can also run XF efficiently with minimal requirements, but that's not what my answer was about... ;)
 
The amount of memory can be matched by the database size so the entire db can be run from memory.
But that is a nice to have and not mandatory.

If you have a large database (~10GB on disk ~20GB in memory) this is no longer nice to have. ;)
My answer is also aimed at operators of VB forums with larger databases and long-standing forums who are looking for a high-performance replacement for vB and the right environment for it.
 
I had to buy a license just to be able to make this post 😆
GIF by MOODMAN
 
The only way to run a forum unless it has little traffic is on a CentMinMod CentOS7 Server (VPS or Dedicated) in my humble opinion.....

By forum I mean XenForo, vB, Invision or other....

As for difficulty, after running cPanel servers for many years and having various bits fall over with updates, Contacting cPanel with support tickets, CMM is far far easier with less hiccups and the support is far superior, combine that with a decent VPS provider (I use Vultr and Hetzner) with snapshots and automated backups and the ability to clone a server to another, its really the only way... The other thing is the cost of cPanel which has escalated in recent years astronomically when they got taken over...

And by far the best way to run the email server (again in my humble opnion after many years) is to offload this from your forum server and either outsource it (No point me listing them when CMM has a list here ) - My personal choice that I use is Namecheaps PrivateMail paid for facility which works out pretty cheap or run a cPanel server for the emails.

The beauty of a separate server for the emails is is the forum goes down or is taken offline the mail still works and vice versa...

Letsencrypt SSL is a breeze to set up and use on CMM.....

And Nginx is a totally great web server, after coming from 15 years of Apache it was fairly easy to pick up...

I had to buy a license just to be able to make this post 😆
I mean, that's dedication right there!

I have no doubts in the product. The doubts are within myself and my time/commitment i have these days to learn it and be comfortable running it.
cpanel is easy/autopilot for me these days. yes, it's almost as much as my server. 25 for the server and 20 for the cpanel license a month and it is on my list to do for cost reduction efforts to keep my dying-niche forum alive a little bit longer (eg, profitable).
 
The doubts are within myself and my time/commitment i have these days to learn it and be comfortable running it.
cpanel is easy/autopilot for me these days. yes, it's almost as much as my server. 25 for the server and 20 for the cpanel license a month and it is on my list to do for cost reduction efforts to keep my dying-niche forum alive a little bit longer (eg, profitable).
CMM is not a steep learning curve at all, I would say its easier than cpanel.... Only thing you need to do is run a separate mail server - You can run a mail server on the CMM server and there is info on this on Evas site but its by far easier to outsource it like I said above.

As per the above post get a cheap hourly vps and have a play, youll save $20 for cpanel and may be able to run on a slimmer server without the bloat of cpanel.....
 
I run a large forum on Almalinux on 16gig of RAM and could do it with with 8gig if necessary. I'm also running Litespeed/LSCache/Redis.

There are times when my RAM is fully utilized, but a change to one of my backup processes will fix that.

Used to run the same forum on 32gig of RAM when I was at OVH but made some tweaks to overcome that, which actually helped speed up my particular site.
 
Currently everyone gets a free latest-gen ARM t4g.small (2Core 2GB RAM) from AWS until the rest of this year - that will get you started and you have some time to play around for free even if you do not have access anymore to their first free year. Cache everything out to a CDN add a mail server and some elasticsearch.

@eva2000 setup is nice and you can learn from it how to setup your own nginx if that's what you want to do.
 
I honestly can not believe that. I will go check that out. Thank you so much ! I currently work on the free 2 Core (up to 20% CPU core useage) ARM 2GB RAM (free this year, and fast) with 10GB SSD (for that I pay, and it is multiple times faster than the offer they had a few years ago) and it even works out with caching. The hardware and the software are fast now and much more effective than two decades ago. There were times I paid three figures a month for servers and a service who "maintains" them.

Thank you so much, unbelievable Oracle offers this.
 
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