A free (libre), open-source (GNU GPL), content management platform designed for group collaboration. Open Atrium is based on Drupal (running on Apache, with a MySQL database).
Open-source server application packages for deployment as appliances (e.g., virtual machines) or sandboxed local installation on Linux, OS X, or Windows. Smaller application downloads are available to pair with LAMP, LAPP, and Ruby base stacks. Handy for test-driving applications.
A free (libre), open-source (GNU GPL) blogging and content-management system. WordPress is written in PHP, supports severeal operating-systems, and requires a MySQL database.
Notable WordPress sites include the U.S. Library of Congress, MSNBC, and The Rolling Stones.
A free (libre), open-source (GNU GPL) content management framework written in PHP with support for a number of operating-systems, web-servers and databases.
Drupal made international news following the U.S. White House's October 2009 web redesign. The variety of Drupal-powered websites demonstrates the platform's flexibility. Notable examples include British Medical Journal (BMJ); Stanford Law School, and Turner Broadcasting.
In the months prior to leaving Heavy, I led an exciting project to build a hosting platform for our online products on top of Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). We eventually launched our newest product at Heavy using EC2 as the primary hosting platform. I’ve been following a lot of what other people have been doing with EC2 for data processing and handling big encoding or rendering jobs. We set out to build a fairly standard LAMP hosting infrastructure where we could easily and quickly add additional capacity. In fact, we can add new servers to our production pool in under 20 minutes, from the time we call the “run instance” API at EC2, to the time when public traffic begins hitting the new server. This includes machine startup time, adding custom server config files and cron jobs, rolling out application code, running smoke tests, and adding the machine to public DNS. What follows is a general outline of how we do this.
You may know about the MySQL Cluster, which is a complex architecture to achieve high availability and performance. One of the advantages of MySQL Cluster is that each node is a peer to the others, whereas in a normal replicating system you have a master
ActiveGrid's Application Server software, set for release in July, is designed to combine several individual servers running LAMP software to tackle demanding computing jobs. The company will give away a low-end product and charge for a more functional se
LAMP has become a defacto-standard around the web community in the recent years, here is a guide to help you set it up. LAMP is the combination of Linux + Apache + MySQL + PHP. You probably already have Linux up if you have come this far, if not you can g
This page walks through the setup of Apache, PHP and MySQL on a Redhat (Fedora) Linux system. The installation is very similar on other Linux distributions. Also, since each package is open source they run almost every OS including Mac OS X and even Windo
This tutorial is designed to guide you through the initial steps of setting up Apache, MySQL, and PHP on Linux. The Linux distribution being utilized for this tutorial is Fedora Core 1, however the steps should be very similar across most distributions. T
Setting up a PHP 5 with Apache 2 and MySQL 4.1.3 PHP 5.0 has finally arrived. Here's a step-by-step guide to setting up a cutting-edge Web development environment with PHP 5.0, Apache 2.0, and MySQL 4.1.3.
This document will walk you through the installation of what is known as a "LAMP" system: Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP. Depending on who you talk to, the P also stands for Perl or Python, but in general, it is assumed to be PHP. I run CentOS on my servers
This document will walk you through the installation of what is known as a "LAMP" system: Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP. Depending on who you talk to, the P also stands for Perl or Python, but in general, it is assumed to be PHP. I run CentOS on my servers
This page walks through the setup of Apache, PHP and MySQL on a Redhat (Fedora) Linux system. The installation is very similar on other Linux distributions. Also, since each package is open source they run almost every OS including Mac OS X and even Windo
Simply exploding the acronym on a letter by letter basis gives us the following elements: * Linux * Apache Web server * MySQL database * Perl, Python, or PHP
This document will walk you through the installation of what is known as a "LAMP" system: Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP. Depending on who you talk to, the P also stands for Perl or Python, but in general, it is assumed to be PHP. I run CentOS on my servers