Bryan Smith wrote:

> After all, countless
> hosting providers have been around for decades, and with full PaaS
> solutions like CloudFoundry, OpenShift (which was born out of JBoss
> developer needs in the late '00s -- yes, originally before Docker and
> Kubernetes), et al. a lot of developers really don't need to be deep
> Linux sysadmins unless they are maintaining the PaaS itself.

Sure, but will those readily support NodeJS? I suppose if we were to rely on 
what commercial hosting providers tend to offer, we would have to go with PHP 
and MySQL.

> They may need some LPI [Linux] Essentials for some basics, but that's
> really beyond the scope, as I understand it, for LPI [Web Development]
> Essentials.

Presumably in the context of an instructor-led course, the instructor would 
set up their web servers for them. Even for self-taught learning there could 
be pre-made Docker or virtual-machine images available for download where all 
they need to do is to deposit their own code in some designated directory so 
the server will pick it up.

Anselm
-- 
Anselm Lingnau · [email protected] · https://www.tuxcademy.org
Freie Schulungsmaterialien für Linux und Open-Source-Software
Free Training Materials for Linux and Open-Source Software


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