Thanks. I will give this a test.
Regarding support for Fedora, this is a philosophical conversation and needs to be examined along with the goals of the Litespeed project.
Right now, Apache and Nginx are universally supported out of the box on, I assume, on all Linux distros and even MacOS. So while LS might think its target market are cloud providers of one type or another, I would guess that there is familiarity with these two choices by potential customers. The lack of exposure because of this slows down OLS/LS penetration. You are mostly relying on cloud providers. That is how I heard about it.
OLS/LS is not at all easy to install for users. There are too many choices, processes are bifurcated on Linux and CPU platforms. Where available, 1-Click is great, but intimidating to configure for a newbie. And installing MariaDB directly instead of through the Fedora/Rhel repositories is a no-no. I reviewed the script yesterday and noticed that MariaDB RPMs were used at one time. Since 1-Click can tell if Maria is already present, I would suggest removing MariaDB from 1-click and instead suggesting it is installed prior to OLS but OLS will take care of the config.
While an OLS Docker/Podman container even works directly on my ARM Mac, containers are not easy to setup properly (with external directories for WP, custom domains, etc) and there are no docs available to help with this. While I could setup OLS on my Mac quicker than it takes me to write this post, there is not much I could do with that container.
The difficulties installing OLS undermine one of it's biggest advantages – ease of administration through it's Admin client.
I'm not a fan of Ubuntu. IMO, it's old, slow to innovate and rigid. Fedora OTH = IBM. Fedora is cutting edge. Also multiple releases of Fedora feed into a singular release of the RHEL stuff. Once it works on Fedora, it's gonna work with little effort on the RHEL platform. OLS could be available upstream but recommended for downstream.
And of course there are big changes happening and probably more to come for the Fedora—> downstream path. More and more people are moving from the Debian/Ubuntu side to Fedora, apart from the Debian ideologues.
One last point. The Fedora stream is pushing Cockpit for admin. While Cockpit has been around for a while, there have been big changes in the last few months, including upgrading to python and it has removed the dependency for a special open port instead now also using SSH. While porting over OLS/LS admin to a Cockpit add-on is probably a big project, the benefits would be exposure to a very large market. OpenVPN has an add-on that involves upsell to paid services built right into its Cockpit add-on, although testing this right now requires an effort to find all the parts.
Why is Cockpit so important? Because it is far superior to Webmin and with fibre becoming ubiquitous, there is great potential in the self-hosting market.
Personally, I use Fedora server w/o a GUI on metal and for production I use OLS on Alma in a VM.
Cheers
Mike