/PRNewswire/ -- K1 Investment Management, LLC ("K1"), one of the largest investors in small-cap enterprise software companies, today announced the completion...
The AIO docker image put together by the NC team uses postgres. That’s the recommended way to install NC now, and having used a multitude of methods in the decade I’ve uses nextcloud, I 100% recommend the AIO image.
The virtualization shouldn’t have a negative effect, since containers are just using the host kernel so it’s not much extra overhead.
I would give it a try, it’s simple enough to set up docker on the pi, turn off your native NC install, and add the docker compose file and stand it up. Or build another SD card with a fresh raspbian install and swap it out.
I use NextCloud w/ Postgres and it works completely fine.
Great. It wasn’t too long ago that MariaDb was still the “recommended” option.
It’s still “recommended” and pretty much every tutorial I see uses it, but Postgres seems to work just fine.
I just checked the docs for installation instructions, it didn’t seem to make a distinction anymore.
It still is, as that’s what the developers use.
The AIO docker image put together by the NC team uses postgres. That’s the recommended way to install NC now, and having used a multitude of methods in the decade I’ve uses nextcloud, I 100% recommend the AIO image.
Is there a minimum system requirements? I have bare metal nextcloud on a raspi 4, 4 GB ram, and it’s pretty snappy.
I would consider migrating to the AIO version for more stability but IDK what toll the virtualization would take.
The virtualization shouldn’t have a negative effect, since containers are just using the host kernel so it’s not much extra overhead.
I would give it a try, it’s simple enough to set up docker on the pi, turn off your native NC install, and add the docker compose file and stand it up. Or build another SD card with a fresh raspbian install and swap it out.
nextCloud becomes notably faster when you migrate from MySQL to PostgreSQL.