Initial Release Of Virtualmin Pro

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#1 Sun, 08/07/2005 - 12:18
JamesMiller

Initial Release Of Virtualmin Pro

When should we expect to see Virtualmin Pro available?

Sun, 08/07/2005 - 18:42
BradSpangler

Yes, Please -- When? And Pricing??? I'm pricing dedicated serv ers right now due to data center issues and this is my chance to wean my partner off cpanel. But I need to know more ASAP.

Mon, 08/08/2005 - 08:05
DannyWeaver

I do believe details like pricing and when it will be available are being worked out.

On availability. Virtualmin Pro will be available when it is a commercial grade product. It is not like the GPL virtualmin where it can be released with minor bugs that the users can be expected to work out on their systems. Virtualmin Pro has to be tested on a variety of systems and operating systems before they can release. It is important to be patient. In the meantime I reccomend you work with the GPL Virtualmin as it is a quality product and I expect it will be easily upgraded to Virtualmin Pro.

You can get the GPL Virtualmin from www.webmin.com.

You can learn some useful information on virtualmin at http://www.swelltech.com/support/virtual-servers/index.html. Also you can get your learn on webmin at http://www.swelltech.com/support/webminguide/index.html.

Mon, 08/08/2005 - 12:49
JamesMiller

I understand the need for it to be heavily tested, however I would still like to get a target date that the Pro version will be available.

Mon, 08/08/2005 - 18:34
Joe
Joe's picture

I'm glad to hear how excited everyone is to get their hands on the Professional version! (I'll be excited to get it out the door!)

I will be distributing a beta version of the installer to all sponsors tonight. It is expected to work well on Fedora Core 3 and 4, and RHEL (and derivatives like CentOS) 3 and 4. SuSE and Mandriva will come in the next day or two, and Debian and Ubuntu will follow as soon as possible after that. The ones that lack package management (FreeBSD and Gentoo) will take a bit longer, but they are also on the agenda.

I have finally rounded up a contractor to assist me with the ecommerce portion of the website, and he believes we can have the software registration process up and running before the end of the week--so we'll have a few days to work with the early users to make sure all of the bugs are worked out before it goes on sale.

Pricing will be very competitive with the current virtual host administration tools on the market, and the bundle will include just about everything (where our competitors charge extra for things like script installers).

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Tue, 08/09/2005 - 08:11
DannyWeaver

Throwing in the extras is a good marketing plan. I've grown tired of paying more for them when I can install them myself in little more time than it takes to run the scripts.

Tue, 08/09/2005 - 17:27
JeromyLukenbaugh

I don't know if anyone has expressed a need for it, but is Slackware 10.1 expected to be supported?

Tue, 08/09/2005 - 22:37 (Reply to #7)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hi Jeromy,

We've had no customers asking for slack, so far. I'm not opposed to it, as we hope to address as many platforms as is economically feasible. Slack doesn't have very good package management (ala yum/apt-get/up2date/urpmi) but we have to solve that problem for FreeBSD and Gentoo (which we have had some pretty vocal requests for) so there's no reason we can't solve it in the same way for Slackware.

I haven't actually solved the problem for FreeBSD or Gentoo, however, so it's hard to estimate exactly when Virtualmin Professional will be available on the non-package manager platforms.

There is a poll going on here:

http://www.virtualmin.com/vote

You can vote for what OS you'd most like to see Virtualmin Professional on. We are paying attention, and the results of the polls, plus the feedback we get from early adopters, will dictate where we go with the product.

In the short term, our OS support list, in order of appearence over the next few days/weeks, looks like this:

Fedora
RHEL/CentOS
SuSE
Mandriva
FreeBSD
Debian
Gentoo
Ubuntu
...whatever comes after...

I'd like to have all of these rolling out the door by the end of the month, though some of them might prove more difficult than I anticipate.

We will be focusing on the latest couple of releases of each OS, so that we don't have to commit to maintaining support for very old systems, especially since there are a few packages that we have to provide ourselves and can't be pulled directly frmo the vendor.

Hope this answers your questions.

I suppose I should also note that if you're bold enough, you can make Virtualmin run on any OS that Webmin supports. We'll help as best we can, and we'll integrate as much of what is learned during the process into our installer as possible. It is entirely possible that if you've got some experience with your OS' inner workings, and some virtual hosting experience, you can jumpstart the support for your OS. We aren't going to fight you if you try to run it somewhere we don't support yet.

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Wed, 08/10/2005 - 13:38
JamesMiller

Joe, just wanted to make sure that I didn't get missed in the distribution of Virtualmin Pro beta. You mentioned that you were going to distribute it two nights ago.

Thu, 08/11/2005 - 00:53
Joe
Joe's picture

Distributing a couple of nights ago was the plan, but the best laid plans...

Anyway, I ran into some dependency issues with my module RPMs, which led to it interrupting the installer. But the makemodulerpm.pl script has been fixed now, and the new packages actually work. I'm running the test installs now, and hope to send it out to the sponsors list in a couple/few hours before I hit the sack for the night.

I've also rounded up a great OpenACS developer to help me wrap up the shopping cart and software registration manager so that we can begin selling Virtualmin Professional by this weekend (I hope...I'm gonna have to go back to my day job pretty soon if we don't!).

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Thu, 08/11/2005 - 02:43
LonnieB554

Ok Joe
As soon as possible - need to know pricing - even on a Beta version!!!
Love the free version - but for the added features - don't mind paying.

LonnieB

Sun, 08/14/2005 - 16:23
JamesMiller

When's the new planned date to release the beta to sponsors?

Thu, 08/18/2005 - 13:44
BradSpangler

Is there any specific pricing information on VirtualminPro available yet? "Very competitive" sounds great, but I'm looking for a number I can plug in a spreadsheet here, folks.

Thu, 08/18/2005 - 17:40 (Reply to #13)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hi Brad,

Good question, and you're not the only one who's asked. ;-)

So, I'll go ahead and let the cat out of the bag. Pricing will be:

$149 10 domains 3 support incidents
$199 50 domains 3 support incidents
$399 250 domains 6 support incidents
$499 Unlimited domains 6 support incidents
$999 10+10 bundle ten ten domain packs with 3 support incidents per server

Support incidents can be purchased at $39 each, or in bundles. Bug reporting is always free, as are the resulting fixes (and if a support incident turns out to be a bug, it doesn't count against your total).

Annual renewals (which includes updates to the latest version of everything, so it comparable to upgrade pricing) will be roughly half of purchase price.

Early adopters, or those who purchase during the first month or so, will get a significant discount off of the initial purchase price, as we know there are going to be bugs and problems as the product gets installed on a wide variety of operating systems in a wide variety of environments.

In other, related, news I have just tried out the early version of the registration manager that I'm having developed by a great OpenACS developer named Malte Sussdorff...It is coming along very nicely and I expect it to be completed by the weekend. Assuming I can wrap up the installers by then, we'll be taking orders by next week!

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Sat, 09/03/2005 - 08:31 (Reply to #14)
ADobkin

Just to add another "me too" to this thread, I am very interested in the new product, even as a beta version. I have been a Webmin and Virtualmin user for the past few years (even contributed several ideas on the mailing list that have already been implemented in both the GPL and Pro versions).

I am ready to go "prime-time" with releasing Virtualmin Pro to my hosting clients as soon as it is ready, and I would like to start by purchasing a 50-pack. Depending on the "early adopter" discount, I may even be interested in a 250 or unlimited pack.

Please let me know how and when I can place my order, and if you have beta software available for testing in the meantime. I shouldn't require much support, since I am already quite familiar with the free version, and I would be happy to report any bugs I find and submit feedback. I am already building a new test server and would love to have Virtualmin Pro running on it by the end of the week! :-)

Thanks,
Alan

Thu, 08/18/2005 - 21:21
GlenIhrig
GlenIhrig's picture

Fantastic!

I'm ready to buy a 10 domain pack and I have a client standing by ready to buy a 50 domain pack as soon as I tell him Virtualmin Pro is ready for prime time.

Thanks for the pricing info, Joe.

Best,

-Glen

Sat, 09/03/2005 - 19:10
DannyWeaver

I guess this is the official me too thread. heh

I'd be interested in a 50 pack as it is. However I'm curious about how the pro version shall "upgrade" as my buisness grows.

Sat, 09/03/2005 - 21:59
JamesMiller

That's a good question, is there any plan to offer a "leased licence" for unlimited domains?

Mon, 09/05/2005 - 08:37 (Reply to #18)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hey James and all,

I never even thought of it, but monthly "leased" pricing does seem to be very popular. Our card processor supports recurring purchases...so I think we can do this. Not immediately--the shopping cart doesn't support it at the moment--but in a couple of weeks I ought to be able to figure something out.

Excellent idea. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.

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Sat, 09/03/2005 - 22:28
JamesMiller

Continued...

For some reason I never actually thought of this .. All of my cPanel servers are leased licenses, a year goes by very fast and getting updates is crucial.

My opinion, some sort of leased option should be implemented to compete with cPanel, Plesk, and Ensim.

Mon, 09/05/2005 - 10:16
GlenIhrig
GlenIhrig's picture

How is it going in regards to the release of Virtualmin Pro?

I am still struggling with configuration issues that I believe will be handled by the Virtualmin Pro installer.

Could we have a detailed update please?

Mon, 09/05/2005 - 14:32 (Reply to #21)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hi Glen,

The installer is ready for Early Adopter release for Fedora Core 3 and 4 and CentOS/RHEL 3 and 4. I am working with the OpenACS developer to get the final bugs worked out of the software registration system...and I expect to begin selling sometime tomorrow.

There will be a few bits and pieces of the system that aren't in yet but will be in the official release (specifically, SuExec FastCGI and PHP4/PHP5 configurable on a per-domain and per-script basis, scponly and possibly another restricted shell), but otherwise everything is working great and makes for a thoroughly useful system.

In short, if it isn't available for purchase tomorrow, I will make elaborate excuses for why it isn't. ;-)

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Mon, 09/05/2005 - 16:57
JamesMiller

Is the installer script one script a single script for all currently supported OSs? Just wondering if at the time of purchase you have to decide what OS is going to be used. I installed virtualmin pro on Fedora 4, but am likely going to switch to CentOS, and eventually to FreeBSD when it is supported.

Mon, 09/05/2005 - 21:45 (Reply to #23)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hi James,

The same script will install for all supported systems. Right now, it supports Fedora and RHEL/CentOS. The OS is detected very early in the script so that the right stuff can happen later on. The shopping cart will ask you what OS you're using it on, because we want that data so we can decide where our efforts are most useful for customers, but the same script will run on any OS. It just needs a reasonable shell to run in, a download program (either wget or curl), Perl, and the package manager of the OS.

The script makes use of the system standard package manager when possible, so everything is installed from RPMs using up2date and yum on Red Hat based systems. On FreeBSD ports will be used for everything except for our components, which will be installed from tarballs. On Gentoo we will use Portage and install local ebuild scripts for our components. And on Debian apt-get will be used for most everything. This is one of the reasons things are taking a bit of time to get rolling--but in the long run it will allow us to provide more timely updates and track the latest versions of the OS more closely. We know that a very common complaint about many of the other proprietary virtual host administration systems is that they trail so far behind the latest releases of operating systems. I don't want that to be a problem for our customers.

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Thu, 09/08/2005 - 16:35
kenjay

hi not sure if i should post this here but what the heck i wouldnt be a unix admin if i did anything the correct way would i.

i have a couple of questions if you dont mind.

will the installer now add all configurations for quota`s, bandwidth management, apache, multi sql etc i still have the odd problem with installing the system because the current virtualmin needs a working apache, sendmail etc.

is there to be support for multiple stats packages.

will it be possible to store all the customers logins etc on a remote sql server so it will integrate with the current .net support system and ordering system

i have been using virtualmin since pretty much day 1 version 1 and the same for webmin.

also will there be a demo version we can install so that we can show people the full system running as selling an invisible product to manageing directors is not too easy.
a 30 day limited key would suffice for this.

i hope it also has better reporting features, i would need a weekly summary to be emailed to multiple addresses stating, domains bandwidth and good and bad activity on the server and hopefully the latest revision numbers for each of the installed rpm`s and definately mails sent/blocked (i use mailscanner and logcheck on verbose) and thats for starters, putting that directly into a database thats viewable via webmin would be a bonus.

Thu, 09/08/2005 - 17:03 (Reply to #25)
JamesMiller

Here's my best answers to your questions:

Yes, the installer takes care of all configurations of all relevant software packages, and actually installs the packages if they are not present. Right now Virtualmin will disable Sendmail and install and configure postfix, but other than that, it completely works with your current system, it just configures the necessary aspects to work with Virtualmin.

There are two stats packages that are currently included and auto-configured in Virtualmin Pro: Webalizer and AWStats.

Storing customer logins on a remote database is not something that comes build-in to Virtualmin. The Pro version is very similar to the GPL version at this point, it just adds several much-needed features that are imperative for a web hosting system.

As far as reporting features, the features it seems you are looking for really don't require Virtualmin at all .. they could be done using simple Cron jobs and logwatch reporting.

Fri, 09/09/2005 - 11:09 (Reply to #26)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hi Ken,

James has answered pretty thoroughly, but I'll weigh in with an official response.

The installer does the following:

Installs all necessary components (web, mail, name, databases, spam/av, Webalizer/AWstats, Mailman, Webmin/Usermin/Virtualmin, etc.)

Configures quotas and all services for use in a virtual hosting environment

Starts all necessary services

Sets up Virtualmin to work specifically with all of the components we just installed (as you may know, Virtualmin is extremely flexible, and can be used with many different components--Sendmail or QMail instead of Postfix, for example)

Bandwith monitoring is not enabled by default, but it can be enabled easily in the GUI after installation.

Remote storage of account information is not supported, though we're adding LDAP mailbox users in a not too distant version. Also, there is a pretty comprehensive Perl API, which can be accessed from any Webmin server using the RPC API (i.e. you can do it from a remote server). So far, no one has implemented anything making use of this.

There will be a time-limited demo version.

On the reporting question...The following is supported:
[list]

[*]Webalizer[/*]

[*]AWStats[/*]

[*]Bandwidth monitoring with email alerts on overage (and optionally when approaching overage)[/*]

[*]System and Server Status monitors, which has dozens of types of checks, with emailed alerts on service failure[/*]

[*]Quota overage email notification and optional approaching overage email notification[/*]

[/list]

As for RPMs installed, mails blocked, ssh failed logins, etc., on a Red Hat based system, this is already handled by logwatch (assuming you have it enabled). No reason for us to reinvent the wheel. Now that you mention it, however, we may very well add a plugin module for some mail log analysis tool. And it might be useful for us to help you make sure you get those log reports from logwatch and cron, by insuring that your root alias points to some mailbox that is read by a human.

In short, I think reporting is pretty good, but it doesn't answer all of your wishes.

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Fri, 09/09/2005 - 11:46
GlenIhrig
GlenIhrig's picture

Hi Joe,

Being a software developer myself, I understand about how development and deadlines just don't seem to mix.

I have a new server project that needs to be setup this weekend, and I would really like Virtualmin pro to be a part of that project.

On 09/05/05 you wrote:

> In short, if it isn't available for purchase tomorrow, I will make elaborate excuses for why it isn't.

Ok, so tell us, what is the current projection? (elaborate excuses gratefully accepted ;-)

Best regards,

-Glen

PS.

Really, I appreciate your willingness to discuss these issues, very few developers/companies are. It really helps to create confidence (for me at least) in Virtualmin Inc. In my experience, the truth is always better than silence, even if it's bad news.

-G

Fri, 09/09/2005 - 12:16 (Reply to #28)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hey Glen,

Elaborate Excuse #13: Aliens
Elaborate Excuse #79: Corporate Espionage
Elaborate Excuse #101: A dingo ate it
Elaborate Excuse #231: Michael Jackson

Real Excuse #1: It isn't ready yet. I simply can't bring myself to release it when I <i>know</i> the installer is going to fail in some way on one of the first round of supported Operating Systems. I suppose this also indicates that I'm not willing to drop any of the first round of supported systems (FC3/4, CentOS3/4, RHEL3/4). The list of supported systems is short enough without dropping one or more of them just to get it out the door a day sooner!

The good news is that none of the problems are huge, and I keep thinking the one I'm working on right now will be the last one (but that's been my thought for several days now).

I'd like to tell you that it will be released today, but no one will believe me at this point. So let's just say I'm doing an all-platform test, as we speak. If it passes, it goes out today.

To get specific:

The current problem is that the Mailman module is configured with the wrong paths, and so the Virtualmin Configuration check fails. A minor thing, but the real fix has to happen in both Webmin and in the Virtualmin Mailman module. Jamie has sent me the fixed Mailman module, but the new devel Webmin version isn't ready yet. I'm working around the problem in the installation script, I think...I'll find out if my workaround actually works around in just a few minutes.

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Fri, 09/09/2005 - 12:01
DannyWeaver

From the news on the front page, it appears Pro will be available tonight.

Now, when shall Ubuntu/Debian versions be available? Rough guesses are okay ;-D

Currently I'm running the GPL Virtualmin on Ubuntu and would love to upgrade to the Pro version. Also, I'd still like to get in on the early adoptor deal.

Fri, 09/09/2005 - 12:42
GlenIhrig
GlenIhrig's picture

Joe, I really appreciate the response.

Thanks and good luck.

-Glen

Sun, 09/11/2005 - 11:25
RonaldKrisko

Jamie and Joe,

Best of luck in your new commercial venture, and with the 50 percent discount, I am interested in one of the unlimited domains license. Please let me know when it is ready for primetime and your on-line shopping cart is ready to take orders. As always, great tools and keep up the good work! Well, take care and have a nice day!

Ron Krisko

Sun, 09/11/2005 - 11:28
JamesMiller

I'm assuming that anyone who is a registered user on Virtualmin.com will recieve an official notification when Virtualmin Pro is ready .. so you are good to go!

Sun, 09/11/2005 - 22:08
Joe
Joe's picture

I have just enabled the shopping cart. Virtualmin Professional Early Adopter Release 1 is available for purchase.

As mentioned, pricing will be discounted 50% for the next 30 days. We are also waiving premium support incident limits, in order to insure that no question goes unanswered and no problem goes unsolved.

Please have a look at the[a href=&quot;/support/documentation/EA1-Release-Notes&quot;&gt;Release Notes&lt;/a&gt; if you plan to give Virtualmin Professional a try during the Early Adopter period. Feel free to ask questions, if you have any doubt about whether now is the right time for you to buy. A time-limited downloadable demo will be available in a day or two, as will an online demo server.

In other news I've posted all of the documentation to the[a href=&quot;/support/documentation&quot;&gt;Documentation&lt;/a&gt; page. It includes a pretty complete reference for Virtualmin Professional, as well as coverage of the new command line and remote APIs.

New releases will come every week or so until stability is achieved, and each new release will include at least one new supported OS (I'll probably try to maintain a quicker pace than that, now that I've worked out most of the issues in supporting multiple platforms efficiently). Upgrades will of course be free, and purchasers will always be able to download the latest version from the serial number manager tool here at Virtualmin.com.

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Sun, 09/11/2005 - 23:17
GlenIhrig
GlenIhrig's picture

Fantistic! I just purchased a 50 Domain License.

Congratulations!

-Glen

Sun, 09/11/2005 - 23:47 (Reply to #35)
Joe
Joe's picture

Hey Glen,

Thanks a lot! Be sure to let us know of any problems or questions you have. We're shooting for perfection by October 11th. ;-)

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Sun, 08/18/2013 - 21:33
gvidals

I own a small hosting company and I am considering migrating to Virtualmin Pro. Typically, we host 400 domains per CentOS web server. I understand I would pay $499 license fee per server for the first year.

Is there a domain charge on top of the $499? If so , what would it be for 400 domains?

Sun, 08/18/2013 - 22:22 (Reply to #37)
andreychek

Howdy,

Nope, there's no additional charges... it's just the flat rate for Virtualmin Pro (unlimited), and there's a lower rate for all subsequent renewals.

Also, you're welcome to try it for 45 days -- if it doesn't do what you need, just file a Support request and you can receive a refund.

You can see some details regarding Virtualmin features here:

https://www.virtualmin.com/compare.html

If you have additional questions, we'd be happy to answer them -- but you may want to start a new Forum post, this one is 8 years old :-)

Thanks!

-Eric

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