I’m a fan of cPanel for a number of reasons, but a few stand out over all. First, let me tell you that cPanel is a basic web hosting control panel that comes with most cheap web hosting providers on the internet today. It’s not the only option out there; you will find some companies that offer other control panels such Plesk. I personally find some of these other control panels offer less features, are more unorganized, and can be difficult to navigate around.
My favorite features in cPanel come down to three main things: Password Protected Directories, Backup Wizard, and Custom Error Pages. Password protected directories are a great feature if you have a personal folder setup and want to limit access only to people who have the password such as family members or close friends. The backup wizard is amazing feature as you can completely backup your site to transfer to a new web host within about 5 minutes and 3 mouse clicks. Finally, the custom error pages are great if you want to create a unique and custom page for webpages on your site that can’t be found (also known as 403, 404, and many other error pages). These three features are just a few cool features you can find by using cpanel on your favorite website hosting plan. I’m sure there are huge Plesk and other control panel fans out there, but I’m all cPanel!
Brian McArthur, the director of technology at Advantage Professionals, a managed services provider in Charlotte, N.C., wanted a better way to perform bare-metal installations on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server. He and his engineering staff used a pre-boot execution environment or PXE Boot server and the kick-start process for automating Linux installations. While the approach is fairly common, McArthur said, “It was a bit cumbersome and never really worked exactly as we needed.” For one thing, the process was not automated, requiring staff to manually assign roles to servers—a time-consuming and inefficient process.
McArthur set out to find a more automated approach to bare-metal server provisioning to quickly facilitate the addition of new servers running the CentOS distribution of Linux in his company’s data center. McArthur went online, conducted a search and came across LinMin Corp., a Redwood City, Calif.-based systems management startup that focuses on Linux administration and management. McArthur downloaded a demo of the company’s product, LinMin Bare Metal Provisioning and within hours realized he had found the right tool. (more…)