What is our primary use case?
LAMP Stack Debian is basically a full backend, very often used for WordPress hosting, which is my primary use case.
One of the things that I have been working on is setting up an automated pipeline for a customer to deploy WordPress, and I needed to deploy LAMP Stack Debian with those instances as well. We ran this in Kubernetes, for example.
If you ever want to ask a beginner Linux administrator to set up a web server, they are probably going to set up LAMP Stack Debian to showcase that everything is working. It is the default for a lot of web hosting, and I think it has very mature tooling and a really strong integration into Linux.
The internet runs on Linux, and websites will run on LAMP Stack Debian, which is very easy to deploy. If you want to set up a web server, you can do that with LAMP Stack Debian within a few minutes.
LAMP Stack Debian is very often deployed in some kind of cloud environment, also used a lot on VPSs and in Kubernetes. It runs well in containers as well, and it runs on bare metal; you have a couple of options there.
What is most valuable?
I think that LAMP Stack Debian is not necessarily a very good stack, but it is a very proven stack, and that is where it really shines. It is an industry standard.
It is also interesting to call out that LAMP Stack Debian comes in two flavors; the default is of course MySQL, but you can also use MariaDB, whatever you prefer. This is also a little bit operating system dependent.
I have nothing measurable to share, but a lot of stacks are based on LAMP Stack Debian as a backend or as a web server, and LAMP Stack Debian is extremely reliable and extremely proven. It is something you do not have to discover yourself; you just take LAMP Stack Debian and it works.
What needs improvement?
It is an old stack, and I am not necessarily a fan of PHP, to be honest. This is not improving LAMP Stack Debian but changing it. I am not necessarily a fan of PHP, but it is very performant and it uses very little resources. I also like using other stacks as well. How can it be improved? LAMP Stack Debian itself, I do not think can be improved; it is continuously updated with MySQL and with the proxy that is in there, the MySQL database that is in there, and the PHP server. I do not think it can be improved; there are other more contemporary stacks that might be interesting to consider, but LAMP Stack Debian is always updated. Things the .htaccess file can sometimes be a bit finicky with the Apache proxy.
I think that will become then a different stack, and the Apache HTTP server is not a proxy. It is what it is; it is very much proven. If you change that, then it is not proven anymore.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using LAMP Stack Debian on and off for the past ten years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
LAMP Stack Debian is very stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Its scalability is good, if not excellent; if you have very large websites, it might not work, but I would say for ninety-nine percent of the use cases, for WordPress, a simple LAMP Stack Debian will absolutely do. You can, of course, scale your database into a bigger system, but if you are going to go down that route, you are going to use a different kind of website altogether.
How are customer service and support?
It is open source. You go to Stack Overflow or whatever and find your solution. There is also managed LAMP Stack Debian where you get better support, but in essence, I would argue there is no support because it is open-source software; everybody can use it.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I would not argue that I was using a different stack before that; different use cases have different stacks, and for a specific use case, you use LAMP Stack Debian.
How was the initial setup?
I would advise others to just give LAMP Stack Debian a try; try it on your Raspberry Pi or your local computer so you get your bearings. Know that there are Helm charts out there for Kubernetes so you do not have to write them yourself; it is a great way of getting started.
What was our ROI?
There is no cost associated with it, so there is no pricing, no licensing, and thus, there is no return on investment.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
LAMP Stack Debian is open-source software, so I do not purchase it at all.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
I did not evaluate other options because LAMP Stack Debian is defined by whatever tool you are trying to install, so that is more of a given.
What other advice do I have?
I do not think it is the best stack out there; I think there are better stacks out there, but it depends on your use case, and it is boring but proven and good. You cannot go wrong with choosing LAMP Stack Debian, but in the end, I think there are better alternatives out there under development at least.
There are not any AI capabilities in LAMP Stack Debian.
There is no AI capability inside of LAMP Stack Debian.
I gave this product a review rating of seven.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Hybrid Cloud
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Other