The particular issue is around logistics, which I'm pretty comfortable in solving. But for deployment etc. I will struggle
Ultimately, I'm going to need someone to handle my server because I'm just not comfortable enough with Linux to be developing an app and ensuring the deployment is fully secure
In the short term I would just expand my digitalocean instance and drop my website, but I'll need some devops type help. This is all theoretical but I'm trying to roadmap for potential scenarios
It would be a Flask app. I already have the facilities to build distance/time matrices for real-road networks, and I have a vehicle routing solver with an API that I can work with. So the meat of the problem, I can solve.
Front-end would be clunky because I'm not great; I could make it broadly functional for browsers and phones, but I couldn't ensure compatibility across multiple browsers etc
I can do enough to build a functional front-end so it's still covered until someone else comes along to help :) But deployment and just general help with the server health would be great
Yes, you should do. I'm not sure how long this works for (people in chat become unping-able after a few days but that's probably just for the autocomplete). I'll find you, don't worry about that, @DeveshKumarSingh :P
worst-case I'd just find an answer of yours and leave a comment there, then delete after
Incidentally, my "visit the covid room" pin in the Python room doesn't imply that all Covid-tech-related chat has to take place in here, and none of it can take place in room 6. I'm expecting a fair bit of cross talk between rooms.
@MisterMiyagi I push code to the server and run it. I have no idea how to check whether someone is logged on to the server that shouldn't be. I anticipate it could be hacked and I wouldn't know
@roganjosh I see. I assume the setup is basically ssh for login, plus some HTTP/HTTPS web server, correct? Can you reprovision the machine if need be, i.e. is there anything vital stored on the machine itself?
@roganjosh fail2ban is a common utility for handling malicious IP pingers trying common admin and user passwords
I also have done some simple AWS deployments, and there are some good bullet-proofing steps when standing up a new instance. I'll try to track them down.
@roganjosh Don't sweat it. You don't have to be faster than the lion, you just have to be faster than the tons of completely unsecured systems out there.
Enabling fail2ban and closing all ports that aren't needed (likely everything but SSH or HTTPS) will already make you very, very unattractive to hack. It also means only two services need watching every now and then.