Regarding Bacularis, I see I made an error in my previous email (and
previous testing of the bacularis docker containers!).

Bacularis is available in several flavors of docker containers,
including one with all bacula components, and one which only contains the
web interface. I clearly must have tested with the wrong container in the
past.
More info on bacularis docker containers here:
https://bacularis.app/doc/brief/installation.html#install-using-docker

Regards,
Robert Gerber
402-237-8692
r...@craeon.net


On Tue, Dec 5, 2023 at 4:40 PM Rob Gerber <r...@craeon.net> wrote:

> Certainly!
>
> You have several options for bacula web gui.
> There is Bacula-web, which I haven't used so cannot speak to it. I
> believe Bacula-web is primarily a reporting tool, and not a control tool. I
> haven't examined it closely, so I will have to do so later. Looks
> interesting. The developer is on this mailing list!
> https://www.bacula-web.org/
>
> There is Baculum, which is provided and maintained by the bacula project.
> Find it in the bacula project repo or your OS repo if that's what you used
> to install bacula (I hope you used the bacula project repo).
>
> Finally, there is Bacularis, a friendly fork of Baculum. Bacularis makes
> some UI changes, and pushes some bugfixes up to Baculum as well. I think
> the goal of the Bacularis dev is to make baculum more approachable.
> I use bacularis, though I have used baculum as well in the past. They are
> superficially similar in some ways.
> Bacularis is available in a docker container, though the docker container
> version of the app comes with its own director, sd, and fd. You will need
> to modify the container to point to your own bacula installation.
> I installed bacularis natively (not via container) in rockylinux 9. It
> wasn't terribly difficult, as things go. Slightly more involved than merely
> issuing a package manager install command and flying along (this is also
> true of baculum). Generally after installation of the program, you must
> ensure it has appropriate sudoers access to some bacula files, and tell it
> where the bacula executables are located.
> The bacularis developer is also on this list!
> https://bacularis.app/
>
> I personally recommend bacularis, and might advise against using the
> bacularis docker container unless you're comfortable modifying its
> bacularis instance to point to your bacula install. I might be misguided on
> the necessity or difficulty of this, but when I tried the bacularis docker
> container it came with its own bacula install, and I didn't want the
> complication or potential for error. I'm also not very familiar with docker
> containers, and wanted to go with a native install to avoid any surprises.
>
> When installing bacularis OR baculum, I personally used lighttpd, though
> apache is also supported.
>
> Regards,
> Robert Gerber
> 402-237-8692
> r...@craeon.net
>
>
> On Tue, Dec 5, 2023 at 4:20 PM MylesDearBusiness via Bacula-users <
> bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm not a PHP expert and am looking for a lower barrier to entry.
>>
>> Is there a Docker container available holding the entire environment
>> required by the Bacula GUI that I can hook up to a client server?
>>
>> II've already set up director/sd/fd daemons on my cloud server and am
>> looking for an easier way to manage the system.
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> <Myles>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Bacula-users mailing list
>> Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net
>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users
>>
>
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