We run .NET Core on Linux servers at work without any issues. When it comes to shared hosting, however, if they don't know anything about it, they can't help if you run into configuration issues and the likes.
Sorry if I'm not fully agree with you. My overall experience is quite good. I basically choose the provider that specialize in their field. For example, I use .net so I choose the provider has been in this business for more than 10 years or more, they have good technical support and can give advice. They will try to give solution if you have problem or issue. Honestly I never run .net on Linux, so I can't comment anything.
I'm not talking about .NET, I'm talking about .NET Core, which was built from the ground up to be multiplatform (Windows, Linux, Mac). It's been out for more than three years.
Yes, I know, what I meant above is .net core. I know that .net core can run on Linux, but I don't know whether it is stable or not. That's why I stick with Windows server.
This comment is very outdated to be posting in 2019. and quite frankly its rubbish..Net core runs just fine on linux with just one package (the .net core runtime).. so its as simple as installing that package. You will indeed get lost in a land of proxy servers, config files, and what not but it does work. Not only that but you can run that same code on Android, IOS, OSX, Docker, and Cloud compute instances.
Indeed. We've been running .NET Core apps on Linux servers (and Windows servers - we use a mix) at work since late 2017/early 2018 without any issues. My problem has been finding a Linux shared hosting solution that supports it. I'm not sure I want to bother with administering a VPS. But development is going very slowly for various reasons, soooo... :(
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
We run .NET Core on Linux servers at work without any issues. When it comes to shared hosting, however, if they don't know anything about it, they can't help if you run into configuration issues and the likes.
Sorry if I'm not fully agree with you. My overall experience is quite good. I basically choose the provider that specialize in their field. For example, I use .net so I choose the provider has been in this business for more than 10 years or more, they have good technical support and can give advice. They will try to give solution if you have problem or issue. Honestly I never run .net on Linux, so I can't comment anything.
I'm not talking about .NET, I'm talking about .NET Core, which was built from the ground up to be multiplatform (Windows, Linux, Mac). It's been out for more than three years.
Yes, I know, what I meant above is .net core. I know that .net core can run on Linux, but I don't know whether it is stable or not. That's why I stick with Windows server.
This comment is very outdated to be posting in 2019. and quite frankly its rubbish..Net core runs just fine on linux with just one package (the .net core runtime).. so its as simple as installing that package. You will indeed get lost in a land of proxy servers, config files, and what not but it does work. Not only that but you can run that same code on Android, IOS, OSX, Docker, and Cloud compute instances.
Indeed. We've been running .NET Core apps on Linux servers (and Windows servers - we use a mix) at work since late 2017/early 2018 without any issues. My problem has been finding a Linux shared hosting solution that supports it. I'm not sure I want to bother with administering a VPS. But development is going very slowly for various reasons, soooo... :(