What is Webmin?
Webmin is a web-based interface for system administration for Unix. Using any modern web browser, you can setup user accounts, Apache, DNS, file sharing and much more. Webmin removes the need to manually edit Unix configuration files like /etc/passwd, and lets you manage a system from the console or remotely. See the standard modules page for a list of all the functions built into Webmin, or check out the screenshots.
Latest News
Cloudmin 4.6 released
This release adds support for automated failovers between host systems with shared storage, records the history of status changes for each system, allows an SSH key to be added to an existing system, fixes the Xen VNC IP address, and lets you set a custom hostname when creating a new system. Current users will be able to install it from our YUM and APT repositories.
Virtualmin 3.79 released
This is primarily a bugfix release, but it also adds support for changing the web documents directory for an existing domain. You can get it from the Virtualmin downloads page, and it will soon show up in our YUM and APT repositories.
Webmin development version 1.515 released
This new testing version moves Webmin's cron jobs for collecting system information and time synchronization into a new internal cron-like service, which uses no additional RAM when run. It also fixes numerous small bugs, adds online LVM resizing and much more. If you want to try it out, it can be downloaded from the development versions page.
Cloudmin 4.5 released
The biggest new feature in this version is support for cloning virtual systems, which is easier than creating an image and can be done by system owners. It also has a number of bugfixes and minor new features. Current users will be able to install it from our YUM and APT repositories.
Webmin Kompakt book now available in PDF
A free PDF version of the book Webmin Kompakt by Holger Reibold is now available for download. For more information, see the book's website at http://www.bomots.de/webmin/.
Virtualmin GPL AMIs now available in California and Southeast Asia
If you run Virtualmin on Amazon EC2 or are interested in trying it out, you
can now launch instances containing Webmin, Virtualmin and all their dependencies in EC2's new California and Southeast Asia regions. The AMI IDs for those
regions are ami-d389d896 (California) and ami-ffe699ad (Southeast Asia).
For more details, see the Virtualmin on EC2 documentation.
Cloudmin 4.4 released
This major new version includes Citrix Xen support, real interface creation for Xen and KVM systems, default gateway management, better support for resizing disks with no filesystem, EC2 southeast Asia region support, improved system type detection, the ability to safely detach disks, and more. The new version is available from our YUM and APT repositories right now.
If you are interested in learning about future plans for Cloudmin, see our roadmap which lists new features under development or planned for the near future.
Cloudmin 4.3 released
This update includes the ability to edit MAC addresses, support for configuring a DHCP server for Xen and KVM instances, IO priorities for backups, more formats for imported images, and a bunch of bug fixes. The new version is available from our YUM and APT repositories right now. See the Cloudmin page for more information on installing it on a new system.
Virtualmin 3.78 released
This new version adds support for running PHP scripts with domain owner permissions (previously a pro-only feature), the ability to change a domain's Apache log file location, re-tries for FTP backups, restores from an uploaded file, cPanel migration fixes, a page showing new features in all previous releases and much more.
You can get it from the Virtualmin downloads page, and it will soon show up in our YUM and APT repositories.
Cloudmin GPL now available
Cloudmin is a web-based interface for managing virtual machines, such as Xen, KVM and OpenVZ instances. A commercial version has been available for several months now, but we have just released a GPL version that supports management of Xen guests on a single host system.
The simplest way to install it is to use the appropriate install script. Currently Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS and Redhat Enterprise are supported. If you like it, you can upgrade to the commercial version.
Webmin version 1.510 and Usermin 1.440 released
This update improves the speed of finding package updates, adds Czech and Brazillian Portuguese updates, EXT4 support, better InnoDB support, DNSSEC NSEC3 algorithms, and much more. You can get it from the Webmin downloads page, or from our YUM or APT repositories.
Also available is a new Usermin release which fixes a few bugs in the Read Mail module. It can be found on the Usermin downloads page.
Cloudmin 4.1 released
In this new version system owners can make use of the remote API, Xen instances can have their memory limits increased without rebooting, and common IP ranges can include multiple addresses (and gateways). Customers will be prompted to upgrade after logging in to Cloudmin, and new users can purchase it from the Virtualmin shop.
Webmin on FLOSS Weekly
Listen on an interview with Jamie Cameron by Randal Schwartz, Jono Bacon, and Leo Laporte on FLOSS weekly, at http://twit.tv/floss110.
Cloudmin 4.0 released
This release adds support for common IP pools, allows Xen and KVM images to be created from existing files, improves the display of free memory on Xen hosts, and allows a backup Cloudmin master to be setup which receives replicas of all configuration settings on the real master.
For more information, see the Cloudmin documentation, or purchase it from the Virtualmin shop.
. .