> you do need to install cockpit on [all] your server[s], right?
apt install cockpit
Installation is not an issue, more is keeping it up to date package-wise. Little or nothing extra on to of having the tools and libraries it needs installed.
So unless you have a _really_ compelling auto config system for common enough workloads I doubt there would be a large enough paying market.
There could be a case for if using cockpit or similar was not possible due to policy rather than technical concerns (there aren't going to be many circumstances where someone who can't install cockpit has a SSH account with the privs required for your app to be useful much beyond monitoring).
Perhaps there is a use case for people tentatively moving from shared hosting to having their own VMs/servers, so they can give your app the host address, user, and pass word/key & let it discover available resources & install what they need. But that is a market who notoriously won't want to pay for anything generally (they want the unlimited ride their last shared hosting provider promised but failed to deliver, for as little as that host or some chapter other is charging) but will bitch endlessly if there free moon-ona-stick isn't 100% perfect and 110% reliable.
apt install cockpit
Installation is not an issue, more is keeping it up to date package-wise. Little or nothing extra on to of having the tools and libraries it needs installed.
So unless you have a _really_ compelling auto config system for common enough workloads I doubt there would be a large enough paying market.
There could be a case for if using cockpit or similar was not possible due to policy rather than technical concerns (there aren't going to be many circumstances where someone who can't install cockpit has a SSH account with the privs required for your app to be useful much beyond monitoring).
Perhaps there is a use case for people tentatively moving from shared hosting to having their own VMs/servers, so they can give your app the host address, user, and pass word/key & let it discover available resources & install what they need. But that is a market who notoriously won't want to pay for anything generally (they want the unlimited ride their last shared hosting provider promised but failed to deliver, for as little as that host or some chapter other is charging) but will bitch endlessly if there free moon-ona-stick isn't 100% perfect and 110% reliable.