Comment by nekusar

4 months ago

So, basically, MinIO is dead.

Time to move on, folks. Dead horse is dead. Kicking it will release toxic decomposition sludge.

Fun, I had just started using it as a the data store for a distributed Rust compilation cache, guess we're moving that somewhere else. Hopefully the choice of NixOS as our server OS will make this easier rather than harder.

What alternatives do people recommend that has at least similar features-set and at least similar performance as MinIO?

I built my first Slackware box from source.

How times changed.

  • Sad to break it to you but it was 30 years ago.

    We have a tendency to stick to what we know but everything changes constantly and us being connected amplifies that.

    • I imagine that this makes it much less viable for hobby use, or as a dependency for other open source projects, but setting up a private docker registry and building this image nightly isn’t onerous for any business

      3 replies →

    • Boomers stuck behind the times, vendoring their dependencies and even looking at the code they compile. Get with the program already and just push another container!

      2 replies →

It's still free and available, you just need to run the docker build command yourself or pay them to get their enterprise version.

  • Well, you can build some parts of it, but the builds aren't the only thing they're removing. Reading some of the Github issues, eg. https://github.com/minio/object-browser/issues/3546:

    > We initially explored a basic admin UI for the community branch but haven't actively maintained it. Building and supporting separate graphical consoles for the community and commercial branches is substantial. Honestly, it is hard to duplicate this work for the community branch. A whole team is involved in console development, including design, UX, front-end, back-end, and pen testing. This commit introduces an enhanced object browser but removes the unmaintained admin UI code.

    They deleted the admin UI from the current version of the open-source side. It's time to pay the VCs, the project is being rug-pulled and they're going all in on the enterprise version.