I am using Jiffybox for developing and testing. It easy to create a new virtual machine, and start from fresh again. Unfortunately, Fedora 22 is not available yet. See for details: https://www.df.eu/forum/threads/76789-Update-auf-Fedora-22 For the moment, the only way is to upgrade your Jiffyboxes
Installing Demo Version of Kolab 3.3 with Docker
This describes how to install a docker image of Kolab. Please note: this is not meant to be for production use. The main purpose is to provide an easy way for demonstration of features and for product validation. This installation
Building a Docker container for Kolab 3.3 on Jiffybox
This article is an update of the previous post that built a Docker container for Kolab 3.1: Building a Docker container for Kolab on Jiffybox (March 2014) Preparation I am using a Jiffybox provided by DomainFactory for building a Docker
Installing Demo Version of Kolab 3.1 with Docker
This describes how to install a docker image of Kolab. Please note: this is not meant to be for production use. The main purpose is to provide an easy way for demonstration of features and for product validation. This installation
Building a Docker container for Kolab on Jiffybox
Preparation I am using a Jiffybox provided by DomainFactory for building a Docker container for Kolab 3.1 running on CentOS 6. I have installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on a Jiffybox. I am therefore following Docker Installation instructions for Ubuntu for
LXC Linux containers on JiffyBox running CentOS on Ubuntu
This post covers several topics at once: I have got some experience with OpenVZ, and was looking how LXC could satisfy the requirements that I am used to. Especially how to install several Linux distributions on one LXC host. I
Install Kolab3 on Jiffybox
When running setup-kolab, after a timeout during the set up of the 389 Directory Server, see /var/log/kolab/setup.error.log: Failed to create semaphore for stats file (/var/run/dirsrv/slapd-kolab.stats). Error 13.(Permission denied) There was already a mounted tmpfs, but the directory /dev/shm was not