by Matt T.
The only way to guarantee that your software will be supported by Moodle is to install it, configure it, and upgrade it, using a method that is supported by Moodle.
Your concern that you 'might encounter problems in the future' is not only a reasonable concern, but demonstrates you have good intuition. I get worried that these installs are a ticking time bomb. Every month that goes by that you don't do anything about it will just increase the potential fallout. At bare minimum, revert to backups.
Your concern that you 'might encounter problems in the future' is not only a reasonable concern, but demonstrates you have good intuition. I get worried that these installs are a ticking time bomb. Every month that goes by that you don't do anything about it will just increase the potential fallout. At bare minimum, revert to backups.
I do have respect for Softaculous for their ambition in making dynamic website hosting more accessible to the ordinary folk. The fact it is necessary for some could perhaps be seen as an indictment on Moodle for making the setup process too difficult. But there's a pretty good setup guide now, and followed carefully, it will work.