Looking for Beta Testers — Anvil Server Management Panel


Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

I'm looking for beta testers for Anvil, a lightweight, single-binary Linux server management panel. If you're running an Ubuntu-based distro and want an easy way to manage your server from a browser, I'd love your feedback.

What is Anvil?

Anvil gives you a clean web UI for managing your Linux server — services, packages, Docker, files, logs, cron jobs, users, firewall, DNS, endpoint monitoring, and a web terminal. It's a single Go binary with no database, no containers, and no dependencies to install. It authenticates against your system's PAM accounts, so there's no separate user setup.

Screenshots

home.thumb.png.c7e32f085ebdd1a7a470734169fa4211.png

dashboard.thumb.png.9b0205fab7dbe2cc328a54c5648572fb.png

docker.thumb.png.91992e3496ba86efa7e81a175bab21cf.png

packages.thumb.png.ed6d22afca7bf95080dfcfd2f85eca6e.png

sshkeys.thumb.png.84cdf8cfbf6546c5011d314794709b83.pngusers.thumb.png.4a9c50dc83efda29b737af35b71d9bf3.png

 

 

 

Prerequisites

Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint, Pop!_OS, or any Ubuntu-derived distribution

PAM development library — required for authentication:

sudo apt install libpam0g-dev

Go 1.24+ — required to build from source:

sudo apt install golang-go

Or install from https://go.dev/dl/ if your distro's version is too old

A user account on the system (Anvil uses your existing Linux login credentials)

How to Install & Run

I will send you a link to the latest binary

Run on any free port

PORT=9005 ./anvil

Then open http://your-server-ip:9005 and log in with your Linux username and password.

What I'm Looking For

  • Does it build and run cleanly on your distro?
  • Any pages that error or don't display correctly?
  • Features that don't work as expected?
  • General UI/UX feedback

 

"any Ubuntu-derived distribution"

That should be any Debian-derived distro. Debian isn't based off Ubuntu. :laugh: 

Anyway, it looks closely like Webmin. But yeah, I don't have a spare computer to run this, sorry.

Ah i just said Ubuntu as thats all i have personally tested on, it should work on any distro really including distros using DNF and Arch based

 

My friend is borrowing my spare laptop for the moment while he moves house, but when he hands it back I'll be sure to take a look. I plan on converting it into a media hub for the house so this could be very useful!

Anvil v0.20-beta — A lightweight, self-hosted Linux server management panel built in Go.

Download: https://gitlab.com/Haggistech/anvil/-/releases/v0.20-beta

Features

  • System Monitoring
  • Real-time dashboard with CPU, memory, disk gauges and system info
  • Live telemetry strip on every page (CPU / Memory / Disk / Uptime)
  • Connection health indicator with red pulse on server disconnect
  • Network overview — interfaces, active connections, open ports, routing table, public IP
  • Service & Container Management
  • Systemd service viewer with start/stop/restart/enable/disable
  • Docker container management with icon actions, logs viewer, image list
  • Process-level control from the web terminal
  • File & Package Management
  • File browser with upload, download, edit, rename, delete
  • Package manager with update detection and install/remove
  • Cron job editor — add, edit, delete scheduled tasks

Security & Access

  • PAM-based authentication with remember username
  • Session idle timeout with countdown warning (auto-logout at 30min)
  • Sudo toggle for privileged operations
  • Firewall (UFW) rule management
  • SSH authorized key management
  • Full audit log — who did what and when

Infrastructure

  • SSL/TLS certificate viewer with expiry tracking and Let's Encrypt/certbot integration
  • Disk management — partitions, SMART health, directory usage scanner
  • DNS management — /etc/hosts and /etc/resolv.conf editor
  • Endpoint monitoring — host:port checks with 12h uptime bars (5min granularity)

Alerts & Backups

  • Notification system — webhook, Discord, Slack, and email (SMTP) channels
  • Alert rules for endpoint down, certificate expiring, and disk full
  • Backup manager — tar and rsync jobs with scheduling, gzip compression, exclude patterns, and one-click restore

UI & Experience

  • Blueprint-style dark theme with JetBrains Mono + Outfit fonts
  • Light theme toggle
  • Quick navigation (Ctrl+K)
  • Custom confirmation modals and toast notifications
  • Right-click context menus on all data pages
  • Web-based terminal

Deployment

  • Single binary, no dependencies (just drop and run)
  • systemd service file included
  • Makefile with build/install/uninstall
  • HTTPS/TLS support
  • Default port: 9006

Anvil v0.21-beta — A lightweight, self-hosted Linux server management panel built in Go.

Download: https://gitlab.com/Haggistech/anvil/-/releases/v0.21-beta

What's new in v0.21-beta

System info page — New /sysinfo page with neofetch-style overview: hostname, OS, kernel, architecture, CPU model, RAM/swap, network interfaces, storage, temperatures, virtualization type, timezone, uptime, and boot time

Config export/import — New /config page to download all Anvil settings (endpoints, notification channels, alert rules, backup jobs) as a single JSON file. Import on another instance with replace or merge mode for easy migration

Alert timeline chart — 30-day stacked bar chart on the Notifications history tab showing alert frequency by type (endpoint down, cert expiring, disk full) with hover tooltips for pattern detection

Anvil v0.22-beta — A lightweight, self-hosted Linux server management panel built in Go.

Download: https://gitlab.com/Haggistech/anvil/-/releases/v0.22-beta

What's new in v0.22-beta

This release is focused entirely on security fixes found during an internal audit.

  • Password injection fix — Newlines are now stripped from passwords before being passed to chpasswd, preventing an authenticated panel user from injecting extra username:password pairs and changing other accounts' passwords
  • Username validation hardened — The regex already used when creating users is now also enforced on delete, modify, lock/unlock, and password change operations, blocking argument injection via crafted usernames
  • GID validated as numeric — Group GID input is now checked to be a valid integer before being passed to groupadd
  • CSRF protection — All authenticated routes now validate the Origin or Referer header on non-GET requests. Logout is enforced as POST-only with the same check, and the logout button and idle auto-logout timer updated accordingly
  • DNS resolv.conf injection fix — Search domain input is now validated against a hostname regex before being written to /etc/resolv.conf, preventing newline injection of fake nameserver entries

 

  • 4 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I agree. I also think Phil stayed too long. They should definitely fire whoever thought all a console platform needed was Call of Duty, Elder Scrolls, and Fallout to survive. Asha and crew are still saying they need more Elder Scrolls and Fallout games. They simply don't get it.
    • Macbook Air is an appealing option, as are plethora of Windows devices with various different CPU's
    • Mozilla highlights Firefox Nova 2026 redesign and more upcoming features with new roadmap by Sayan Sen Last month Mozilla confirmed that Firefox was set to get a major redesign this year. Dubbed "Project Nova", it can already be tested and will roll out to all users later this year.The idea is to keep the browser competitive in a rapidly evolving internet landscape. As such the revamp focuses on improving privacy, usability, performance, accessibility, and customization. Key privacy features including the built-in VPN, private browsing mode, and Enhanced Tracking Protection, will be more visible and easier to manage, while users will have the option to disable AI features entirely through a dedicated kill switch. Additionally, the redesign promises faster page loading, the return of Compact mode, expanded personalization options, and stronger accessibility support. You can find the full details in the dedicated piece linked above. In a new blog post today the company once again reiterated on Nova and also emphasized other new and upcoming features like the settings revamp that is intended to make it easier for users to understand browser settings. In order to make it simpler for users to keep up with such features Mozilla today is launching Firefox roadmap. Hence enthusiasts and interested users will be able to check out what's cooking and also share feedback about the upcoming additions. Alongside the roadmap announcement, Mozilla also highlighted what's new in Firefox 152. One of the biggest additions is the arrival of Tab Groups on Android. The feature, which has already been helping desktop users organize large numbers of tabs, is now beginning to roll out on mobile. Users will be able to group related tabs together, assign names and colors to them, and return to them later. Mozilla says support for iOS will arrive later this year. Firefox 152 also introduces the aforementioned redesigned Settings experience. The company says the changes are meant to make controls easier to find and help users discover features they may not have previously known about. Existing preferences are not changing, though they are now better organized. Another notable addition is the new Blocked Tracker Widget, which provides a visual overview of Firefox's privacy protections by showing how many trackers have been blocked over time and the types of tracking activity the browser has stopped. Looking ahead, Mozilla revealed several upcoming roadmap features. They include customizable keyboard shortcuts, as well as enhanced PDF editing tools that will allow documents to be split, merged, and reorganized directly within Firefox. The company is also working on bringing Multi-Account Containers into the native Firefox experience thus removing the need for a separate extension. Meanwhile Firefox's built-in VPN is set to expand to mobile devices. Mozilla is also developing AI-powered features like Quick Answers, which can provide concise responses to voice queries, and Smart Window, its optional AI browsing experience that is now available without a waitlist. Finally, a new Power Saving Mode is in the works and will help reduce the impact of resource-heavy tabs on mobile devices in order to extend battery life. The video below summarizes the upcoming changes in an easy to understand format: You can find the announcement blog post here on Mozilla's official website.
    • Dead on arrival at that price. Like they missed the mark by multiple hundreds of dollars - this should actually undercut the Macbook Air at $899 if they want any sort of sales / further adoption of WoA
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      513
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      109
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      89
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!