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Open source software hosting and cloud computing provider Fosshost will no longer be providing services as it reaches the end of life.

Fosshost project volunteers announced the development this weekend following months of difficulties in reaching the leadership including the CEO.

Users are being urged to immediately backup their data and migrate to alternative hosting platforms.

An abrupt shut down, unreachable CEO, lack of funds

UK-based non-profit Fosshost has been providing services to several high profile open source projects like GNOME, Armbian, Debian and Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) completely free of charge. But that will soon change as the project reaches the end of life.

As of this week various fosshost.org links are returning 404 (not found) error message as the service is on its way out.

“At this time, Fosshost is deeply sorry to announce we are no longer able to continue offering our services,” states a notice seen today by BleepingComputer on the fosshost.org website.

“Due to circumstances outside of the control of the Fosshost volunteers, we are now in a situation where we cannot guarantee our servers will stay online, and in fact expect them to go offline shortly.”

“Because of this, we strongly recommend all Fosshost tenants to backup their data immediately, and migrate elsewhere as soon as possible.”

The vague notice and the tweet generated much confusion among the community members who were unable to understand the real reason behind Fosshost’s shut down.

“We are unable to pay for co-location costs, and that’s why our servers will go offline as[ThomasMarkeyourCEOisunreachable”apurportedFosshostvolunteerisseencommentingonaYCombinatorHackerNewspost[ThomasMarkeyourCEOisunreachable”apurportedFosshostvolunteerisseencommentingonaYCombinatorHackerNewspost

The commentator suggests that Markey, who has been unresponsive over the past six months, is the only person with access to bank accounts with the funds required to operate Fosshost.

It is worth noting that Fosshost is a Community Interest Company (CIC) formally registered with Companies House, England. As such, its management is still responsible for filing the annual regulatory paperwork. Failing this, Fosshost, like any other incorporated organization, could be stricten off from the companies register with additional penalties incurred for the directors.

BleepingComputer has approached both Fosshost and Markey in advance for comment.

Fosshost suffered from a single point of failure

What started in 2020 as a passion project of its CEO Thomas Markey quickly evolved into a cloud computing platform adopted by the open-source community because of its reliability, scalability and provision of global hosting infrastructure.

By December 2021, Fosshost has as many as 250 open-source projects utilizing the service to develop, build, test and compile software.

But its continued increased dependence on the CEO meant Fosshost inadvertently suffered from a single point of failure.

Granted, Fosshost volunteers may have finally been compelled to throw in the towel, early warning signs of Fosshost’s internal management chaos began to emerge this year.

By August, Fosshost had reached “an untenable situation with its current supplier commitments and obligations” forcing it to phase out its AArch64 as a service offering before the month ended.

In the same announcement Fosshost stated its current management, governance and leadership team were “under review.”

By September, Fosshost had suspended its applications citing scalability issues.

In November, maintainers reached a dead end when attempting to operate a Chicago node that was no longer accessible, bootable or recoverable.

“Unfortunately, the current situation with the node is that we are unable to reboot it as our CEO hasn’t given anyone access to do anything with the DC,” a maintainer wrote at the time.

Users were then urged to explore alternative hosting arrangements or attempt to contact Markey who was “the only one able to fix it.”

With hundreds of large scale computing projects entrusting Fosshost with critical data, the project certainly reached its pinnacle in its lifetime. But its single point of failure and lack of funding are likely factors that ultimately led to Fosshost’s demise.

On the bright side, former Fosshost volunteers and free software enthusiasts have begun building alternatives with The Radix Project being “one such initiative” that is free of charge, with its founders comprising one of the original Fosshost architects.

By Skypiea