Rich Gwilliam's digital shed
"LAMP stack" refers to a common combination of server software - Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP - that historically have frequently been used together. Like Cheese and Onion, or Cheese and Tomato, or cheese and more cheese and another cheese to make Three Cheese.
It's a little old-hat these days. While all of those components are still excellent options, different teams switch them out to good effect depending on their use case.
I'm familiar with:
And less commonly:
I've been using LAMP Stack Admin since May 2012 (13 years).
Senior PHP Developer
For ASL I developed several long-lived and high volume telemetry systems. These processed large amounts of data and delivered it for rendering in charts and tables on a daily basis.
Full-stack Developer / Devops Engineer
At Hidden, I filled the role of an API Developer as well as a Devops Engineer. I updated and expanded existing legacy code to run on AWS Lambda functions for increased efficiency, and created Jenkins build servers for the Unity development team.
Contract Senior Full-stack Developer
Successful resurrection of a mothballed legacy Craft CMS project without documentation or input from the original developer; planning and provisioning of AWS infrastructure to support the software based on Docker images.
Contract Senior Full-stack Developer
Development of high-precision bespoke analytics and diagnostic modules on a Laravel base to surface opportunities and weaknesses in extremely high-volume, fast moving Fintech data and fine-tune performance for emerging markets. Innovative and intuitive modelling of data, completely revolutionizing how stakeholders analyse performance.