LaraDep Documentation
You are reading Managed mode
Managed mode — guided LaraDep operation
Guided operation: the instance runs and updates on our side, work goes through forms, templates and guided onboarding. The entry point to the managed-mode documentation.
Managed mode
Managed is the quickest way to run LaraDep without infrastructure operations. The instance runs and updates on our side, while you work through forms, templates and guided runbooks.
Who this track is for
- Your team needs fast start without setting up dedicated infrastructure,
- you do not need full operating-system and runtime control,
- you need governance, audit trail, and guided onboarding.
How to start
- Go through managed onboarding (registration, workspace, guided setup).
- Run first deployment and production checklist.
- Preflight and deployment readiness — recommended pre-check before production launches.
- Validate process using guided deployment.
- Align roles, templates and workflow for your team.
Execution checklist
- Do you have workspace and team members configured?
- Are clients/projects properly separated by workspace?
- Is preflight validation part of every deployment?
- Can every run be traced and audited?
Common issues
- Starting deployment before onboarding is complete.
- Skipping preflight checks.
- Mixing access rights without clear role model.
Next steps
- Managed onboarding checklist — pre-production checks for first and repeatable runs.
- Managed operations and governance — daily run patterns and controls.
- Managed governance and audit — role model, approvals, and change evidence.
- Workspaces and access — who can do what.
- Mode comparison — when self-hosted is the better fit.
- How to switch to self-hosted — migration checks and safe rollout plan.
Is managed right for you?
If you need to start quickly without managing infrastructure, managed is usually right. If you require full infrastructure control or direct database/template administration, review self-hosted.
Next step: Continue to operations and governance for managed mode, or compare managed vs self-hosted.