I installed webODM on Raspberry Pi 4B 4Gb via docker and 64 bit version of Raspberry PI OS and it works. (Instructions as from debian)
Of course, it’s completely unsuitable for counting projects on this little computer, but importing an already counted project works. It displays slowly on Rapsberry but if I run webODM from Raspberry on another fast machine and we only browse this project over the internal network it works pretty well.
Unfortunately, I can’t make it available to the Internet outside because I don’t have a fixed IP. However, you could use this raspberry 4B as a server to share simple projects with clients!! Maybe I’ll get a permanent IP and somehow share it soon. With Fixed IP, it should be able to share outside the home network. I don’t know how to configure internet and ports but I will try.
I’m always amazed at what can be done with the current generation of Single-Board-Computers. They are becoming increasingly powerful.
I have a RetroCenter RockBox R-Cade that I’m trying to get setup as a Piwigo server for sharing photos with my family, but I’m waiting on upstream/mainline kernel support to get a bit more robust. In the meanwhile, it is an incredibly good emulator
If you want to put it on the internet, from your home network i would suggest you try cloudflare tunnels or ngrok. I have had pretty good luck with x86. Cloudflare has a great free tier, you can use it even if you have CG-NAT and you don’t need to forward ports to your Pi.
for now, I tried through the No-IP service, but unfortunately, no ports to the world come out on my router. I don’t know much about this. I did bridges on the router but it didn’t help. Probably my provider is limiting something. I ordered a permanent IP and it will work from February 1st. Then it should be able to configure.