this post was submitted on 02 Feb 2026
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So, I am soon going to finally set up my first home server. Exams are not that far away, I am motivated as shit, my first own domain is bought and I want to level up my sysadmin skills.

Currently my plans look like this:

  • Host Jellyfin
  • Host my own NAS
  • Some form of hosted musicstreaming integration with my local music
  • Automate Backups and push them on my server
  • make all of the above things available where ever I want using my own self hosted domain.
  • run my own dns

In the long term I also want to be able to host my own webapps, since I will soon start to develop one for someone.

Now I want to know what suggestions do you have, for stuff thats really cool and that I can selfhost.

Edit: thanks for all the replies. Definitely going to look into this.

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[–] MudMan@fedia.io 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I strongly recommend Overseerr if you are going to run a video server.

Forget piracy. I only host dumps of my physical media (which at least where I am is perfectly legal), but that thing has an database of international streaming sources. I use it just as a watchlist and to check whether I have access to a thing on a commercial streaming service already. It is effectively Justwatch for your streaming media.

Immich is a pretty obvious thing, too, if you want to get out of commercial image hosting services.

I'd say, though, that's a fairly ambitious plan, and if your self-hosted apps, your home webhosting and your NAS are all going to live on the same home server I'd certainly figure out security and backups before overcommitting. That plan is a lot of hard drives and failure points you're gonna be wrangling.

[–] filcuk@lemmy.zip 5 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

This was merged with jellyseer and is just called seer now. I believe it's 'safe' to switch to the develop branch they have available. I've had zero issues so far.

https://github.com/seerr-team/seerr

[–] MudMan@fedia.io 3 points 5 months ago

Hah. Good to know. I haven't refreshed that container in a while and the data keeps populating just fine, so I hadn't considered it. Makes a lot of sense to consolidate all the media server options into one package, though. I'll take a peek at the new one.