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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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🤔 yeah, that and I guess docker?
Cockpit is nice for that. The Podman integration of it is also useful.
+1 to cockpit. My entire network is domain managed and cockpit makes managing everything so much easier
Ansible or ssh
Exactly this! Oh, and gatus for the nice view (mostly own php talking to gatus api)
NixOS and SSH I guess?
ssh, git and docker compose files.
Same, just replace docker compose with cloud-init. Gitea runners for deployment.
- Proxmox GUI for restarting hosts or vms
- Komodo for restarting containers
- Forgejo for configuring and updating containers (deployed by komodo)
- Ansible for OS updates
- Prometheus + Grafana for monitoring
Those for basic stuff, ssh for everything else.
I guess, K3s & argocd? Not sure exactly what you're asking
I run k3s and use Argo CD at work, but it always seemed overkill for my home server. I also would want to use self-hosted Forgejo instead of an external service, but I don’t care to spend time on a setup that bootstraps Forgejo, PostgreSQL and Argo CD, then has all of the above managed by Argo CD.
Forgejo, I can't help ya with that one
Even though me and another guy set up Argo at work, I wasn't gonna do it all over again - I pretty much just copied our manifests from work, swapped out the secrets and github urls, and was on the path to success. And the benefits cannot be understated
Whatever you interpret that as since my main goal here is to seed conversation, but the thing that I was thinking of when asking was a web gui with some live stats, doing some simple maintenance stuff, maybe manage or glance at docker/podman status and other services, etc.
Since I've seen some conversations about documenting setups so they can be picked up and troubleshot by someone else unfamiliar with the setup like a family member, I expected it would be common to lower the friction for basic maintenance but seeing the amount of ssh comments makes me think otherwise, maybe more people use their servers exclusively for personal entertainment than I expected.
more people use their servers exclusively for personal entertainment than I expected.
Uh-huh, think of it like jigsaw puzzles...
That said, I prioritize ease of maintenance and simplicity, still wouldn't expect my family to pick it up in any reasonable amount of time, nor have the motivation, more's the pity.
I've moved to podman (quadlet) containers mostly, easy to read and edit, secure (mostly userspace), systemctl integration, autoupdate. I've done my distrohopping, fedora (in my case bazzite immutable) isn't going anywhere, does everything I need. I run fairly lean, but have a bunch of stuff that can be spun up at a whim that I don't use daily. It's entertaining without being a burden, and useful stuff just happens.
Honestly, ssh and btop cover most of my monitoring needs, serious stuff gets a notify-send to my laptop. I've tried the web gui stuff and I don't look at it enough to justify it, I'm not a sysad monitoring hundreds of computers, it's just a hobby.
ssh and portainer.
Unpopular answer, but Unraid; as i have mixed sized drives.
Proxmox to manage my VMs, SSH for anything on the command line and portainer for managing my docker containers.
One day I will switch probably switch to dockge so my docker-compose files are stored plain on the hard drive but for now portainer works flawlessly.
I had started out with CasaOS and ran it for a year or so. Last week, I took some time to move everything out of Casa's file structure and cleaned up the compose files.
For container management, I'm using Dockhand. It's been great.
Otherwise, like most others have said, SSH when I need to do more.
- Portainer for Docker containers
- ssh for most real administration tasks
- Olive Tin for repetitive tasks like sudo apt update
- Netdata for server metrics and ntopng for metrics on standalone pFsense box
Terraform, ansible and kubernetes (microk8s).
K8s in particular has been a huge change to simplifying my network despite the complexities involved and the initial learning curve. Deploying and updating services is much easier now.
For system and docker stats I can only recommend beszel. Portainer for docker management and anything else ssh.
I second Beszel, it's such a clean interface, and I can also have it send alerts through Gotify if my shit breaks!
My setup is a barebones Alpine Linux with ssh and docker, and everything I run on it is a container (except backups).
Those I manage remotely (remote Docker context), so the only time I have to log in is to do an update for the few system packages and that's it. And for that ssh is more than enough
I'm currently in the process of setting up my home server again but this was basically my setup before. Alpine Linux + SSH + Docker and I kept everything to a minimum.
This time I'm setting up rootless Podman in place of Docker and as of today the switch over is complete.
I'm thinking of trying to use wireguard as a way to secure my ssh port but I'm still trying to learn and figure out if that's possible.
With all the security and trust issues hitting the self-hosting headlines, less and simple is completely fine with me.
So many things. Mostly Kubernetes and FluxCD, but also doco-cd for managing a few deployments on my NAS with GitOps.
Proxmox gui and ssh for my LXCs
...and nix config and podman in the lxc for me
I’m running OMV with the Docker Compose plugin and I just SSH in for everything else. I run this stack both at home and work. It’s a good middle ground for me of stability and customizability.
Ssh, dockhand, beszel. They have nice GUI and setting up notification providers is easy. I am using ntfy, so if my CPU is peaking at 90% for a while, or I if any of the containers become unhealthy I get notification to my phone.
What kind of problems do you catch with beszel?
Opentofu for all the looking after the config on my proxmox boxes and networking gear. Ansible for everything else.
I don't currently have any monitoring set up but it's in the to do list when I feel like it.
Check out gatus. Super easy to get up and running depending on what type of monitoring you want to do.
Check out gatus.
It doesn't do SNMP. That's ... bold.
Virtualmin and cockpit
Does proxmox count? Then I run lots of docker containers in lxcs
Bash? (and Ansible)
I use tugtainer for managing updates to containers (not automatic). and aside from that, I just apt upgrade every so often.
Home server for me is mostly Ansible for provisioning and systemd for everything else. The trick is keeping it simple enough that you can recover from a broken state without Google. For daily tasks I reach for bare metal SSH or a web interface if it needs to be friendly. K8s is great but I found myself overcomplicating things until I stepped back and remembered: I already know how to SSH into a box.