A raspberry pi is not going to be powerful enough to run these things beyond a test setup or, a really small use-case. I'd only setup #Nextcloud with the SQlite setup. And don't plan on using it for mass storage. and for heaven sakes keep a backup. :shiba_please:
That said, if your goal is simply to run these out of your home and you want to access it beyond your intranet, all you would need is a VPN back to your house.
Avoid openVPN :openvpn: Simply because it's a resource hog, albeit the more reliable option. Wireguard would be better especially considering you're already going to be bottlenecked by the pi :raspberrypi:
I don't know much about Podman or Quadlets. But, a Docker instance will work just fine. :docker:
Updates are not too tricky in my opinion. I can share my own update script for my Docker Nextcloud setup if you want. It'd probably be adaptable for jellyfin and whatever else.
Just make sure you expose the Nextcloud data directory as a volume outside the container. and before you back it up always try to update so that if you have to reinstall you'll have a better chance of having a compatible backup.
Thanks! Looks interesting. I am not quite a fan of the performance hit a VPN brings but I feel like it’s something that I need to deal with in order to suit my usecase. I thought DDNS could help me out.
Yeah I might switch back to Docker and use Watchtower to auto update. Thank you again!
Oh, well yeah, you can do that too. In fact, you may not even need a DDNS. I don't have one for my fedi server, and I only ever had to change the IP on my DNS after we got hit by an earthquake and all of the local datacenters went out.
I choose not to do the DNS option for 90% of the things I host. Partly because my ISP has limitations on which ports can be exposed and, in general, I prefer not to expose any ports especially when I am serving up my own data.
But that's just my paranoia talking. :cat_rock_on:
VPN + DDNS is what I do. You may be thinking about the perf hit of putting all your home connections through a VPN. That’s not the idea here. For self hosted services you would set up a wireguard “server” at your house. Then you connect your phone back to it to access your services.
With Wireguard it’s pretty easy to do a split tunnel, so that the VPN connection is only used for traffic to your home servers. Nothing else is affected, and you have access to your house all the time.
This is better for security than DDNS + open ports, because you only need a single open UDP port. Port scanners won’t see that you are hosting services and you wouldn’t need to build mitigations for service-specific attacks.
As far as podman, I am migrating to it from a mix of native and docker services. I agree with others that getting things set up with Docker first will be easier. But having podman as an end goal is good. Daemonless and rootless are big benefits. As are being able to manage it as systemd units via quadlets.
At this stage it’s a trope that people imitate, perhaps without really thinking about it. Originally it was almost certainly an ironic joke about the value of the medals, playing on the old-fashioned bite tests that would be used for for items of dubious worth
…of coarse. It’s the internet. Anything you say, even the most obvious basic common sense comment ever, there will always ALWAYS be someone on the internet waiting go show you how wrong you are.
“The sky is blue”
“Uh, actually, blue is just an illusion perpetuated by imperfections in the human imperfections of spectrum observation. Only humans see the color blue. Cats see more of a grey. So you can’t truely call anything blue. Especially the sky, because sometimes there is overcast.
Also, you’re an idiot loser for not knowing these things.”
And THATS the experience found commenting on the internet.
Primitive Technology. Guy in the jungle builds houses and makes pottery from scratch and I mean from scratch. He even gets into forging a little bit, made a crude iron knife from ore he collected himself.
Joan Westenberg. She just started a YouTube channel a couple days ago, but I've been subscribing to her newsletter for a few months and it's great. Give her a follow on Mastodon, too: https://mastodon.social/@Daojoan
Maggie Mae Fish Only just found this one, but seems well thought-out.
I’ve used GNU/OpenBSD all the way through community college (US) with minor issues. Biggest issue is having to use platforms like zoom for some online courses, which requires an RTC capable browser (aka firefox or chromium, neither of which I am a big fan of) for the webclient, which the company clearly does not want you using as they won’t actually give a prompt to use the webclient until you click their link to fail opening their native spyware client (so who knows when the webclient will just disappear altogether). Another issue was professors using proprietary microsoft formats which require installing libreoffice, which isn’t tooling I particularly enjoy using, but at least the option is there. I haven’t had to use a malware “lockdown” browser or anything like that thankfully (though if I had to, I’d just use computers on-campus to do the work). Most classes allow submissions in PDF, and if the syllabus only allows docx submissions, the professor will allow me to submit PDF after contacting them.
That’s probably illegal in your country (and for good reasons). You should report to the correct organization rather than the email client, which only affects their spam filter
Still having fun with Helldivers 2. Player Base dropped but still around 40k in the meantime (don’t look at Steam Numbers only, there are console players too). There are constant updates and a big one is coming mid August.
Outside of large channels with millions of subs that now only get thousands of views, Stumpt in general for clean fun and HeroVoltsy for their pokemon fangame/rom hack content. Voltsy’s how I discovered almost every single pokemon fangame I have ever played.
Definitely counts as spam. I give them a few courtesy clicks on the “unsubscribe”, if I still get the chance in yet another email, I go for the “report as spam” as they clearly don’t give a damn.
Also, screw those who require you to login to update your preferences, they also get a quick treatment as above. Take me to the page where I can adjust the types of email I get if you must, but obey the unsubscribe demand by default.
In the end, “report as spam” is two clicks away making it the easiest route to achieve the same result.
Funny enough, my college pushed me to a Linux dual boot.
One of my classes required an Ubuntu environment for C++ programming, and after trying and failing to get WSL working, I decided to just dual boot (from 2 separate SSDs) instead of trying to work around the limitations of a VM.
On the other hand, 2 of my other classes required a Windows-only program.
I used to default to Windows, but after the BS from Microsoft this year I switched to defaulting to Ubuntu.
kbin.life
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