If you just want to view logs, then a lightweight viewer I really recommend is Dozzle.
I self-identify as an nblob, a non-binary little object.
If you just want to view logs, then a lightweight viewer I really recommend is Dozzle.
I’ve tried nearly every selfhosted dashboard out there and in the end settled for static html/css/js. If you want to access links quickly by typing abbreviations then use something like https://github.com/Ozencb/tilde-enhanced. A lot lighter and can be used with an existing webserver too.
https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns#nameservers
and
https://tailscale.com/kb/1114/pi-hole#step-3-set-your-raspberry-pi-as-your-dns-server
Set tailscale to use your dns server to resolve your services (or all traffic if you prefer). Assuming your dns server is on 100.x.x.1:53, then put 100.x.x.1 as a nameserver.
How about Uptime Kuma status pages? They’re separate from the admin page and you can add Docker containers as monitors.
SFTPGo supports OIDC and has a lot of ACL features. It allows users to have their own folders, as well as shared volumes between a group.
This might be an issue with opensearch.xml, which is a standard for how browsers recognise search engines.
See here:
https://github.com/hnhx/librex/blob/main/opensearch.xml.example
I don’t know how you’re hosting it, but when I was hosting LibreX, I had to make an opensearch.xml with the correct domain and bind mount it to the correct location. I don’t exactly remember the details since I moved to Searxng.
Also, if you’re not aware, LibreX was forked to LibreY, which is the updated repo.
Navidrome replaced Spotify for me, with Symfonium on Android, I’m never going back. On PC you can use any Subsonic client, and there are plenty I threw Tailscale on top to access it when I go out.
Org-mode, with Orgzly on Android, sync via a WebDav server, which you can also mount on you PC and literally use any editor to edit.
Okay I think I might know what you mean? I just tried doing that and got it to work. We can compare what we did. Here’s mine.
I created a shared folder called “Shared”
then I create a group called “All” and mount the “Shared” folder to /shared
I went to a user and add them to group “All”
Examining that user’s files
I can navigate into that shared folder and access everything (I have stuff in there already).
To set up the folder, which I called “shared”, I set the home directory for it to /srv/sftpgo/data/shared
. For reference, my user home directory is /srv/sftpgo/data/user1
. Then to allow user1 to access it, I mount it as a virtual folder. Is this what you did?
I bet for the owners of public instances, it must be a constant fight against YouTube’s IP banning or rate limiting.
If you have the resources, you could self-host your own private instance for you and your friends or family. I haven’t had performance issue with my private instance so far.
+1 for Netdata, very fast and a lot of alerts have already been set-up. It also has a lot of plugins, as well as the ability to use Prometheus metric endpoints. The local dashboard is near parity with the cloud one, and setting it up is as easy as running their bootstrap scripts. There is decent documentation too, if one gets stuck.
I think all the RAM related issues were closed a while back and were supposedly fixed. I just don’t understand why when interfacing with the front-end, it uses so much it would get OOM kill itself with 1.5 GB allocated memory.
Every page, as well as loading in the initial dashboard from an idle state, spikes the RAM. Are there no clever lazyloading happening or something? Surely viewing and modifying database entries can’t be this memory intensive?
Maybe it’s just an unoptimized Python thing. I stopped self-hosting stuff written in Python, with the exception of Linkding (which takes a while to also submit a link) and Whoogle.
https://awesome-selfhosted.net/tags/document-management.html#paperless-ngx
I stopped using Paperless-NGX for this reason. It eats RAM and CPU insanely even after configuring it to stop doing OCR and no ML. I wish there is a Go alternative.
I’m using Headscale with minimal issues. It’s low on resource and the docs Tailscale provides applies to it which is neat.
Weird, did they not enforce the use of a VPN if you want to SSH outside the network or was this done by someone on campus?
If you want some cloud syncing but also want privacy, then you will have to self-host, or pay someone to do it for you. There are some free tier Nextcloud accounts, but quite limited in storage. Disroot is one of them. If you do end up self-hosting, there are really good budgeting stacks out there:
https://awesome-selfhosted.net/tags/money-budgeting–management.html
My partner and I use Actual budget, and I can recommend it.
For any of these services, you don’t even have to have a server running 24/7 if you don’t add transactions live. If you do it once a day, just boot up the Docker container, store your stuff, and go about your day. But if you want constant access, you’d have to leave the server running all the time, and to access from the public network, then I recommend Tailscale.
Damn they’re making todo lists a subscription service now??
To answer the question: anything that provides a CALDAV backend (e.g. Nextcloud, Etesync, Radicale). Some are free with limited storage, but some are subscription based, but you get calendar, storage, other stuff too. You can additionally self-host a CALDAV server or Nextcloud to use these services gratuit. For a more minimal implentation, try plain text, markdown, orgmode, etc., and use Syncthing to sync between devices.
Anything on this list if you want to build it yourself: https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted#static-site-generators. I’ve used Hugo, Jekyll, and Zola, all are very good. Neocities if you want an easy start and want to learn the HTML/CSS/JS stack because editing is very easy.
I’ve been using Authelia with several OIDC integrations for a while now. Works great. They’ve released a huge update like a day ago too. Out of the ones you listed, it’s very lightweight too. The docs are a bit all over the place but it is quite comprehensive.
I did look at Zitadel and tried setting it up myself but I just couldn’t get it to work. The docs are a bit vague.