Lem453

joined 1 year ago
[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Would appreciate a link please! Can't seem to find it on DDG

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 9 points 2 days ago

You don't have the knowledge or experience to do this for a business. This is different than a personal cloud. You will be blamed when things don't work.

Don't touch this with a 10ft pole.

If you want to help, find commercial services that offer this and suggest those.

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 days ago

Its just another part of the puzzle you have to figure out.

When I first started, getting my reverse proxy, port forwarding, domain name etc working and debugging the issues took a lot of time and learning.

Certainly doable but will just make things harder

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 4 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (3 children)

To be fair i really like having a separate nas to my main docker/proxmox applications server. It allows me to mess around with my services or restart the system while not having to mess with the more sensitive spinning drives or important services like pihole.

Also gives me a nice method for local backup in 3-2-1 method.

That being said, I wouldn't recommend this for someone just starting out.

If anyone is wondering, I have the docker container itself mount the NFS share from the Unraid NAS. My docker server is all nvme ssds for things like the app itself and its config. Large data sets like photos and media are in the same via NFS.

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 0 points 6 days ago

I've been using Firefox install via obtainium straight from the Mozilla repo.

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

For normal docker self hosters the biggest is similar structures across their images.

It config is always /config

Also they run the same user so it helps with file permission issues

https://www.linuxserver.io/

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This. N100 box with Opnsense will serve you well for a decade+ until you want to upgrade to 10gbps.

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

https://send.djazz.se/

This website allows you do email files to kobo

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Sonarr puts shows in

  • show folder
  • season folder
  • show name - S01E01 - episode name.mp4
[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 7 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

You can change the store on the Kobo to become to your selfhosted calibre library

https://brandonjkessler.com/technology/2021/04/26/setup-kobo-sync-in-calibre-web.html

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

How do you login from a device that doesn't have Bitwarden on it if you have passkeys.

For example a friend's computer etc

With a password I can type the 20 or so digits of the password. Can't really be done with a passkey as far as I know

[–] Lem453@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Check their website for migration info. There are some caveats in special circumstances but most people can just change the docker image from gitea to forgejo.

I did exactly that with no issues.

 

The topic of self-hosted cloud software comes up often but I haven't seen anyone mention owncloud infinite scale (the rewrite in Go).

I started my cloud experience with owncloud years ago. Then there was a schism and almost all the active devs left for the nextcloud fork.

I used nextcloud from it's inception until last year but like many others it always felt brittle (easy to break something) and half baked (features always seemed to be at 75% of what you want).

As a result I decided to go with Seafile and stick to the Unix philosophy. Get an app that does one thing very well rather than a mega app that tries to do everything.

Seafile does this very well. Super fast, works with single sign on etc. No bloat etc.

Then just the other day I discovered that owncloud has a full rewrite. No php, no Apache etc. Check the github, multiple active devs with lots of activity over the last year etc. The project seems stronger than ever and aims to fix the primary issues of nextcloud/owncloud PHP. Also designed for cloud deployment so works well with docker, should be easy to configure via docker variables instead of config files mapped into the container etc.

Anyways, the point of this thread is:

  1. If you never heard of it like me then check it out
  2. If you have used it please post your experiences compared to NextCloud, Seafile etc.
49
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by Lem453@lemmy.ca to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Technically this isn't actually a seafile issue, however the upload client really should have the ability to run checksums to compare the original file to the file that is being synced to the server (or other device).

I run docker in a VM that is hosted by proxmox. Proxmox manages a ZFS array which contains the primary storage that the VM uses. Instead of making the VM disk 1TB+, the VM disk is relatively small since its only the OS (64GB) and the docker containers mount a folder on the ZFS array itself which is several TBs.

This has all been going really well with no issues, until yesterday when I tried to access some old photos and the photos would only load half way. The top part would be there but the bottom half would be grey/missing.

This seemed to be randomly present on numerous photos, however some were normal and others had missing sections. Digging deeper, some files were also corrupt and would not open at all (PDFs, etc).

Badness alert....

All my backups come from the server. If the server data has been corrupt for a long time, then all the backups would be corrupt as well. All the files on the seafile server originally were synced from my desktop so when I open the file locally on the desktop it all works fine, only when I try to open the file on seafile does it fail. Also not all the files were failing only some. Some old, some new. Even the file sizes didn't seem to consistently predict if it would work on not.

Its now at the point where I can take a photo from my desktop, drag it into a seafile library via the browser and it shows successful upload, but then trying to preview the file won't work and downloading that very same file back again shows the file size about 44kb regardless of the original file size.

Google/DDG...can't find anyone that has the same issue...very bad

Finally I notice an error in mariadb: "memory pressure can't write to disk" (paraphrased).

Ok, that's odd. The ram was fine which is what I assumed it was. HD space can't be the issue since the ZFS array is only 25% full and both mariadb and seafile only have volumes that are on the zfs array. There are no other volumes...or is there???

Finally in portainer I'm checking out the volumes that exist, seafile only has the two as expected, data and database. Then I see hundreds of unused volumes.

Quick google reveals docker volume purge which deletes many GBs worth of volumes that were old and unused.

By this point, I've already created and recreated the seafile docker containers a hundred times with test data and simplified the docker compose as much as possible etc, but it started working right away. Mariadb starts working, I can now copy a file from the web interface or the client and it will work correctly.

Now I go through the process of setting up my original docker compose with all the extras that I had setup, remake my user account (luckily its just me right now), setup the sync client and then start copying the data from my desktop to my server.

I've got to say, this was scary as shit. My setup uploads files from desktop, laptop, phone etc to the server via seafile, from there borg backup takes incremental backups of the data and sends it remotely. The second I realized that local data on my computer was fine but the server data was unreliable I immediately knew that even my backups were now unreliable.

IMHO this is a massive problem. Seafile will happily 'upload' a file and say success, but then trying to redownload the file results in an error since it doesn't exist.

Things that really should be present to avoid this:

  1. The client should have the option to run a quick checksum on each file after it uploads and compare the original to the uploaded one to ensure data consistency. There should probably be an option to do this afterwards as well as a check. Then it can output a list of files that are inconsistent.
  2. The default docker compose should be run with health checks on mariadb so when it starts throwing errors but the interface still runs, someone can be alerted.
  3. Need some kind of reminder to check in on unused docker containers.
 

Looking for a self hosted YouTube front end with automatic downloader. So you would subscribe to a channel for example and it would automatically download all the videos and new uploads.

Jellyfin might be able to handle the front end part but not sure about automatic downloads and proper file naming and metadata

 

The jellyfin app (self hosted video streaming) app on steam deck (installed via desktop mode->discovery as a flat pack) doesn't seem to register as 'playing' with the os. The screen will dim after a few mins.

I'm 'playing' the jellyfin app as a non steam game in game mode.

I know I can disable screen dimming in the settings but is there a way to have it auto detect when a video is playing and prevent the screen from dimming?

 

Any suggestions for roasted decaf beans I can get Canada?

30
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by Lem453@lemmy.ca to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Very solid price, the cheapest I've seen for something like this. Has anyone tried it with OPNsense or other software?

The linked thread talks about someone getting 60C load temps but the air was 37C and they are using a RJ45 DAC which are known to use lots of power.

Wondering if anyone else has experience with this. Seems like a big advancement in what's possible at a home scale for non second hand equipment.

Another article about this: https://liliputing.com/this-small-fanless-pc-is-built-for-networking-with-four-10-gbe-and-five-2-5-gb-ethernet-ports/

 

This should eventually make it's way into jellyfin. Eager to see the performance improvements.

7
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by Lem453@lemmy.ca to c/jellyfin@lemmy.ml
 

Beautiful stats for Jellyfin. I just set it up in docker compose yesterday. Love it!

 

I'm wondering if I can get a device that enables zwave over Ethernet/wifi and connect that to my home assistant setup?

Basically I have a home assistant setup in my house. I want to add a few simple things to my parents place but I want it to all be on the same HA instance.

On the router in my parents place, I can install wireguard to connect it to my LAN. So now my parents network is the same as my LAN network.

I'm looking for a device that can connect to zwave and then send that info over the LAN to my home assistant. Does such a thing exist? Thanks.

 

By local control, I mean if the Z-wave hub is down will the switch still work as a dumb switch and turn the lights on/off?

This is the product I would like to get, but can't find if they allow 'dumb switch' operation. Does anyone have experience with these? https://byjasco.com/ultrapro-z-wave-in-wall-smart-switch-with-quickfit-and-simplewire-white

Thanks!

 

Starship has been stacked and is apparently ready to launch as per Musk. Waiting on FAA approval for second test flight.

 

Hi all. Just learned about NixOS a few weeks ago. I'm in the process of migrating several of my docker services to a new server that will have proxmox installed as the host and then a VM for docker.

I'm currently using alpine as the VM and it works well but one of the main goals of the migration is to use infrastructure as code as much as possible. All my docker services are docker compose files checked into a git repo that gets deployed. When I need to make a change, I update the git repo and pull down the latest docker compose.

I currently have a bunch of steps that I need to do on the alpine VM to make it ready for docker (qemu agent, NFS shares, etc).

NixOS promises to be able to do all that with a single config file and then create a immutable OS that never changes after that. That seems to follow the philosophy well for infrastructure as code and easy reproducibility.

Has anyone else tried NixOS as a docker host? Any issues you've encountered?

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