selfhosted

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

thelittleblackbird, in jellyfin freezes on TV every 2 minutes

Hi,

Every time it happened to me was either transcoding, either a real poor network speed.

I would double check the transcoding option

momsi,

Checked on transcoding, it happens on direct streaming…

rambos,

There is an option to disable transcoding completely, try that. Also check is it working with subtitles disabled.

I used to have issues sometimes when I had rpi4 as media server

momsi, (edited )

tried with transcoding disabled, no joy, still freezes. Subtitles were also disabled, I rarely watch with subtitles. Edit: I just noticed, when forcing transcoding by limiting the quality (Bitrate) on the client to lower values, it does not freeze

Salix, in Self-hosted media tracker recommendations?

I personally use Media Tracker because it’s fast and have enough features for me.

Ryot is another one that’s good.

Flox hasn’t had a commit since 2020. It’s not being updated anymore.

SchizoDenji,

I wish they built it for windows too.

Salix, (edited )

It is only made for Docker, which you can run on Windows, MacOS, and Linux

ignisda.github.io/ryot/

SchizoDenji,

I meant bare-metal windows.

Salix,

Unfortunately, it looks like they deleted the Windows branch in Sept 2023

github.com/IgnisDa/ryot/pull/371

savedbythezsh,

Ooh, ryot is really nice! And seems to have a similar feature set to Media Tracker, plus exercise. It’s also maintained actively.

Have you used it before? Any warnings?

Salix, (edited )

I have used Ryot for a while. It is nice and has a lot of features. It has documentation, which is really nice.

I am using Media Tracker because it has most of the features I need and it’s very fast. I wish it had genre sections like Ryot though. It looks like someone created an issue for it at least. Might go back to Ryot eventually, but we’ll see. Luckily Ryot has a Media Tracker import option.

savedbythezsh,

I was wondering why everyone kept talking about Media Tracker being fast. I finally installed RYOT, and wow is it slow, and resource intensive. It’s using more than 20% of the CPU on my NAS when it isn’t even open!

Salix,

Yup! Whereas with Media Tracker, everything is pretty much almost instantaneous for me.

Ryot was too slow for me. It’s really bad when you try to mark multiple TV series seasons as “seen” at the same time as well.

Czeron, in Do any of you have that one service that just breaks constantly? I'd love to love Nextcloud, but it sure makes that difficult at times
@Czeron@lemmy.world avatar

Installed Nextcloud-AIO using the docker script, took about 4 - 5 terminal commands. Practically zero issues! Hopefully someone else can provide some help in the thread!

butt_mountain_69420,

Do you have office set up in it?

moomoomoo309,
@moomoomoo309@programming.dev avatar

I have it set up. Try the AIO docker image. Once you get it set up, it pretty much just works. You just pick which office suite you want, check a few optional features if you want 'em, and it handles the rest for you. Most importantly, the AIO image is from nextcloud. They test it, it always works because it is the blessed version from them. If you’re not a Linux guy, don’t try the other installation methods, they’re much, much more difficult.

butt_mountain_69420,

I’ll give it a shot. I’ve tried so many different approaches already. I think I maybe tried to install AIO straight onto a linux vm; don’t recall how it got derailed. I did build a Lubuntu VM for experimentation. I really wanted to get an Ollama chatbot running to assist me in my future digital endeavors, but it just wouldn’t come together.

suzune, in Do any of you have that one service that just breaks constantly? I'd love to love Nextcloud, but it sure makes that difficult at times

I’ve been updating Nextcloud in-place (manually) for multiple major versions without any flaws. What is the problem?

InEnduringGrowStrong,
@InEnduringGrowStrong@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yea I’ve been using nextcloud for a while and it’s fine.
I remember when I used owncloud before nextcloud was even a thing and the upgrade experience was absolute shit.
These days it’s just fine.

thatsnothowyoudoit, (edited ) in Nextcloud zero day security
@thatsnothowyoudoit@lemmy.ca avatar

Nextcloud isn’t exposed, only a WireGuard connection allows for remote access to Nextcloud on my network.

The whole family has WireGuard on their laptops and phones.

They love it, because using WireGuard also means they get a by-default ad-free/tracker-free browsing experience.

Yes, this means I can’t share files securely with outsiders. It’s not a huge problem.

Chewy7324,

Wireguard is awesome and doesn’t even show up on the battery usage statistics of my phone.

With such a small attack surface I don’t have to worry about zero days for vaultwarden and immich.

BearOfaTime,

Tailscale has a feature called Funnel that enables you to share a resource over Tailscale to users who don’t have Tailscale.

Wonder if Wireguard has something similar (Tailscale uses Wireguard)

thatsnothowyoudoit,
@thatsnothowyoudoit@lemmy.ca avatar

Neat, I’ll have to look it up. Thanks for sharing!

ahal, in Do any of you have that one service that just breaks constantly? I'd love to love Nextcloud, but it sure makes that difficult at times

Nextcloud has been super solid for me using the official docker image.

beerclue, in Nextcloud zero day security

Not only for Nextcloud, but I recommend setting up crowdsec for any publicly facing service. You’d be surprised by the amount of bots and script kiddies out there trying their luck…

thisisawayoflife,

One of my next steps was hardening my OPNSense router as it handles all the edge network reverse proxy duties, so IDS was in the list. I’m digging into Crowdsec now, it looks like there’s an implementation for OPNsense. Thanks for the tip!

False,

How is this different from Fail2Ban?

TwinHaelix,
@TwinHaelix@reddthat.com avatar

My recollection is that Fail2Ban has some default settings, but is mostly reactionary in terms of blacklisting things that it observes trying to get in. Crowdsec behaves in a similar vein but, as the name implies, includes a lot of crowdsourced rules and preventative measures.

johntash,

Iirc crowdsec is like fail2ban but blocks ips reported by other servers, not just ones attacking your server. Kinda like a distributed fail2ban I guess?

False,

Neat

Comptero,

In my understanding fail2ban will block ips if they are detected to do brutforce or use known exploits.

Crowdsec will share this IP via a blocklist to all subscribte systems. You will benefit form the detection of other systems and not only your own.

umulu, in Comparing compression in AV1, x264, and x265
@umulu@lemmy.world avatar

I would like to have seen more data on that table. The time it took to run each video compression… the final bitrate of each stream. Besides that, very interesting results.

bruhduh, in Do any of you have that one service that just breaks constantly? I'd love to love Nextcloud, but it sure makes that difficult at times
@bruhduh@lemmy.world avatar

Same with my arch install, didn’t touched it for 2 months even though laptop was turned off it decided to die when i launched it and run pacman -syu

FedFer,

I’d say that it’s your fault for running a system upgrade after 2 months and not expecting something to break but it’s not that unreasonable either

TeaEarlGrayHot,

I disagree–a system (even Arch!) should be able to update after a couple months and not break! I recently booted an EndeavourOS image after 6 months and was able to update it properly, although I needed to completely rebuild the keyring first

ayaya,
@ayaya@lemdro.id avatar

Arch and EndeavourOS are the same thing. There is no functional difference between using one or the other. They both use pacman and have the same repos.

TeaEarlGrayHot,

Very true–the specific EOS repo has given me a bit of trouble in the past, but it takes like 3 commands to remove it and then you’ve got just arch (although some purests may disagree 🤣)

FedFer,

I know this is how it’s supposed to be and how it should be but sadly it doesn’t always go this way and arch is notoriously known for this exact problem, the wiki itself tells you to check what’s being upgrades before doing because it might break. Arch is not stable if you don’t expect it to be unstable.

aard,
@aard@kyu.de avatar

I’m using opensuse tumbleweed a lot - this summer I’ve found an installation not touched for 2 years. Was about to reinstall when I decided to give updating it a try. I needed to manually force in a few packages related to zypper, and make choices for conflicts in a bit over 20 packages - but much to my surprise the rest went smoothly.

Xavier,

I regularly “deep freeze” or make read-only systems from Raspberry Pi, Ubuntu, Linux Mint LMDE and others Linux Distros whereas I disable automatic updates everywhere (except for some obvious config/network/hardware/subsystem changes I control separately).

I have had systems running 24/7 (no internet, WiFi) for 2-3 years before I got around to update/upgrade them. Almost never had an issue. I always expected some serious issues but the Linux package management and upgrade system is surprisingly robust. Obviously, I don’t install new software on a old system before updating/upgrading (learned that early on empirically).

Automatic updates are generally beneficial and helps avoid future compatibility/dependency issues on active systems with frequent user interaction.

However, on embedded/single purpose/long distance/dedicated or ephemeral application, (unsupervised) automatic updates may break how the custom/main software may interact with the platform. Causing irreversible issues with the purpose it was built for or negatively impact other parts of closed circuit systems (for example: longitudinal environmental monitoring, fauna and flora observation studies, climate monitoring stations, etc.)

Generally, any kind of update imply some level of supervision and testing, otherwise things could break silently without anyone noticing. Until a critical situation arises and everything break loose and it is too late/too demanding/too costly to try to fix or recover within a impossibly short window of time.

alphacyberranger, in Update: Everyone said GameVault's UI was garbage, so we completely overhauled it.
@alphacyberranger@lemmy.world avatar

This actually looks cool. Keep up the good work.

zerodawn, in Could someone explain how to set up a lemmy instance with ansible for an absolute beginner

As a self taught self-hosting enthusiast i wouldn’t recommend ansible to a beginner. I know that sounds backwards as absible makes everything easy and does all the work for you but that’s also part of the problem. It would be like jumping behind the wheel of a self driving car without knowing how to drive at all. When (not if) something goes wrong it could go wrong hard and you’d lose the whole instance.

It’s better to start with some other self hosted projects that interest you to get a feel for the process and software like docker then work your way up to bigger things like lemmy. I consider myself fairly versed in the process and lemmy still gave me some issues to set up and my pixelfed instance still won’t federate despite my best efforts. I’m pretty sure i know the issue, i just need to get around to fixing it.

Last thought, the raspberry pi is a pretty impressive little pc for it’s size and price point but you might find yourself quickly burning through resources depending on the number of active users you have and how heavily you use it.

zerodawn,

Learning how to use your pi to run a reverse proxy to a self hosted blogging site would give you plenty of hands on starter experience. Run docker and portainer and mess with docker config files from a webgui to see what work and what doesn’t.

arudesalad,

Could you give somd examples of something to selfhost? I am only really aware of selfhosting lemmy and other fediverse stuff

themachine,

Replace existing online services you use with self hosted ones.

themachine,

Replace existing online services you use with self hosted ones.

zerodawn,

You could set up a dns based ad-blocker like pihole and a vpn like wireguard to tunnel your phone back into your home network so you have ad-blocking on the go, too. That’s a semi beginner protect with plenty of tutorials to pick from.

You could run nextcloud, syncthing, or immich to make your own cloud at home but that might need more than a basic pi setup.

arudesalad,

I actually set up pihole today!

zerodawn,

It’s a great software to run. I like to watch youtube tutorials that explain things step by step so i can understand what happens. If i find a good video i’ll see what other software that channel may have a tutorial on and if that software may interest me.

wreckedcarzz, (edited )
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

So, I’m not new to this (omg it’s been 6+ years now wtf) but I don’t host a lot of stuff, and it’s been pretty easy to poke at; I’ve got:

  • plex
  • minecraft (bedrock and java)
  • freshrss
  • rustdesk
  • home assistant
  • vaultwarden
  • pihole
  • actual (budget software)

Running in docker containers, along with a few of the built-in plug-and-play services on my nas. Of that list, plex, minecraft, freshrss, rustdesk, and vaultwarden were very easy to setup in my situation. Rustdesk is a really good remote control program/service, vaultwarden is a fork of the bitwarden server, and plex was almost comically simple to get going as a media host.

CosmicApe,
@CosmicApe@kbin.social avatar

I'm still getting my pieces together for my first server but I'm definitely gonna look into actual!

atzanteol,

I agree completely with self hosting lemmy for a beginner. But disagree completely about ansible.

Learning to script your environment is extremely useful for stability, maintainability, and security.

domi, in Does anyone else harvest the magnets and platters from old drives as a monument to selfhosting history?
@domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

I have like 30 old hard drives laying around and have been thinking about doing a cool art installation with them for a while.

Maybe shatter the platters to create a spiky landscape and epoxy them in, or something like that.

Any ideas?

OutlierBlue,

I use an old platter on my desk as a coaster.

domi,
@domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

Already have a few of those, always a good party gag for the ones that know.

owen,

If you have different types you could do an exploded view hardware showcase

domi,
@domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

Yes, I’ve got quite a few types, good idea.

medicsofanarchy,
@medicsofanarchy@lemmy.world avatar

Their density makes them ring like a bell, if suspended by a wire through the center. Good wind chimes.

domi,
@domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

Will have to try that, also a good way to one-up my neighbor with those CDs hanging outside. :)

funkless_eck,

As more of an artist than a techie for the most part — if you have your medium or at least part of it — the more interesting thing about art is what you have to say about it.

As an example, if you want to draw a distinction and comparison between the age of discovery and the age of technology, you could use the hard drives as a canvas on which to paint a portrait of something like Robert Scott / Lawrence Oates, or Jacques Cousteau, or Armstrong and Aldrin etc.

On that last one - if you could tie the size of the drive in comparison to the size of the code used in the moon landing that might also be interesting.

Anyway, all that to say - art is a mix of medium and message

domi,
@domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

Thanks for the artist view on things. :)

I mostly want something pretty to look at but adding a message to it is an excellent idea.

stagen, in Does anyone else harvest the magnets and platters from old drives as a monument to selfhosting history?
@stagen@feddit.dk avatar

I keep the magnets, but I shred the platters. 'cause magnets are cool.

sagrotan, in Does anyone else harvest the magnets and platters from old drives as a monument to selfhosting history?
@sagrotan@lemmy.world avatar

That’s funny, that’s exactly the method I stored my cdRoms back in the day.

nmaloney, in Question: Best UI to manage VMs and containers?

With docker containers I’ve moved from portainer to dockge. It lets you see the birds eye view, but also lets you directly edit the compose file from the UI. I haven’t been using it very long, but so far I like it.

You will need to find something else for vms though. I use proxmox.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • selfhosted@lemmy.world
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #