DietPi is great! (dietpi.com)
from Teppichbrand@feddit.org to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 12:12
https://feddit.org/post/15603456

Do you guys know about DietPi? I use it on two Raspberry Pi, just installed it on a Wyse mini-PC and I think it’s really great:

Truly Optimised
DietPi is an extremely lightweight Debian OS, highly optimised for minimal CPU and RAM resource usage, ensuring your SBC always runs at its maximum potential.

Simple interface
DietPi programs use lightweight Whiptail menus. Spend less time staring at the command line, more time enjoying your Pi.

DietPi-Software
Quickly and easily install popular software “ready to run” and optimised for your system. Only the software you need is installed.

DietPi-Config
Quickly and effortlessly customise your device’s hardware and software settings for your needs, including network connection and localisation setup.

DietPi-Backup
Quickly and easily backup or restore your DietPi system.

Logging System Choices
You decide how much logging you need. Get a performance boost with DietPi-RAMlog, or, rsyslog and logrotate for log critical servers.

DietPi-Services Control
Control which installed software has higher or lower priority levels: nice, affinity, policy scheduler and more.

DietPi-Update System
DietPi automatically checks for updates and informs you when they are available. Update instantly, without having to write a new image.

DietPi-Automation
Allows you to completely automate a DietPi installation with no user input. Simply by configuring dietpi.txt before powering on.

#selfhosted

threaded - newest

AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 12:24 next collapse

I run it for my pi-hole. It’s been great. It tells you when there are package updates when you log in, which I find helpful.

BroBot9000@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 13:30 next collapse

Got a tutorial link to set up the piehole with it? In the process of setting up my piehole with the default instructions from their website.

Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe on 11 Jul 13:37 next collapse

Dietpi.com

They have images for all sorts of devices, and for virtualization platforms (I run mine in VMware).

I ran a different one once before (built a Linux VM, installed Pi), this one was much easier, and it just works.

c24w@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 13:50 next collapse

  1. Flash DietPi
  2. Boot
  3. Run dietpi-software
  4. Search for pi-hole
  5. Select and install
BroBot9000@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 13:52 collapse

Thanks but I was hoping for a link with some more breakdown of the installation process and more resources to learn.

c24w@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 14:39 collapse

Ah, I see. Have you tried the official docs?

BroBot9000@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 14:48 collapse

Currently reading them while you posted 😊

AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 15:36 collapse

Unfortunately I can’t remember whether I downloaded pihole from some package manager within DietPi, or whether I used the instructions on pihole’s site. It’s not hard either way, it’s really just one package.

chellomere@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 15:53 collapse

A gui is unnecessary for something like pi-hole. As for updates, you can easily automate installation of security updates via unattended-upgrades.

AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 19:22 collapse

Given pihole’s recent record with updates, I’m not sure I want them firing automatically.

chellomere@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 00:58 collapse

Whether you automate pihole upgrades is separate from whether you automate debian package updates. I recommend at least automatically installing security updates for the OS, unless you want to manually keep track and do this for all your devices.

ilillilillilillililli@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 12:59 next collapse

I’ve been running DietPi for years. Its so lightweight and stable. I love GUI-less Debian and its chefs kiss on a Raspberry Pi.

jogai_san@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 13:09 next collapse

How does it handle kernel updates? Can it do live patching?

tenebrisnox@feddit.uk on 11 Jul 13:30 next collapse

It’s great. I’ve been using it for nearly a year and it just works brilliantly.

meltedcheese@c.im on 11 Jul 13:37 collapse

@tenebrisnox @Teppichbrand Would you recommend #DietPi for a #RPi Zero running a slim #HomeAssistant that will be dedicated to drive a kiosk? (no camera feeds)

#homeAutomation

Teppichbrand@feddit.org on 12 Jul 06:23 next collapse

Yeah, if the software is supported and your hardware is sufficient. I don’t run home automation so I don’t know. But evcc works great!

mal3oon@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 07:03 collapse

I have been running Hassio on my rpi2 dietpi (supervisor mode) for 3-4 years now. Surprisingly, it’s alive still. I am mot sure hassio still support this method (all docker managed), but if you’re comfortable with linux you can make it work.

kindenough@kbin.earth on 11 Jul 13:52 next collapse

Yes I agree it is great. I am using it on a Raspberry Pi 400 for pihole. It's lean and conveniant.

negativenull@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 15:56 next collapse

I run DietPi on an OrangePi5+ to run Jellyfin on. It’s brilliant

Cyberflunk@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 17:12 next collapse

Alpine all the way for me, but Dietpi was my gateway drug

Alphane_Moon@lemmy.world on 11 Jul 20:22 next collapse

I’ve been using DietPi on my SBC home servers (NAS, media service, pi-hope, etc.) since 2017 or so.

It’s an excellent distri for headless operation and makes CLI easy to use for somewhat casual users.

rezz@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 08:41 collapse

For media, I use Jellyfin on an M1 MacMini.

How do you get around RAM requirements on SBC home servers with little devices like this? I am often streaming 4K files and the encoding/decoding can sometimes be mildly intensive depending on the file.

somerandomname@lemmy.ml on 12 Jul 04:43 next collapse

I use it and love it, but still think the logo is a bit weird, reminds me of some evil message you see after a virus crashed your PC 😁.

Teppichbrand@feddit.org on 12 Jul 06:19 collapse

Agreed. The tagline “lightweight justice” always sounded strange to me as well. They could definitely go with a friendlier, more mainstream design.

hobbsc@lemmy.sdf.org on 12 Jul 06:50 collapse

big fan. used it on a pi zero w that I had hosting my PiHole for years. when the hardware finally died, I just installed dietpi on a VM in my proxmox server and used it for pihole again.

sure, I could’ve used another distro but it only seemed fitting for this use case.