Self hosting: real game starts today
from elettrona@poliversity.it to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 28 Jun 22:08
https://poliversity.it/users/elettrona/statuses/116831665459634526

Self hosting: real game starts today

@selfhosted

So, it’s done: my main domain has finally got its transfer to Hostinger, new provider where I have the VPS I’m experimenting in.

Real game with WordPress multisite/multilingual and self-hosted Fediverse starts TODAY!

#activitypub #selfhost #selfhosting #wordpress #yunohost

#ActivityPub #selfhost #selfhosted #selfhosting #wordpress #yunohost

threaded - newest

leandro@snac.cybervalley.org on 28 Jun 22:35 next collapse

@elettrona@poliversity.it
Welcome in this beautiful game 😃
@selfhosted@lemmy.world
#selfhost #yunohost

valhalla@social.gl-como.it on 28 Jun 22:46 next collapse

@elettrona congratulations!

cybervseas@lemmy.world on 28 Jun 22:49 next collapse

Congrats. Good luck self hosting Wordpress!

elettrona@poliversity.it on 28 Jun 22:54 collapse

@cybervseas I have learnt how to do it through YunoHost, I will transfer the pattern to the new domain - I've built nothing yet, regarding interface and posts. I want to have a working infrastructure before.

khleedril@cyberplace.social on 28 Jun 23:39 next collapse

@elettrona @selfhosted Wordpress and fediverse... that's impressive as a starting point; most people begin with a basic web server and some hand-written pages.

elettrona@poliversity.it on 28 Jun 23:53 next collapse

@khleedril @selfhosted It is 25 years I work on web, I started this self-hosting experience on my personal website, through YunoHost, which is a web-based application manager. Users say terminal knowledge is not needed, but, well, it helps a lot!
I'm not a sysadmin, can't manage a VPS from scratch. But I do my best to make things work.

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 29 Jun 03:27 collapse

Who tf starts with hand written pages? I always heard nextcloud, WordPress or the like.

curbstickle@anarchist.nexus on 29 Jun 05:39 next collapse

raises hand

To be fair there is also a lot wrong with me.

tburkhol@slrpnk.net on 29 Jun 07:34 next collapse

vim index.html

<html><header><title>Welcome</title></header> 
<body><h1>Welcome</h1>  
<p>Here's my random thoughts and links I keep forgetting  
</body></html>

:wq

Why would I want to learn wordpress, much less spin up a database, for that?

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 29 Jun 09:24 collapse

Nothing wrong with that, just not what many people are doing these days in my experience.

valhalla@social.gl-como.it on 29 Jun 07:57 collapse

@tofu @khleedril /me sits on a rocking chair

listen, young grasshopper, back in my time we didn't have this wordpress thing you're talking about, nevermind nextcloud. back in my time if you wanted to host an homepage you had to write your html by hand, with a dip pen, on parchment, uphill in the snow!

ok, I may be mixing up things a bit, but you don't have to be that old to have started self hosting pages when wordpress didn't exist and the alternatives were writing html directly with a text editor or, a few years later, using some kind of graphical editor that saved pretty bad html pages you could load on the server like your handwritten ones.

(or you have to be old, and I am old :D )

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 29 Jun 09:26 collapse

I do remember those times as well! Shady free webspaces where you could host some pages and images. But I haven’t seen people doing that a lot in the recent years.

lemmyvore@feddit.nl on 29 Jun 03:18 next collapse

With WordPress (or any CMS) keep in mind that if you don’t really need visitor-facing dynamic features (like comments), then you can self-host the admin and content editing completely privately, and only export a static “dump” of the finished website pages as plain HTML/CSS/JS and images.

You can serve these static files fairly efficiently yourself with a small HTTP server, or upload to a CDN service which will take care of things like redundancy, availability, replicated content for faster access from certain geographic areas, you won’t care about denial of service or bots etc.

Meanwhile your CMS software is completely isolated from break-ins or drive-by bot attacks. As a perk, you can experiment with different CMS freely without fundamentally changing your approach, because they all produce static files one way or another. You can try for example Hugo, or a fediverse-enabled microblogging app like Pleroma, Misskey or even Mastodon.

mereo@piefed.ca on 29 Jun 04:53 next collapse

Great advice.

mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 Jun 14:16 collapse

Yeah, WordPress is an extremely common vector for automated attacks. It’s highly expandable, but those plugins often aren’t secure. Even my tiny site (it isn’t running WordPress, and doesn’t even have a landing page because I only use it for my own stuff) sees a ton of attempted Wordpress attacks.

lemmyvore@feddit.nl on 30 Jun 13:16 collapse

I’ve spent a few years at the height of the blog trend doing WordPress work. It’s a very poorly designed app that has always put reliability/performance/security last and prioritized extensibility and low barrier of entry. Which is why they absolutely dominated the blog world but also why it’s such a big fat juicy target.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 29 Jun 06:58 collapse

Hey @Elena Brescacin@poliversity.it , did you ever decide on a back up solution?