Welcome to !selfhosted@lemmy.world - What do you selfhost?
from devve@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 11 Jun 2023 11:55
https://lemmy.world/post/60585
from devve@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 11 Jun 2023 11:55
https://lemmy.world/post/60585
Hello everyone! Mods here š
Tell us, what services do you selfhost? Extra points for selfhosted hardware infrastructure.
Feel free to take it as a chance to present yourself to the community!
š¦
threaded - newest
Two āserversā
Pi4-8gb; 1TB SSD:
External-facing
Dual Xeon; 96Gb Ram; 50TB; bound NICs:
Internal, mostly
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that Iāve seen in this thread:
[Thread #292 for this sub, first seen 21st Nov 2023, 13:45] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
Iāve been working on expanding my homelab recently. I have a physical box at home serving as an LXC host along with a few VPSes. Iām now up to:
I think I read an old blog post once that said āServers tend to multiply like rabbitsā and itās 100% true.
Do you have some massive server home or using VPS/VDS?
I know itās been 2 months but I just stumbled upon your question.
Hereās what my massive home server looks like. : )
This is so awesome. I know this is an old post, but I am just getting started. Youāre inspiring me!
Just testing from selfhosted instance!
Late to the party and after reading through some of these setups I may have to expand mine soon (it never ends does it?), here is what I have right now.
Unraid (Dell R720XD, dual Xeon E5-2670 v2, 64GB RAM, 12 x 6TB in 12 disk array with 2 parity disks, 800GB SSD cache pool)
-NextCloud
-Plex
-Emby
-Gitea
-Backrest
-MariaDB
-Netbootxyz
-Trillium
-Traccar
-Vaultwarden
-Adguard-Home
-Unifi
-Homebox
-Nessus
-Headscale
-Collabora
-*arrs
-Jupterlab
-Mealie
-SearXNG
-IT-Tools
-EmulatorJS
-Youtube-DL-Material
Proxmox (old Intel server S2600WT2, dual Xeon E5-2620 V2, 768GB RAM, 5 x 2TB disks):
-Zap2XML
-Immich
-Mumble
-NextPVR
-Stirling-PDF
-WebTop
-Frigate
-MCServer (gameserver)
-SDTDServer (gameserver)
-SFServer (gameserver)
There are some other things floating around in my homelab that arenāt really āselfhostedā things, just important to the home network:
3 HP Microserver Gen8ās
-x1 with ESXi hosting pfSense
-x2 with TrueNas Scale for backups
R610 with ESXi for a few remote desktops and Home Assistant (which Iām sure Iāll move to docker at some point).
Oooohhh⦠some really interesting and new-to-me apps in your list! Thanks for sharing.
Presently, my Fediverse presence is mostly self-hosted by one definition or another. This Lemmy instance lives on my server, and my Masto is hosted by a company dedicated to exactly that because itās dirty cheap and one fewer thing for me to worry about.
Looking to add to the list.
Hi
I started self hosting 3 years ago when I got wind of tailscale. Iāve always cared about privacy and building things so that was great.
My infrastructure consists of two machines.
One - my personal and work server A deskmini i3 12th gen
256GB Boot drive 4TB NVME data drive
-photoprism -syncthing -nextcloud -Firefox+VPN -archivebox
Two - my media server that I let 6ish other people access - PC tower i3 12th gen
512GB Boot and docker config file drive 4*4TB HDD mergerfs for raw data
-jellyfin -*arr suite -gluetun VPN -audiobookshelf (also for auto downloading podcasts) -calibre-web
Running Tipi on a five year old chrome box with tailscale as the VPN. Has been running great! Now Iām self hosting
Tipi is pretty awesome. If you havenāt already, check it out!
Didnāt know about Tipi!
Getting ready to set up Immich, Navidrome and Nextcloud, was meaning to handle it with separate Docker containers, but now Iāll try Tipi first.
Thanks!
I havenāt self-hosted yet, but Iām working on it. Lemmy doesnāt really have any conservative instances, and I donāt want lemmy to become some huge echo chamber. And not just poltical-wise, I feel that more alt points of view should be welcomed.
Host all the things!
Wordpress, SMTP/IMAP, tor, bittorrent, Nextcloud, Plex, NTP, photo galleries, DoTā¦
I even started hosting the website for my local Italian restaurant and they havenāt even realised it yet.
Wait, what? How are hosting someone elseās website?
OK, hereās how it happened.
I was hungry, and I wanted to see the menu for my local pizza joint. I couldnāt find it anywhere.
I discovered that all their socials linked to a website that wouldnāt load. When I checked, the domain had lapsed.
Out of frustration, I purchased the domain and pulled the last snapshot of their website off archive.org. It had their full menu as a PDF.
6 months later and itās still getting visitors from their facebook page, who are viewing the menu. They havenāt even realised.
Are you still hosting it? Have they realised?
The owners closed the restaurant and started a new one so I let the domain lapse.
Well⦠Start hosting a website for their new restaurant! š
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š
I have a few things going on. Iāve been blogging some of my notes on how Iām getting some things going in Docker. But I only relatively recently started sharing my notes so thereās not a ton yet. Hopefully thereās something useful for someone here. magnus919.com/tags/selfhosting/
Pangolin!
I have been self hosting things for over 15 years. I now host on 7 computers. Iām proud of the fact that I stay under 100W idle, including 3 Omada WLAN APs and network technology (all via PoE and all is on a UPS). For most of the services i normally used the helper scripts. iām currently in the process of moving everything to komodo. there should be an lxc for each service or service group, komodo pulls the compose files from gitea and deploys everything.
Proxmox pve0: M910x i5.7500 4x3,4GHz, 32 GB RAM, 256 GB NVMe
UNRAID-NAS - odroid h2+ Intel J4115 4x1,8 GHz, 32 GB RAM, 2x24GB HDD - fileserver)
Proxmox Backup Server (M90n-1: i5-8265U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB NVMe, 2TB SSD)
Proxmox pve1 (M90n-1: i5-8265U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB NVMe)
Proxmox pve2 (M90n-1: i5-8265U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB NVMe)
Proxmox pve3 (M920x: i7-8700, 64 GB RAM, 250 GB NVMe, 2 TB NVMe)
*raspberry pi 5
iām happy to have found an entry point and an alternative to reddit here, even though my second post (question about suitable hardware with 32 answers) has already been deleted. hello everyone!
I just started months ago, but I have a yunohost server ona raspberry with nextcloud and forgejo on it :)
.
I might be the only person self hosting a gopher server. Its running on a Raspi 4 on my home network, using Flask Gopher.
Aww man I remember those well. Is this for nostalgia or do you regularly use it?
I have a number of useful services on it, including stock quotes, many news sources, some games. Its been a labor of love.
I cover most of what services Iām running in my own post looking for assistance recently.
geekroom.tech/post/242
.
Thank you for all for sharing 𤩠I still havent determine if Iām going self hosting at home or with a VPS, but I discovered cool projects!
Got a proxmox node with a couple of vmās, mostly for hosting docker.
Iām considering switching proxmox for kubevirt, but Iād have to deploy all my container as either k8s deployments or create new vm for dockerā¦
Been using prometheus at work lately and I want to create a push setup with thanos backend, but for now itās just an idea
Running xen hypervisor (Debian 12) on a HP Elitedesk 805 Gen6 (currently 10 VMs) at home, a few VPS from different hosting providers too.
I've been selfhosting various things for almost 25 years now. Started with email/web, but now I've got the following (in no particular order):
Virtualization is mostly docker containers, but also some ESXi/VMWare Fusion. I also have Obsidian in the mix but that's not really a self-host but more of a way to organize/access my data. I have also been doing a (very!) little bit of experimentation with local LLMs, but it's all on ARM, using either the GPU or the NPU available on the RK3588.
This stuff either exists on an OVH VPS for the "internet facing" stuff or on an old Dell C6100 blade server. ESXi uses one blade and another blade runs Debian and talks to an old SATA/SAS disk shelf I got for $50 to see if I could make it work (it was super straightforward). I have a bunch of 2T and 4T "spinning rust" drives in two RAID6 arrays (mdadm) and then carve out storage for various things using LVM. I am experimenting with zfs on the VPS but am not a big fan of it. I used to run OpnSense on another blade since I couldn't find a router which would properly shape gigabit internet traffic, but now I'm using an ER605 and it seems to be doing quite well. I have a tiny KeepConnect device which will physically cut power to the cable modem if it can't see the internet which is very helpful since the biggest source of trouble for me has always been the damn internet service doing weird things when I'm not at home.
I've even been working toward "self hosting" my own educational electronics stuff for my kids using https://microblocks.fun (the actual project is called smallvm) - think scratch running completely in the browser and executing code on a "vm" which is actually running on a microcontroller over BLE or serial.
This sounds like a shitload of work and sometimes it can be, but one of the best parts of self hosting is that once it's set up, it hardly ever has to be updated/changed. Security updates are the biggest reason of course, but a LOT of this is not on the open internet so I can be more lenient about keeping things up to date. I also try to keep everything that needs a database to use ONE database (postgres), which also makes it easier to back up or use data from several tools in a new way. Honestly it's largely fire and forget these days. I add more space or replace drives as needed and try not to touch things otherwise. I keep a set of notes to help me remember not only the how but the WHY I set things up in a particular way, and those notes are accessible 100% offline. (After all, what good are notes on how things are set up if the thing you've stored them on isn't working?)
My infrastructure at home (C6100, SAS shelf, switch, etc.) consumes about 700W 24/7 which is not awesome but I figure the power bill saves a lot of service costs. The VPS runs me about $30/mo.