My Favorite Self-Hosted Apps Launched in 2025 (selfh.st)
from meonkeys@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 09:23
https://lemmy.world/post/40100834

#selfhosted

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JASN_DE@feddit.org on 12 Dec 09:42 next collapse

Oh fantastic… That’s another 5 services to test drive.

crunchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 12 Dec 10:36 next collapse

I’ve been pretty satisfied with my *arr stack so far, but how are the alternatives?

otacon239@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 10:50 next collapse

Thank you for this! I’ve been trying to find a NextCloud replacement for years. I personally can’t stand the database approach to managing files. So glad to see Sync-In can just add a system folder directly without having to import.

bobslaede@feddit.dk on 12 Dec 23:04 collapse

There is also opencloud

nublug@piefed.blahaj.zone on 12 Dec 10:52 next collapse

switched from portainer to arcane recently. much easier on the eyes and the ability to save compose projects without deploying them yet is exactly what i was looking for. one thing is weird and i should prolly make an issue for it: no horizontal scroll or word wrap function in the compose editor, so for those compose files with extensive comments like npmplus you’ll have to have open in a text editor or webpage to read to the end of lines.

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 12:38 next collapse

man, arcane looks amazing, I ended up deciding off it though as their pull requests look like they use copilot for a lot of code for new features. Not that I personally have an issue with this but, I’ve seen enough issues where copilot or various AI agents add security vulnerabilities by mistake and they aren’t caught, so I would rather stray away from those types of projects at least until that issue becomes less common/frequent.

For something as detrimental as a management console to a program that runs as root on most systems, and would provide access to potentially high secure locations, I would not want such a program having security vulnerabilities.

dan@upvote.au on 12 Dec 13:08 next collapse

a program that runs as root

Does it have to run as root? It’s common to run Docker in rootless mode in production environments.

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 13:18 collapse

while docker does have a non-root installer, the default installer for docker is docker as root, containers as non-root, but since in order to manage docker as a whole it would need access to the socket, if docker has root the container by extension has root.

Even so, if docker was installed in a root-less environment then a compromised manager container would still compromise everything on that docker system, as a core requirement for these types of containers are access to the docker socket which still isn’t great but is still better than full root access.

To answer the question: No it doesn’t require it to function, but the default configuration is root, and even in rootless environment a compromise of the management container that is meant to control other containers will result in full compromise of the docker environment.

nublug@piefed.blahaj.zone on 12 Dec 17:13 next collapse

ugh well that sucks butt. i’ll be trying new alternatives tonight i guess lol

any recommendations?

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 18:12 next collapse

Sadly no recommendations, I still use portainer myself

uninvitedguest@piefed.ca on 12 Dec 20:35 next collapse

Dockge?

Zeoic@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 21:28 collapse

I switched from Portainer to Dockge to Komodo. Been very happy with komodo so far

MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Dec 07:43 collapse

I wouldn’t be exposing any management consoles to the internet either way, too much risk with something that has docker socket access.

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 13 Dec 19:16 collapse

fully agree, mine isnt accessible to the outside world either but, you never know if something gets missed or somehow a path gets made. would rather not open up that risk

Grass@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 17:07 next collapse

I’m just waiting for something like this with native podman support

MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Dec 07:41 collapse

Komodo is the best portainer alt I’ve found, I read through the Arcane info but it doesnt seem as good. Komodos editor also works great.

priapus@piefed.social on 12 Dec 11:42 next collapse

Those media management apps look great. Sonarr and Radarr have both annoyed me a bit recently, I’ll definitely be looking into them.

WhatTheDuck@piefed.social on 13 Dec 07:26 next collapse

Any initial thoughts so far (if you’ve had the time to look into them)? I really want to find something that can support multi-season downloads. The *arr stacks have rejected the feature in the past and it’s been my biggest gripe lately.

The alternatives seem pretty young still. I wonder if anyone’s done a feature comparison between them…

TunaLobster@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 08:07 collapse

Like one download that has multiple seasons? Sonarr doesn’t do that itself, but you can do it with a manual import.

WhatTheDuck@piefed.social on 13 Dec 08:23 collapse

Thanks, I do, but I have other non-technical family members. They request media via Jellyseer, which then sends the request to Sonarr.

Most of the time it’s fine, but when the show has 8 seasons? It’ll download each episode individually - some of which won’t be available/poor quality/no subtitles. There’s often a season pack with all 8 seasons in it and are more reliable subtitles/quality wise.

It’s an infrequent but annoying quirk I have to manually intervene with.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 11:25 collapse

How so? I’ve ran them for years with zero issues

suicidaleggroll@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 12:56 next collapse

Thanks! BentoPDF is fantastic, I never knew something like this existed.

I have a todo list where I keep track of services I might be interested in one day, I read your post a few hours ago and added Bento to my list, thinking I might get around to it in a few days/weeks/months. Then out of nowhere 15 minutes ago I randomly needed to crop and split a PDF and realized I didn’t have anything to do it. I fired Bento up and was done in under a minute.

dan@upvote.au on 12 Dec 12:58 next collapse

You might be interested in StirlingPDF too.

fizzle@quokk.au on 12 Dec 13:56 collapse

Yeah I use StirlingPDF extensively.

I might give Bento a try but ultimately not much incentive to change.

maaaaaaaaat@jlai.lu on 12 Dec 17:32 next collapse

You will love omnitools

EDIT: And vert

I know that cause I’m using framasoft instances:

omnitools.framatoolbox.org

vert.framatoolbox.org

(From framatoolbox)

dan@upvote.au on 12 Dec 21:06 next collapse

Wow, this is very useful!!

HotDog7@feddit.online on 13 Dec 10:34 next collapse

Between omnitools and vert, which one do you recommend? I think the former has more features, but there must be a reason why you recommended vert as well.

EDIT: On closer inspection, it looks like omnitools has multiple tools (including conversion), and vert focuses on conversion. I focused way too much on the conversion features that the other tools went over my head.

gringoaleatorio@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 00:45 collapse

Vert is amazing, thanks!

Electricd@lemmybefree.net on 13 Dec 19:51 collapse

Is it better than StirlingPDF?

fizzle@quokk.au on 12 Dec 13:59 next collapse

Usually I find these lists a bit “meh”, but there’s actually a bunch of stuff here I want to try.

  • Upvote RSS
  • Sync-In
  • Poznote
  • Postgresus
  • Loggifly
  • OpenArchiver
  • BentoPDF
Bakkoda@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 17:12 next collapse

I used compose maker a lot when i started learning docker recently. It’s a great way to see how to use tool.

pathos@lemmy.ml on 12 Dec 18:27 next collapse

Nice curated list! I think I’ll check some of them out for my own self hosted solution

con_fig@programming.dev on 13 Dec 07:53 next collapse

Anyone know of any container management systems focused on podman?

clif@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 08:19 next collapse

I don’t have a suggestion but commenting so I’ll remember to follow. I’ve just been using the CLI but if there’s a nice management system I’m interested.

Though, I’m curious if a docker one would work… I have docker aliased to podman already

Evotech@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 11:24 next collapse

By management you mean?

I just have all my podman containers in the same folder. With one root file linking them all together.

Podman also has built in watchtower functionality so it can patch and maintain itself automatically

I don’t ever think about them

erock@lemmy.ml on 13 Dec 11:53 next collapse

Quadlet

dudesss@lemmy.ca on 13 Dec 19:40 collapse

I use Cockpit which comes with many other awesome features too.

PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca on 13 Dec 20:05 collapse

I’m gonna pick up a few of these I think.

That NoteDicovery looks pretty slick. Its exactly what I was looking for a few months ago, and I’d absolutely pick it up if I didn’t just fall in love with the silverbullet’s ability to execute code embedded directly in the markdown; a feature that I expect to use almost never, but atotally smitten with.

As a side note, all these email archiving projects almost do something I want, maybe folks here can help me:
I’ve heard that self-hosting email is not worth the pain, but I also don’t want to leave my email history in the hands of these megacorps I don’t trust. These archive projects solve that problem, but they’re not email clients. I don’t want to archive and delete an email just to find out actually I need to reply to it like a month later.
What do you recommend for this usecase?