- Nextcloud + OnlyOffice
- *arr media management series (Lidarr, Sonarr, etc)
- Gitea
- Vaultwarden
- PiHole
- Jellyfin
- Wiki-js
- Lemmy
- Prometheus/Grafana/Loki
Currently all containerised running on a debian VM on a Rockylinux Qemu/KVM hypervisor. Initially I was using rocky+podman but inevitably hit something I wanted to run that just straight up needed docker and was too much effort to try and get working. 🤷
Hardware is an circa 2012 gaming machine with a few ZFS raids for all of my Linux ISOs. It lives an extremely tortured existence and longs for the sweet release of death.
Toying with the idea of migrating it all to on-prem virtualised kubernetes cluster using helm charts to manage the stacks and using NFS mounts for persistent storage because I hate myself (and to upskill I guess)
What about you?
Proxmox host running on a Dell Inspiron laptop with a 6th gen i3 and 12GB RAM, 120GB SSD
- Home Assistant
- Jellyfin
- Sonarr
- Radarr
- Prowlarr
- qBitTorrent
- Syncthing
Home Assistant runs in its own VM (HAOS), the rest run in a Ubuntu Server VM.
deleted by creator
After I watch something (usually tv episodes), it gets auto-deleted after 3 days. torrents seed for 14 days.
What’s deleting? I have never heard of such concept.
Haha. Said the hoader with tonnes of content he’s never going to finish watching.
Nothing too crazy. I use Proxmox on hardware that used to be a gaming rig (4th gen Intel) and I upped the RAM to 32GB.
- Plex
- Home Assistant
- NextCloud
- VM to host Duplicati + Samba which backs up some shared storage.
- VM that contains the extremely specific build environment for one of my mechanical keyboards
- VM that contains my ESP Home environment.
- VM for Docker based web development because as good as WSL is, it still sucks sometimes.
Some of my “VMs” are actually LXCs but I can’t remember which are which at the moment.
Playing with ZFS was fun too, and it puts all that RAM to good use!
I’ve also been meaning to create a VM for Dokku, but I haven’t had a strong enough need yet.
TrueNas Scale (4820k, 64gb ddr3, 1x256gb sata ssd & 2x4tb hdd):
-> Plex (Looking to replace with something less… commercialized)
-> EmulatorJS
-> OpenSpeedTest
-> DisqTV
-> Calibre (Looking for flashier alternative)
-> Nas storage + media storage
Windows Server w/CubeCoders AMP (xeon 1230v2, 32gb ddr3 ram, 256gb ssd)
-> Minecraft W/Mods
-> Satisfactory
-> Plex (Looking to replace with something less… commercialized)
Give Jellyfin a go!
- Vaultwarden
- audiobookshelf (Best audiobook and podcast server)
- Teamspeak3
- Sinusbot (music bot for Ts3)
- SWAG (reverse proxy with built-in fail2ban)
- Plex
- Sonarr / Radarr / Overseerr / Jackett
- Lemmy
- Uptime-Kuma
- Nextcloud
- Bookstack
- LanguageTool (Grammar and spellcheck)
- Multiple game servers depending on what our group is playing. Currently, Minecraft with PaperMC
- calibre / calibre-web (calibre with guacamole to manage library and calibre-web to access it with a webpage and send to kindle)
- DailyTxT (Diary server)
- Libreddit (Alternative reddit front end that doesn’t use the official API)
- Rallly (scheduling for groups)
- Tandoor (recipe manager and shopping list)
- Tautili
- Grafana
- Pihole
Does send to kindle go through amazon?
Wouldn’t you have your kindle disconnected from the net since ur pirating?
You can send with calibre-web to kindle if you have an amazon account. You get a specific address for your kindle. They appear under documents in your library, legal or otherwise.
Amazon has always turned a blind eye to the ‘send to kindle’ backdoor for getting pirated content onto the kindle
- PiHole
- Mealie
- Duplicati
- Treafik
- Uptime Kuma
- Bookstack
All running on a Raspberry Pi 4 4GB. Also currently running Plex on a separate Rasperry Pi with a external SSD, but looking into getting a Synology NAS.
One thing I’ve not been able to find, unfortunately, is a good replacement for subsonic for my 1.5TB mp3 and FLAC collection.
Everything I’ve tried to host dockerized has just crawled.
But other than that, hosting mostly for nyswlf…
The typical arrs, subsonic, spotweb, pinhole, duckdns, caliber, calibre web, qbittorrent via a dockerized vpn client
All containerized
Airsonic has been rock solid for (just) me in docker behind npm on a 6yo celeron nuc
I was considering airsonic. How large is your music collection? That’s what seems to kill every other self hosted service i tried
18,000 songs
Gotcha ok so that may be the difference. Right now I’m at…
4,843 artists 18,708 albums 235,303 songs 2254.59 GB 16,936 hours
And so media services that catalog and server that all seem to puke big time. Except for subsonic for some reason.
Wow I feel so small time
It’s a result of lidarr just doing its own thing and me dropping new artists onto it every time I hear something I like, multiplied by a few years
I’m a noobie:
- portainer
- pihole
- wireguard server
- jellyfin
- youtube-dl
- nextcloud
- tor/privoxy
- freshrss
- minetest server
- nginx proxy manager
All running locally on a 2008 lenovo core 2 duo with 2gb, 1 120gb SSD, 1 1tb HDD and 1 250gb HDD…couldn’t open the services to the web since my ISP blocks every port (except 52180 udp) even if I open them in the router sothey can change the double on a fixed IP withppen ports in their “enterprise” package
Try tailscale to access services outside of the network, works great for me
Radarr, Sonarr, Jellyfin, handmade image and video scraper, Firefly, Minecraft, Minetest, Factorio, and a handmade image/video browsing/tagging web app.
So far, a small amount. I just upgraded to my busted RPi to a refurb Optiplex 9020 and got brave enough to finally try out Docker 😂
- Calibre
- Portainer
- Home Assistant (a work in progress, having networking issues since that’s where I lack know how)
- Libreddit
- Jellyfin (to replace Plex)
I’ve got it on Tailscale along with my Synology NAS and the rest of my machines.
Love this community for all the ideas and guidance I get looking at other setups!
Pretty much anything I can. It’s too much to type out, but my Homepage lists most of it minus any databases or reverse proxies. I also host a one person Lemmy instance. Everything but Lemmy is run on a 2013 gaming PC with Unraid.
EDIT: After posting this, I’ll probably end up selfhosting an imgur alternative too…
- Categories
- Main
- Docker
- UptimeKuma
- Video
- Plex
- Overseer
- Tautulli
- Wizarr
- Audio
- moOde Audio
- Audiobookshelf
- Your Spotify
- Books
- Calibre-Web
- Calibre
- Downloads
- SabNZBD
- qBittorrent
- Cloud
- Immich
- Filerun
- Pairdrop
- Syncthing
- Paperless
- Home
- Home Assistant
- Mealie
- Node RED
- Productivity
- FreshRSS
- Linkding
- Obsidian
- Starr Apps
- Prowlarr
- Jackett
- Radarr
- Sonarr
- Sonarr Anime
- Readarr Audio
- Readarr Books
- Kapowarr
- Lidarr
- Website
- SerpBear
- Umami
- Utilities
- FileFlows
- Changedetection.io
- Stirling-PDF
- OpenSpeedTest
- Adminer
- Radicale
- Network
- PiHole
- PiHole - IoT
- Speedtest
- Main
Hey, thanks for doing that! I, unfortunately, didn’t think about people that would need to use screen readers or the like. Next time I’ll wait until I’m at a computer to type it out.
- Categories
Here you go !
- Vaultwarden
- Searxng
- Nextcloud
- Smallstep (own CA for self-signed full chain certificates)
- Linkding
- Gotify + watchtower
- Adguardhome
- Traefik
- Wireguard
Took me to much time to make everything work perfectly together, but learned alot along the road ! Everything hosted on a old spare laptopt with docker containers.
Proxmox host. Fedora server vm.
- openvpn as a backup (and because i went through the highly laborious process of setting it up)
- wireguard
- nitter (twitter alternative frontend. makes twitter usable)
- audiobookshelf (podcast manager)
- pihole (block ads by dns)
- nginx for my website and some related website stuff
- Vaultwarden (sometimes. I usually keep it off because I prefer KeepassXC anyway)
The hardware is a 10 year old Thinkpad. I think it’s pretty clear by my software list that I don’t ask it to do much, but it does so much for me. Like, I wouldn’t run Jellyfin off of this thing. In fact my NAS is 4x8TB drives but I keep it mostly shut off. It’s powered on maybe about once or twice a week for a few hours at a time. I try to batch my activity with it. Like “oh, yeah, I want file X but it’s on my NAS. Maybe later, when I have a need for file Y I will turn it on and retrieve both.”
I can achieve everything I want with even lower spec hardware, but this Thinkpad has a faulty trackpad anyway, which is also how I got it for cheap. I have never measured it, but supposedly it consumes around 6W at idle which is low enough for me.
Initially I was using rocky+podman but inevitably hit something I wanted to run that just straight up needed docker and was too much effort to try and get working. 🤷
Can you clarify some of the things you got stuck on with podman? I currently have a docker-compose based setup that I’m pretty happy with, but am rebuilding and am planning to experiment with podman play with k8s-style manifests as an alternative to compose. It’s still not clear to me whether podman is going to simplify my life or make it worse compared to docker and compose, and I’m curious about your insights and why you backed off from that architecture.
Basically I ran into issues with building images from newer and more complex compose files that podman-compose just couldn’t pull apart.
Docker is still the go-to if you want shit to ‘just work’, it has an easier user experience, it’s what the vast majority of developers building containers are using. You can run rootless if you want without too much pain.
It has come a long way but the probability that you’ll run into some random edge case or other issue with podman is higher, podman-compose has some thorns (high likelihood you’ll need to hack on compose files), if you want containers to start without your interaction you have to bake up systemd unit files for them, etc. I’ve not messed with
podman-kube-play
- wasn’t even aware of it, so can’t really comment as to how well that works.There’s nothing to lose by giving it a go except your sanity and time. 😁
Thanks for the insights. I’ll see how it goes.