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  • 12 comments
Joined 5 years ago
Cake day: January 29th, 2021
  • I’ve just migrated most of my repos from Codeberg to Sourcehut (sr.ht) and I really like it. I’ve got nothing against Codeberg or Forgejo, they’re awesome, but I just really like the simple design of Sourcehut.

    The git send-email workflow was new to me, but I started liking it fast! I’ve never really enjoyed the web-based MR/PR workflow of GitHub anyway (read: it feels very slow).

    Sourcehuts CI system if also really nice overall, although there are some things I miss from the great CI that GitLab has. Mostly I miss only running pipelines when tags are pushed, and stuff like that.

  • Maybe because it’s not an obviously wanted feature? But I’m just guessing. You should request it and see what happens, maybe more people want it. I’ve never even thought about it, since in the case of Podman/docker it’s so “obvious” and easy to just mount network shares to the host first. And in the case of Kubernetes you can just mount NFS shares directly into pods.

  • Ubuntu doesn’t allow pip to install system wide stuff anymore. You can solve that by installing everything in a pyhton virtual environment.

    But for real, use Docker/Podman instead. It’s a lot easier, especially if you’re managing several applications!

  • The Beeline is definitely powerful enough to run a hypervisor, so I would do that if I were you. Proxmox is a very good product and easy enough to use. Personally I use Harvester (with Rancher) but that might be a bit daunting if you’ve not used Kubernetes before.

    I would recommend running Proxmox as your OS, spin up a few Debian virtual machines and run your services (Nextcloud, plex/jellyfin, …) with Docker containers. I would personally use Podman, as I think it’s the simpler one to use, but there might be more documentation online for Docker, I’m not sure. But do definitely use containers! You’ll thank yourself in 6 months.

    For reverse proxy I would suggest using Traefik, especially is your using Docker/Podman. But there are other good solutions like Nginx Proxy Manager, which has the advantage of being very easy to use. But I do run Traefik on every Podman server I have or any Kubernetes cluster. That way I can just have a wildcard DNS entry for an IP and then every proxy route will just work, whitout having to touch the DNS further.

    Also, just a general tip: look into how you can deploy everything using a GitOps flow. Whether that just be with Ansible or more specialized solutions (Kubernetes with ArgoCD or FluxCD is very well suited for this). Look into Terraform/OpenTofu. This last point is nowhere necessary, but if you ever (like me) get tired of forgetting how you setup your infrastructure (virtual machines, application deployments and configuration, etc) you’ll love GitOps.

    Oh, but do definitely look into Ansible for configuring your servers. It will save you a lot of time in the long run.

  • I think that’s kind of what they meant. I’ve also selfhosted Nextcloud for years, but I only use file sync and calendar/contacts.

    Lately I’ve been feeling that Nextcloud is too big and clunky for just that. Like it’s something I’d love to setup at work or for an org, but that it “feels” to heavy for home use these days.

    I need to check out Radicale, I think.

  • I’m currently running Jellyfin on a VM in Proxmox and have been for a long time, it works great. My storage solution isn’t glorious, but it is simple. I just have a Debian LXC container in proxmox that bind mounts a large disk and exposes that through an NFS share. Then I’ve installed jellyfin with Podman/Docker on a VM that has that NFS share mounted.

    Also, a lot of people have already said this, but Podman/Docker only looks intimidating before you use it. It’s A LOT easier to get applications running then using the “traditional way”. The only thing that could potentially increase complexity for you is to expose a GPU to the docker container. But since you said you don’t have a dedicated GPU I’d strongly recommend using a docker container for the job. Once you’ve used it, you’ll never look back.

  • I used to manage the file hierarchy myself, but I haven’t done that for years at this point. Same goes for tagging files and such. I just download everything to a root folder called “music” and let lidarr handle everything from there.

    Lidarrs default file structure is something like {Artist}/{Album}{Year}/{Track} . This can of course be changed. Then I let lidarr just tag everything for me automatically, embedding album art and such.

    It’s a great setup overall, but I don’t know where Lidarr indexes it’s music library from, because some artists and albums might be missing sometimes. That’s really the only pain point.