Today I set up my old laptop as a Debian server, hosting Immich (for photos), Nextcloud (for files), and Radicale (for calendar). It was surprisingly easy to do so after looking at the documentation and watching a couple videos online! Tomorrow I might try hosting something like Linkwarden or Karakeep.

What else should I self-host, aside from HA (I don’t have a smart home), Calibre (physical books are my jam), and Jellyfin (I don’t watch too many movies + don’t have a significant DVD/Blu-ray collection)?

I would like to keep my laptop confined to my local network since I don’t trust it to be secure enough against the internet.

edit: I forgot, I’m also hosting Tailscale so I can access my local network remotely!

  • Karna@lemmy.ml
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    16 hours ago
    • AdguardHome/Pi-Hole (for DNS Filter)
    • DrawIO (MS Visio equivalent)
    • Invidious (Youtube privacy frontend)
    • SearxNG (Google Privacy frontend)
    • Vaultwarden (Self-hosted Bitwarden server)
    • Miniflux (RSS Reader)
    • linkWarden (Link aggregator)

    Also, checkout https://selfh.st/apps/

    • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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      12 hours ago
      • SearxNG (Google Privacy frontend)

      SearXNG is more than just a front end for google results, it’s an aggregator, if configured properly can collect results from Bing, Startpage, Wikipedia, DuckDuckGo, Brave.

      • SpatchyIsOnline@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        I’m no expert, but I read that self hosting your own instance doesn’t actually help with privacy since the search providers still track those requests and if you’re the only one using it, that’s just tracking you with extra steps.

        Of course if you use a public instance, you have to then trust that the instance isn’t tracking you

          • nfreak@lemmy.ml
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            1 hour ago

            I just recently started routing mine through a gluetun container, but now I’m hitting timeouts pretty consistently. Not sure if there’s a solution to that or just deal with it.

        • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          While true, they still collect data on the results hosting your own instance can prevent you from hitting rate-limits as often.

  • kristoff@infosec.pub
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    12 hours ago

    I run a small setup on a seperate server segment (2nd router behind my main router) so it is on the internet. I run nextcloud, an dendrite and conduit instance (matrix chat-server servers), a mastodon and go-to-social instance (fediverse), bitwarden (password manager), and others.

    If there is a service that you do not want to be publically accessable by everybody but you do want to access from everywhere on the internet yourself, check out client-side TLS (https) certificates. The server does is accessable from the internet put only people who have a TLS certificate on their client signed by you can access it. For services that do not require incoming connections from other machines (e.g. nextcloud, bitwarden, … but no federated services like matrix-chat or the fediverse) that is a very good option to protect your servers.

  • themakara@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago
    • Paperless if you want to keep your digital documents organized.
    • Jellyfin/Navidrome for music streaming if you have a collection.
    • AudiobookShelf for streaming & tracking progress of audoobooks if you have a collection.
    • Kitchenowl for organizing your household (expenses, shopping lists, recipes, planning meals)
    • FreshRSS for RSS-Feeds (News, Blogs etc)
    • LinkDing for Bookmark Management
    • Game-Servers (like Minecraft or others)

    EDIT:Added Linkding & GameServers

    • TurboLag@lemmings.world
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      13 hours ago

      Are you using Kitchenowl for storing recipes? If so, what’s your experience with it?

      I’ve tried Tandoor, the common suggestion for recipe management, but I’ve found it too clunky to add recipes to. I like the concept, but it would take a long time to move all my recipes into the specific format they use, and the web UI does not make things easier.

      • Provolone@lemmy.zip
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        10 hours ago

        Worth checking out Mealie, too. Can’t say how it compares to Tandoor or Kitchenowl but I’ve been happy with Mealie for years now.

      • themakara@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        My experience with the function is limited, but I think it’s decent. Markdown support, import from websites etc. If you add the items to the recipe with their amounts and then write them out in the text it automatically give you the amount you need based on the portions specified.

        On app.kitchenowl.org you can create a demo-user and household. Within that, you can try the recipe function. Sign up requires a mail-address, but it does not need to be a valid one.

    • PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      In my experience, firefly is not aimed at household or personal finance. It is very obviously made by and for accountants.

      Actual Budget is much more approachable for the normal home user, and very similar to the successful YNAB.

    • Provolone@lemmy.zip
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      10 hours ago

      Actual Budget if you’re more into envelope budgeting. I came from YNAB and could not get the same workflow out of Firefly as I could YNAB. Actual Budget does provide that.

      I do think setting up HTTPS is required for Actual so if you don’t have that yet, then Firefly is the way to go.

      • toketin@feddit.it
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        7 hours ago

        Hi, I’ve tried Actual Budget but I’ve found more interesting in terms of options Firefly, so I’ve chosen for it :)

  • DownByLaw@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Just from the top of my head:

    Edit: I left out some stuff that you or others already mentioned. But here’s the extended list so I can copy/paste this if someone else asks in the future.

    Honorable mention:

    • TheTrueColonel@lemmynsfw.com
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      10 hours ago

      As someone who works in security, I don’t personally recommend self hosting your password manager unless you’re planning on never opening it up outside your network or you’re willing to be on top of all potential security issues. These are your account credentials we’re talking about. You WANT them safe, and the people paid to make sure they stay secure are likely going to do a better job than you.

    • sbird@sopuli.xyzOP
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      18 hours ago

      That’s a big list. I already use joplin, but never knew you could self-host syncing! I’ll do that then :D

    • zeroIncentive@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Why not Jellyfin for music? I’m curious as I run plex and Plexamp myself but have been considering switching over to Jellyfin for media.

      • pory@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I use Navidrome for music because Jellyfin’s Android TV client still can’t handle playlist lengths above 300 songs.

      • RmDebArc_5@feddit.org
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        15 hours ago

        Jellyfin is quite capable for music, however Navidrome has a much better client ecosystem. Personally I use the Finamp beta on mobile as it does everything I want and is quite stable, but if you want Android auto/apple carplay you will have to use a client that isn’t as reliable or proprietary (paid.

      • jake@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I use Jellyfin for movies and TV shows, but never tried for music because I already had Navidrome set up. It is so good, really one of my all-time favourite pieces of software. It greatly repays a well-tagged collection, relying on embedded metadata only. Not sure how Jellyfin works here, maybe there is some ability to scrape album info from online sources (?), but I believe it’s pretty strict about directory structure (one folder per album), which Navidrome doesn’t care about.

      • DownByLaw@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        I’ve set up navidrome a long time ago, way before I’ve started using Jellyfin. And it just runs like a charm paired with some great clients for the subsonic ecosystem. So honestly it never even occurred to me to use Jellyfin for music.

  • excess0680@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You may or may not be a developer, but I would like to vote for Gitea/Forgejo. Should you ever get a grasp of git, a git forge is great for keeping code and even plain text documents recorded. It’s my favorite self-hosted service by far.

    It can even operate as an OIDC server, so you can create a single login for all your services (that support OIDC).

    I’ll also recommend Grist, an alternative to Google Sheets (and Notion, I believe?). It’s a web interface to spreadsheets that supports Python code as formulas. (I’ve also tried Nocodb, another Notion alternative, and I much prefer Grist.)

    • sbird@sopuli.xyzOP
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      18 hours ago

      I am, indeed, a developer. I might try locally hosting Gitea/Forgejo as an extra backup. I assume you can have multiple “origins” in git, right? That means I can back my repository to both codeberg and server.

      Grist seems pretty cool too.

      • excess0680@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        Absolutely! I have used multiple origins for posting my projects to Gitea/Forgejo and GitHub. You can also mirror repositories from one site to another, too, although it requires a clean slate for pulling from another remote.

        The biggest use case for me is documenting (as code) my home network setup on my private forge.

        • sbird@sopuli.xyzOP
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          17 hours ago

          Should I get Gitea or Forgejo? Forgejo seems to be a more free/libre fork of Gitea, the latter of which is influenced by a for-profit company. Is Forgejo functionally equivalent to Gitea, and if not, what are the differences? If they are basically the same I would probably go with Forgejo over Gitea. Is Forgejo’s documentation and setup similar, better, or worse than Gitea?

          • Jayjader@jlai.lu
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            2 hours ago

            To my knowledge, there is 1 feature that forgejo has that gitea doesn’t: it can generate a new ssh key for you at the click of a button that can be used to push repo changes to another git forge.

            I have several personal repos on my forgejo instance that are each setup so that they mirror themselves onto my Codeberg account at noon every day.

            I also have a gitea instance on a raspi on my local network that itself will push out changes on certain repos to the (public-facing) forgejo instance.

            I can push and/or pull to any of the three origins as needed, but usually I just push to the gitea when I’m at home and the forgejo when I’m not, and let the mirroring take care of propagating changes to Codeberg.

          • PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            Forgejo is a fork from gitea that is made for us. Forgejo is the new gitea.

            There was some licensing or something, some kind of disagreement I don’t recall. Forgejo is the one that is still free and open source.

          • excess0680@lemmy.world
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            16 hours ago

            I haven’t looked much into the differences, but from my brief research, it appears that Forgejo has just recently updated such that migration from Gitea is no longer possible. I knew that they had become a “hard” fork last year but it has now diverged.

            From a feature standpoint, I know that Forgejo is working on Fediverse integration. Beyond that, I think the differences are less apparent.

            So to answer your question, I use Gitea and have for a long time. They’ll still remain MIT-licensed even if it’s no longer fully open source. However, the owning company can (and may) cease open source development. If I had known of Forgejo breaking away earlier, or if I were a new user, I would have probably started with Forgejo. That’s my recommendation.

    • Emotional (he/him)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      I love Grist!

      My wife and I were frequent Google Sheet users and since a few years ago we started using Grist a lot. We tried some other alternatives before, but none of them felt even close to right for us.

  • Elvith Ma'for@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    As you mentioned Immich, Nextcloud and Radicale - don’t forget to make regular backups. If you haven’t automated them, that’s your next project now ;)

    • sbird@sopuli.xyzOP
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      9 hours ago

      How do I set up backups for Immich, Nextcloud, and Radicale? I see lots of different options, I can’t pick!

      • PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        And don’t think that you can just back up using a file-copy process. These things have databases that also need to be backed up. It’s not as simple as it first seems.

        Source: been selfhosting for an embarrassingly long time without any backup!

    • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Yes, back up your stuff regularly, don’t be like me and break your partition table with a 4 month gap between backups. Accomplishing 4 months of work in 5 hours is not fun.

  • EpicFailGuy@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Host a pangolin reverse proxy on a free oracle cloud VPS! It’s super nice to redirect online traffic to a LAN resource, that way you can share your home lab with friends and family without having to forward any ports or loosen your security posture.

    https://blog.thetechcorner.sk/posts/Connect-to-your-homelab-over-CGNAT-with-tunnels-homelab-2-0/

    I also highly recommend this suite of tools for downloading and streaming legal media via torrent because I would never endorse piracy.

    https://github.com/TechHutTV/homelab/tree/main/media

    • Suzune@ani.social
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      18 hours ago

      I’m thinking about moving my Nextcloud calendars and addressbooks to Baikal. Why? Because I like one “tool for one thing” better than “one tool for everything”.

    • sbird@sopuli.xyzOP
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      18 hours ago

      I hosted radicale first so already had my events sorted out. Wasn’t really bothered moving them again. Also, I like radicale, it’s simple and it works.

  • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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    1 day ago

    Actual Budget is an open-source envelope-style budgeting tool similar to YNAB. It has a self-hostable syncing service so that you can manage your budget across multiple devices.

    The reason you might want to do this is that it’s probably easier to do full account review sitting at your computer, but you might want to track expenses/receipts on your smartphone while you’re away from home.