Popular self-hosting services worth running (slicker.me)
from monica_b1998@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 22:54
https://lemmy.world/post/43974833

#selfhosted

threaded - newest

savvywolf@pawb.social on 07 Mar 23:30 next collapse

For the lazy:

  • Nextcloud
  • Jellyfin
  • Immich
  • Vaultwarden / Bitwarden
  • Uptime Kuma
  • AdGuard Home
  • Homepage
  • Monica
  • changedetection.io

Seems a decent selection.

monica_b1998@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 23:36 next collapse

does this count as a spoiler?

yaroto98@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 23:58 next collapse

Recently discovered changedetection.io. It nicely filled the need I had. I have it watching a few static forum posts for updates that are communicated that way.

Couldbealeotard@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 00:17 next collapse

I’m a little confused. It’s this a self hosted program? Following the link I see a monthly subscription cost.

retro@infosec.pub on 08 Mar 00:24 next collapse

If you don’t want to self host, they offer hosting.

Couldbealeotard@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 01:32 collapse

Got it.

That seems pretty cool.

B0rax@feddit.org on 08 Mar 20:18 collapse
superglue@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Mar 01:15 next collapse

I could never get it working right due to captchas on sites, its a beat idea though

Fmstrat@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 09:34 collapse

Oh wow… My 10 year old python script may be replaced now.

Edit: And I already had it starred, because it works just like my 10 year old python script.

yaroto98@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 17:00 collapse

You can go semi-advanced mode by using regex to ignore certain line changes. Some sites require you to go super-advanced mode by using playwright running in a headless-v2 container rather than just plain text mode.

It’s nice being able to see the history of changes. Especially when there’s multiple rapidfire changes.

PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 20:46 collapse

Monica

I hate products with generic names. It makes it utterly impossible to search for.

Even if this OP post might explain it, it is still useless when taken out of context like in the esteemed comment above this one.

/rant, sorry, thank you.

foggy@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 20:54 next collapse

I’m gonna start a company that creates cheap life saving products called “Chris”

PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 20:57 next collapse

And the essential companion product, Potato.

___@lemmy.ca on 09 Mar 04:53 collapse

On a slightly related note, if you ever want a blast of the past, check out the ASCII art section of chris.com

jivandabeast@lemmy.browntown.dev on 09 Mar 01:36 next collapse

Its a CRM, i agree with the gripes about the name but tbf I’m kinda surprised to see it on here? The GitHub repo seems pretty dead

BlairMtnWarrior@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Mar 18:20 collapse

LOL. Back in the day I saw a band open for somebody and the band name was ‘Bob.’ Even in the early aughts searching for ‘Bob’ was a pointless activity. They eventually changed the name to Super Bob which is just as stupid but at least searchable.

realitaetsverlust@piefed.zip on 08 Mar 00:06 next collapse

I would add searxng - a bit finnicky to set up but very powerful and customizeable.

negativenull@piefed.world on 08 Mar 04:08 next collapse

Searxng is my most used self hosted service. It’s amazing

slackarr@piefed.ca on 09 Mar 09:09 collapse

same, i pipe it through gluetun with my Linux isos. works great. maybe second only to jellyfin in most used

roundup5381@sh.itjust.works on 09 Mar 17:35 collapse

Same here, but I’ve began to wonder if using the same connection/ip could be used to help with fingerprinting

x00z@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 23:36 collapse

I like the idea of SearXNG, but I don’t see why so many people like it for self hosting. You’re still querying search engines with your IP which in many self hosted cases is the same IP as the one you browse the internet with. I think SearXNG is really good if you setup a service on a server IP (like a VPS) and it gets used by multiple people, or if you tunnel it trough a VPN, but then again you could also just VPN your search engine searches.

So why do you like it? Is it for the aggregation of multiple engines? Or maybe the fact that it doesn’t link your specific browser to a search? I really wonder and am not hating.

realitaetsverlust@piefed.zip on 09 Mar 16:04 collapse

You’re still querying search engines with your IP

IP in itself might not be as much of a problem, unless you have a static IP, which most consumers don’t. And even if you do, you are also hiding a lot of baggage relating to user agents or other fingerprintable settings. IP alone is rarely used as a sole point to link your traffic to other datapoints. On top of that, you can still just decide to exclude google, bing etc from your search results and rely more “open” ones like DDG or ecosia.

Another huge upside of searxng is the aggregation of results. The search results of google are all up to, well, google. Same with bing, which is controlled by microsoft. If these companies now decide to “surpress” certain information, people using only those engines directly would no longer see those news. However, if you get your results from multiple search engines, you are not - or lets say less - affected by that kind of nonsense.

As always with news and information, the truth usually lies somewhere in the middle. And that’s where searxng helps out tremendously.

Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyz on 08 Mar 00:20 next collapse

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
DNS Domain Name Service/System
HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web
IP Internet Protocol
LXC Linux Containers
NAS Network-Attached Storage
SMB Server Message Block protocol for file and printer sharing; Windows-native
VPN Virtual Private Network
VPS Virtual Private Server (opposed to shared hosting)
nginx Popular HTTP server

[Thread #145 for this comm, first seen 8th Mar 2026, 00:20] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

dudesss@lemmy.ca on 08 Mar 01:52 collapse

This bot is annoying.

Fetus@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 03:06 collapse

You should be able to block it.

TrumpetX@programming.dev on 08 Mar 01:30 next collapse

This feels 1000% like a chatgpt prompt copy and pasted into a webpage.

frishi@lemmy.ml on 08 Mar 01:56 next collapse

That’s because it is.

oyzmo@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 05:10 collapse

and it is great 👌🏻- no reason to do everything yourself when you got tools to make it easier.

edit because all the downvotes: 😅 one only mentions the slightest positive thing about AI, and you get massive downvotes. Guess it is human nature to dislike change. Reminds me of a story my grandad told me on how all the taxi “drivers” (that then rode horse and carriage) hated those awful cars. Even mentioning cars had them spitting the ground, swearing. They were surely never going to change…

I think AI is great, and I think it gives us many new ways of doing (or not doing) things. Both positive and negative. And yes I do hate the energy consumption, computer prices etc that it has caused. But this is something that will fix itself given a little time 😊

drkt@scribe.disroot.org on 08 Mar 05:30 next collapse

If what you have to say isn’t important enough to write then it definitely isn’t important enough to read.

Nilz@sopuli.xyz on 08 Mar 10:55 collapse

Let Chatgpt read it for you

fluffy@feddit.org on 08 Mar 14:59 next collapse

I don’t want to argue if AI is good or bad.

I am using social media to read stuff from other human beings. I am not dumb and I can prompt LLMs myself if I have the need to.

frishi@lemmy.ml on 08 Mar 23:03 next collapse

Just saw this reply. I have to say that I find tools like Claude code indispensable in helping me through my workflow. I have used them enough to the point I know where I’m getting “divorced” from my thought process.

Once that happens, I feel like it no longer belongs to me. It’s someone else’s understanding of what I understood.

And that is my problem with AI generated anything. I am looking at a second-hand take of a second-hand ideation.

Joelk111@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 02:01 next collapse

I also love when I buy something off of Etsy believe it to be hand made, and it ends up being a dropshipped piece of garbage.

Cataphract@lemmy.ml on 09 Mar 16:03 collapse

Oh shit that edit is hilarious and you don’t even see the irony in it.

The Invention of “Jaywalking”

This is the story of how, in the 1920s, the auto industry chased people off the streets of America — by waging a brilliant psychological campaign. So the death toll was astounding. In cities of more than 25,000 people, cars were a leading cause of death by 1925. In the 1920s alone, car drivers killed over 200,000 Americans.

over 100 years later and some communities are still fighting for policies that allow an environment that fosters connection and value of life over powerful industry lobbyists trying to take over with their products (sound familiar?). But for sure, it will just fix itself if we just give it a little more time 😘

foggy@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 20:55 next collapse

Why this matters –

xelar@lemmy.ml on 09 Mar 09:31 next collapse

For more organic vel genuine design experience you can go to the main page. ;) slicker.me

Fmstrat@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 09:39 collapse

Yea, no links to any of the tools.

mrnobody@reddthat.com on 08 Mar 03:30 next collapse

I’m going against the new-age tech grain with this, but… I fucking despise docker anything. I can follow directions fine, it’s the troubleshooting that takes too much time. Sure, I’ll learn it eventually, but I do IT for a living I’m not coming home to waste my nights also doing this.

I’ve setup ZimaOS as a massive NAS with Yunohost on anything web-hosted/accessible. A. It’s easier with a graphical UI on stuff that’s packaged. B. Installing, updating, and most other services are pretty well automated/packaged to work really well. C. When i have the conversations with friends who aren’t tech savvy and are overwhelmed, I want to have firsthand knowledge of easy systems that’re basic, but powerful, and will help them dip their toes in freedom.

No Proxmox, unraid, no docker stuff, no nested VMs, no more complex setups. While I can learn to troubleshoot and memorize CLI, I’m too old and busy with family and work/commute to deal with problems at home lol. Too much tinkering has poised my wife off to the point she thinks all the self hosted stuff is unreliable. So, I deploy, test, vet basic issues, and if it’s too much time or setup involved, or dependencies on other apps, I’m out!!

Too many containers, too many fragile, partial service apps that just feel incomplete. Yuno and Zima (formerly casa) are great!! Others being tested too for fun but at snails pace lol.

jbloggs777@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Mar 08:40 next collapse

You sir, need an AI agent to maintain your self-hosting addiction and free you from the shackles of homelab responsibility. Automate the automations that maintain the automations. That’s the real endgame. /s

mrnobody@reddthat.com on 08 Mar 13:55 collapse

Hah, nice! Yeah maybe my self-hosted AI agent will “take my job” from me at home! Boom, genius

[deleted] on 08 Mar 15:11 next collapse

.

TrumpetX@programming.dev on 08 Mar 16:06 next collapse

I don’t disagree with you, but for a single server hosting multiple projects with differing system dependencies, docker is amazing. I’ve come around to using it for this practical reason.

Using docker over direct installation always feels like an unnecessary interface layer that just complicates things and introduces points of failure.

mrnobody@reddthat.com on 08 Mar 19:57 collapse

Docker makes sense for several applications, but there’s no intuition unless you’re good at memorizing commands/command lines. I can’t just open up an installer or fumble through it decently well enough to get up and running.

While a UI does add overhead, done well it’s not bad. But also, different people learn different styles, and for the extra bit of resources, I’m willing to sacrifice a few MB ram or CPU utilization for less tinker time. However, 20 years ago I didn’t mind spending that time learning stuff like that because I had a lot more time and way less commitments!

BigJohnnyHines@lemmy.ca on 09 Mar 11:48 collapse

I mean you’re memorizing a GUI as well. I don’t work in this field at all but docker compose files are pretty straightforward even for me. Took like 15 minutes to figure out and now it’s much quicker to get set up than any other option.

x00z@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 23:40 collapse

I had that same feeling until I actually learned it.

There’s close to no performance loss, it’s better for security, it makes it extremely easy for developers to ship something that just works, it allows easy updating, and much more.

I prefer docker over almost anything now, and it has made my life much easier.

osanna@lemmy.vg on 09 Mar 10:28 collapse

my SD card in my ras pi got corrupted recently. Thankfully I had my docker directory backed up. I pulled the docker directory, docker compose up -d and within about 20 minutes (not including downloading time) I was back up and running. Docker is a godsend. all my apps were exactly as they were before the corruption.

x00z@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 13:42 collapse

Not sure how your docker directory and services look like but the important thing is that you use remote volumes (or backed up ones) and that you backup your compose file and mounted config files of course. But besides that it’s indeed that easy.

Samsy@lemmy.ml on 08 Mar 09:38 next collapse

Can confirm, solid list for everyone. Only uptime kuma was replaced by beszel in my setup.

ki9@lemmy.gf4.pw on 09 Mar 00:42 next collapse

Why?

dditty@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Mar 04:34 collapse

I just learned about Uptime Kuma from this post and spent an hour spinning it up in a container, building my status page, and setting up monitoring for my services and game servers. It’s working great so far for me. What do you prefer about Beszel? I’m looking into it now and it looks great too

Samsy@lemmy.ml on 09 Mar 09:27 collapse

Uptime is really good for simple uptime, no worries it gets the job done. Beszel does more metrics, like a Prometheus+Graphana combination but simpler to set up.

kalpol@lemmy.ca on 08 Mar 14:10 next collapse

AI generation aside, not a bad list. I’d add searxng, and, opnsense/pfsense is really awesome to have with pfblocker, and then wireguard so you get all the benefits on the go.

moontorchy@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 10:37 collapse

Sadly SearXNG is plagued by captcha limit. Nothing I tried reliable works.

kalpol@lemmy.ca on 09 Mar 12:55 collapse

Not even running your own? Once you get past the Docker config you can have your own endpoint. Mine has never had any issues. As far as I understand it looks just like you yourself using the various sourced services, which it is.

GaMEChld@lemmy.world on 08 Mar 15:28 next collapse

I tried to setup some kinda self hosted AI image generation last month. I didn’t know wtf I was doing and accomplished nothing. Need to give it another try.

dogzilla@masto.deluma.biz on 08 Mar 15:33 collapse

@GaMEChld @selfhosted I kinda got this running and I’m here to tell you - unless you’re willing to babysit it through the constant changes and updates and dependency hell that creates, you might be better off just paying for api use at something like https://fal.ai

GaMEChld@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 06:57 collapse

Yeah, this is true. I just like to tinker. I already pay for one AI tool for like actual use as a tool in my life. The self hosted image thing attempt was like, hey my next home lab project, let’s see how easy it is to just get an image generated from scratch with nothing currently setup! The answer I found was, "you still need more training grasshopper. Much to learn. "

bytepursuits@programming.dev on 09 Mar 09:45 collapse

Opencloud instead of nextcloud

Cyber@feddit.uk on 09 Mar 18:03 next collapse

Or, just radicale and syncthing (if you don’t need a webUI)

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 09 Mar 18:13 collapse

Syncthing isn’t quite the same

I’d be more likely to use a SMB share

Cyber@feddit.uk on 09 Mar 18:17 collapse

True… could be both… or perhaps copyparty.

I was thinking more along the colab side, where syncthing is working on your laptop and mine to sync our files, rather than central storage, but fair point.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 09 Mar 18:12 collapse

I use owncloud