Hey, I was thinking about getting a VPS and hosting my own single user Lemmy instance. I am trying to think of other things to host. I already have some old hardware running unRAID with Plex, the *arrs, Kavita and home assistant. This is pushing my hardware to the limit but I still want to mess around with some self hosted things. Is there anything you would rather host on a rented server as opposed to a server sitting at your home?

  • Luca@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I use a VPS as a homelab gateway of sorts from the outside.

    Essentially, the VPS runs a Wireguard server that I connect to on my OPNSense Router. The VPS then reverse-proxies all incoming traffic through the tunnel to my homelab. All my DNS entries point to the VPS’s IP. This pretty much gives me a static IP, hides my real IP, and lets me do some light caching on the VPS. Kind of like a DIY cloudflare.

    I also run Uptime Kuma on the VPS, since it will continue to work if my local network is down.

    • Count Zero@lemmy.villa-straylight.social
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      1 year ago

      I do the same thing, except with openvpn. I need to upgrade it to wireguard. I ended up just masquerading the traffic opnsense router, but now everything looks like it is coming from the internal openvpn ip address.

      How are you identifying traffic that needs to go out the vpn, vs traffic that doesn’t, if you don’t mind sharing?

  • Ryan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Right or wrong, the line I draw is “will I need to use this if I’m away from my home network?” If the answer’s “yes,” then I go with a VPS. I’m sure lots of people are angrily pounding their keyboard telling me to use Tailscale, but I have no interest in hacking/tweaking my home network’s infrastructure.

    • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’m not angrily typing this but I’m curious why not Cloudflare Zero Trust Tunneling? You get built-in authentication and don’t need to worry about dynamic ips. It’s pretty game changing for me as far as self-hosting goes. It also doesn’t require you to change your network infra as long as the host has some sort of connection to the Internet.

      • Ryan@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This didn’t come to mind when I wrote my comment, but there’s also a “workflow friction” element. Most VPS providers have 1-click installs for the majority of the apps that I want/need to run, and I’m more of a developer than a sys admin. So I don’t really get anything out of figuring out how to do it, it just becomes another headache-inducing barrier to implement the stuff I need.

        • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Fair enough! Curious if you’ve tried out Portainer with Docker templates which feels pretty close to 1-click installs.

          • Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            I’ve been dicking around with Portrainer (and Yacht) in the last week, and in my short experience many of the templates are not really 1-click ready. Especially things that need persistent storage for settings or other things are often a mess with the preoconfigured volume paths. Also most things are not available as a template…

            • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Think it really depends on who you ask. 1-click can mean different things to other people but for me personally, nothing is truly 1-click. I’ve always had to configure something and I like the flexibility Docker gives while also allowing you to understand how things are wired up without going too deep.

          • Ryan@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The closest I’ve gotten to playing with Docker is Distrobox while trying out Fedora Silverblue or openSUSE MicroOS, where most of the Docker functions are abstracted away. If I need something on my LAN where Docker is the best/only option, then yeah, I’d definitely dig into it.

            My approach to tech in general is a combination of just-in-time learning & you-ain’t-gonna-need-it, so… [shrugs]

  • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    With Cloudflare Zero Trust there is absolutely no reason for me to host on a VPS anymore. I have old hardware that’s all been revived and bootstrapped with cloudflare. If you have good Internet and decent upload IO why not start there especially if it’s just for yourself.

    • Dusty@l.dustybeer.com
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      1 year ago

      Just a heads up, things like Jellyfin are against their TOS if you aren’t paying for streaming with them.

    • timespace@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Does Zero Trust allow you to run things on ports your ISP blocks, a la email/port 25?

      I run SimpleLogin on a VPS and if I can save $11/yr moving it home I’d definitely do it.

    • Count Zero@lemmy.villa-straylight.social
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      1 year ago

      Because I don’t want to be centralized around a single company and service. Any company can provide a vps endpoint. I can literally be set up again in a manner of minutes on another ip, vps, or vps provider.

      • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Out of all the battles for decentralization, the convenience Zero Trust provides is a trade-off I’m willing to make. I don’t see it being that much of an all-eggs-in-one-basket sort of deal since there’s no configuration done on any of my hosts. I simply install the tunnel with the token and that’s it. If there’s any reason I need to eject from Cloudflare I can simply pull the plug. Zero Trust feels more similar to relying on a nameserver with DNS management.

  • outcide@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Services that need a lot of storage, I host at home (Gonic, Jellyfin, Audiobook Shelf etc). Services where I care about availability when I’m away from home, I host on a VPS (Vaultwarden, Synapse, Wordpress, DokuWiki etc).

    • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Email is the only one I won’t touch, I just want it to be rock solid reliable. Unless someone can point me to a solution with fault tolerance and redundancy that’s easy to setup via Docker, I’m all ears :)

      • dmaes@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Selfhosting mail with redundancy is easy. Staying of blocklists and filtering spam out is less easy.

        There are some pretty good guides available online, and since dovecot and postfix are old and stable, years-old guides are still relevant. I’m on mobile though, so can’t immediately link any. (Almost all of them are standard deb/rpm+systemd based, no docker. But if you really want docker, building those containers is pretty easy, it’s just a package, a few configs and a service after all…)

        • BetterNotBigger@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, I’ll just stick with the mail services. When you start talking about all the complexity to maintain a spam-free environment their value starts to show. I’d rather have more time to self-host other things. I don’t think we realistically as a community self-host every single thing in our life. Although I can def see a case for someone who’s really interested in how email works and just absolutely wants to maintain all those things. I love how self-hosting has become really flexible.

      • TCB13@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Email isn’t easy end of story. Fault tolerance in email is easy, email servers keep emails queued for hours so even if your server is down you’ll get your emails later.

        You may also setup a backup MX server that will simply receive and hold all your incoming mail and deliver it to the main server when it becomes available. The ETRN setup I described here (https://lemmy.world/comment/406145) can be used to accomplish that.

  • Eddie@l.lucitt.com
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    1 year ago

    I would say this: If it’s just you accessing your server and nobody else, self-hosting is fine.

    When it comes to giving other people access to your server, no matter how close of friends you may be, I would recommend renting a cheap VPS online. The security benefits are just that much better.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    1 year ago

    For me that’d depend on traffic volume and availability needs, and who needs to access it. I have a dynamic IP, so things that are very public facing that needs some minimum availability like Lemmy I put on a real server, so I don’t miss on receiving content and go out of sync.

    Stuff that’s just for me and can tolerate occasional downtime I serve right from home. My IRC bouncer for example can be served from home just fine with a VPN or proxy. My DNS server and emails are on a hosted server. Some of my websites can be served locally, some I serve from the hosted server.

    Some stuff I have hybrid setups, like my hosted server can serve files from my local server but will cache them to reduce load on my ISP. If my home server is down, it can return a 502 error with a friendly message indicating to the user to try again later, my home server being a VM on my Threadripper desktop that I sometimes turn off when I need the horsepower for something else.

    Ultimately an availability needs and cost management deal. Rented servers are expensive, so I try to keep the footprint to a minimum. Ephemeral stuff or stuff only I or a handful of friends need, that can live on my desktop. Like, worst case my Minecraft server is down and someone has to message me on IRC to ask me to turn it on so they can play a bit. I don’t need to pay for a beefy VPS to run that 24/7, but I do pay for a $5 VPS to host my DNS and emails and basic web server because those services need to be up 24/7 so I get my emails, especially for work.

  • Greg Clarke@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    SearXNG and nginx (tunneled to my home server with tailscale so I don’t need to expose my home network for any other services I wasn’t too run)

  • i_lost_my_bagel@seriously.iamincredibly.gay
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    1 year ago

    I have my monitoring software running on my VPS so that if my server goes down for whatever reason I can still look at what might’ve caused it to go down. I also have Authentik running on it because I need my authentication system running to be able to login to said monitoring software. Lastly I have Mastodon on my VPS because the internet at my parents house doesn’t have the upload bandwidth for it.

    I have all of this running on Oracle Cloud Free Tier. I don’t trust oracle in the slightest but I’m a broke college student so I take what I can get.

  • colonial@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Because my university’s network is cringe, I’m unfortunately forced to run everything on a VPS.

    This comes with a financial cost, and I have to carefully ration my computing power, but it does have some upsides - enough that I honestly prefer it now.

    • It keeps my desktop sealed away from the wilds of the open Internet. Obviously the risk isn’t that great, but since every service you run represents a potential security hole… it’s nice to have a “disposable” solution like a VPS.
    • I don’t have to worry about getting a static IP or using a service like Tailscale in order to talk to my services when away. All I have to do is point my Cloudflare DNS records at my VPS.
    • Better uptime. I used to host my blog on my desktop (!) which meant it would go down whenever I rebooted/lost connection/whatever. My VPS restarts once a month to apply updates and is always-on otherwise.
  • Dusty@l.dustybeer.com
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    1 year ago

    Lemmy, Matrix, Teddit, Gitea, Opengist, RSSBridge, Freshrss are all things I have on my vps’

  • pascal@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Since I have a good internet connection now and have a separate room where I can store my machines, I prefer to host everything at home, especially stuff that need a lot of storage, because VPS with big disks demand big moneys.

    What I will always host on a VPS is the mail. Setting up a mail server at home is a lost challenge since 99% of the internet providers will not give you a static IP and a reverse DNS, which is mandatory if you don’t want your mail going always to the SPAM folder.