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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • Molecular0079@lemmy.worldtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDocker or podman?
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    9 months ago

    I use podman with the podman-docker compatibility layer and native docker-compose. Podman + podman-docker is a drop-in replacement for actual docker. You can run all the regular docker commands and it will work. If you run it as rootful, it behaves in exactly the same way. Docker-compose will work right on top of it.

    I prefer this over native Docker because I get the best of both worlds. All the tutorials and guides for Docker work just fine, but at the same time I can explore Podman’s rootless containers. Plus I enjoy it’s integration with Cockpit.





  • Thanks! Yeah i am already using a nginx reverse proxy in a docker container to expose my other docker containers so I was thinking two reverse proxies in a row might be too inefficient. Will definitely look into nftables. Nftable rules are temporary though right? What’s the correct way to automate running these rules on boot?


  • I was thinking the same thing regarding VPS and Wireguard. I use Wireguard personally to VPN into my home network for remote management, but I still haven’t looked up how to make a VPS as a proxy using it. I know they can join the same network and talk with each other but what’s the best way to route port 80 and 443 on the VPS to my server at home? Iptables?




  • I felt the exact same way. So many comments online told me that running Arch as a home NAS was insane, but after the Jupiter Broadcasting guys did it without much issue, I decided to give it a go and was pleasantly surprised. I think if most of your stuff is running in Docker and you have BTRFS snapshots for your root filesystem, the system’s pretty much bullet proof. The rolling updates also mean you’ll never have huge upgrade cycles that are a pain in the ass to migrate to. You’re always just dealing with small manageable fires instead of large complicated ones and that’s a plus.



  • OP might not be looking to make a full paid service considering he’s just doing this for friends and relatives.

    I get the sentiment though. I run a Jellyfin server that I share with a few friends and some of them have flat out told me that I should start charging for it. I refused because getting paid for it just sets up an expectation that it will be reliable and have all the stuff that they want. Personally, I don’t want that kind of pressure. I want to be able to tweak the server and install new things / updates without worrying about uptime.