17

Hello.

I have home server with Home Assistant and small VPSes. I want to monitor one of the VPS in Home Assistant. I know that Glances could be the best choice here, but I cannot connect Glances wuth Home Assistant (I can access to web interface hosted directly on VPS, but I cannot connect it to Home Assistant). Is there a light alternative that I can quickly install on VPS server (ubuntu) and connect it with Home Assistant? I don't need a lot of metrics - only CPU, RAM, Load and maybe net traffic. I am open to standards like MQTT.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 3 points 6 months ago

Hedgedoc and Nextcloud Notes

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 1 points 6 months ago

I know some Docker, even I built my own images, but I just don't really like Docker.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 2 points 6 months ago

yeah, it is available in yunohost catalog https://apps.yunohost.org/app/overleaf and as Docker project.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

I would guess that you need to learn more about Docker usage in general, rather than just looking for a Docker Compose file

Yeah, I don't really like using Docker so I always go for easier option, but my friend uses Docker a lot and also had troubles with Overleaf.

Also, I’d like to point out that Overleaf’s hosting and pricing options are quite reasonable, especially if you’re working for a university or institution: https://www.overleaf.com/user/subscription/plans

I don't work for university, but I am a student that needs Latex. Overleaf free plan got really bad, even my thesis cannot be compiled now and Overleaf pricing isn't really great. Student pricing is only for annually subscription, so it is not ideal for me.

34

Do any of you self-host Overleaf? I know there is a Docker project, but from what I've heard it's not easy to install. The Yunohost version used to work but didn't support file upload, so that makes it bad too.

Have any of you successfully installed Overleaf with e.g. Docker and it works just fine? If so, could any of you share e.g. the Docker Compose file?

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 1 points 7 months ago
  • Home Assistant - Home automation and Smart home
  • Nextcloud - cloud, rss, tasks, kanban, online office suite, file sharing
  • Hedgedoc - markdown notes with easy publication
  • adguard - ad blocking software
  • Wallabag - Mozilla Pocket alternative
  • Jellyfin - multimedia server
[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 14 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Gitlab isn't really lightweight. It is cool, but not lightweight.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 2 points 9 months ago

Plus they always try to hide how stuff works behind the scenes so that day that upgrade script has a bug and fails, it’s hard to revert to a working stage.

Yunohost is creating backups for apps that are being updated. If update fails, it automatically reverts. Yes, it works, I checked.

those projects get eventually abandoned,

Yunohost is here for years now, and it does not look like it will be abondoned any time soon.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 2 points 9 months ago

I use a Yunohost for more about 1,5 year. I love for stability and simplicity but also openess for more pro users. I have my own backup solution that works great. Yunohost isn't popular but has big catalogue. Some of the apps are not present in catalogue, so I use Docker on second device to get them.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 5 points 9 months ago

Nextcloud is hard to install in manual way (even sometimes with Docker). As far I know, both Snap and Yunohost versions of Nextcloud are solid. I used Snap version on the cheapest Linode VPS, and it worked fine, especially when I doubled the SWAP to 1 GB. Now I use Yunohost version and I have only good time with it. It is super stable, fast and reliable. I used Nextcloud_ynh on HP 800 Mini G3 with i5-6500t and now on Asrock Mini PC with Ryzen 7 5700g. It is working just great.

If you don't want to use Nextcloud, you ca install Vikunja for kanban and tasks. For notes Hedgedoc can be great.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 1 points 11 months ago

I think you can go with Yunohost. It is easy to start selfhosting and exposing services to the web. I use it for more than a year, and it is super cool. Especially I love the fact, that it is easy for newcomers, but also it is opened for customisation for more pro users. Yunohost provides domain with ddns, Fail2Ban and tells which ports should be opened (80 and 443 is all you need, maybe another one for ssh). It also provides SSO for hiding services that do not use authentication.

[-] cichy1173@szmer.info 1 points 1 year ago

Wallabag! I am using it for more than a year and it is great

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cichy1173

joined 2 years ago