Post 9tAo7mZRqsVkaRQ5Im by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
 (DIR) More posts by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
 (DIR) Post #9tAmBBlIRsHnfySTCa by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:05:01.463322Z
       
       2 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Amateur sysadmin discovery of the day: PeerTube and NextCloud both default to listening to port 9000. If you're going to run them on the same server, tweak one of those to listen to a different port.I learned this the hard way, and NextCloud kept freaking out about upstream interruptions through nginx.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAnyJEvXCJL0oIuJs by adelorenzo@red.dg74.pro
       2020-03-19T18:24:14Z
       
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       @sean how come your nextcloud server is running on port 9000?I did not see that on my setup
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAnyJq9Io5KsFidKy by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:25:02.052262Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @adelorenzo I'm not sure, it just seems to have defaulted to that?To be fair, I set up the NextCloud server first, prior to setting up PeerTube.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAo7mEt5K43YfnfFo by adelorenzo@red.dg74.pro
       2020-03-19T18:26:12Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @sean so you access your nextcloud server like this: http://ip:9000/ ?
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAo7mZRqsVkaRQ5Im by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:26:48.191761Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @adelorenzo Well, technically the nginx reverse proxy does that.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAoPTx7oQGi3Xvz0a by adelorenzo@red.dg74.pro
       2020-03-19T18:28:28Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @sean oh. well I use peertube and nextcloud on different machines. I only use nginx for peertube+mastodon+funkwhale. for everything else I use apache.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAoPV13rH0lM2mdma by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:29:59.956210Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @adelorenzo Yeah, that makes sense. Part of me even bringing up my setup stuff has been due to segmenting my services into two servers, after histroically running on just one for a very long time.It's a nice thought that my social services and my cloud storage can't interrupt one another, in the sense that my storage can keep on running for a long time.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAq1l84Uy3cHps0hs by Roland@framapiaf.org
       2020-03-19T18:31:29Z
       
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       @sean  Thank you !! I was about to play with them in the same server
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAq1lSdGWVJJbUQkq by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:48:04.813358Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Roland Overall, it's pretty painless! Just make sure to keep the ports separate, and make sure to check your folder permissions when installing NextCloud!I found that being mindful of both things helped me reduce all of the problems I was having. 😁
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAqMKujA3Yn3xRN3o by adelorenzo@red.dg74.pro
       2020-03-19T18:32:28Z
       
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       @sean totally agree. plus it's probably safer to separate them. my 'social'. server gets attacked all the time.
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAqML4IaTDTXdv0ym by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:51:47.583660Z
       
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       @adelorenzo Incidentally, I subscribed to a relay and had a setting to scrape every new person's first five posts for discovery purposes, and my social database filled up to like 75GB of junk. It took my entire server down, and all of my services screeched to a halt.Separation of concerns was a very valuable lesson that day. 😛
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAqphBfQeWSXXMb8y by adelorenzo@red.dg74.pro
       2020-03-19T18:56:35Z
       
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       @sean do you host your peertube server @home or a VPS provider?
       
 (DIR) Post #9tAqphcboU4bt5y78a by sean@social.deadsuperhero.com
       2020-03-19T18:57:07.729646Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @adelorenzo Currently, a VPS provider. I'd love to host at home, but bandwidth is a concern, and service out in the middle of nowhere is kind of terrible.