[HN Gopher] Tipi - A personal homeserver for everyone
___________________________________________________________________
Tipi - A personal homeserver for everyone
Author : thunderbong
Score : 279 points
Date : 2022-09-09 04:35 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (github.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (github.com)
| wyldfire wrote:
| I have now stumbled onto "libreddit" [1].
|
| > cloud Light: no JavaScript, no ads, no tracking, no bloat
|
| I have been an addicted reddit user since before they had user
| accounts. I never had any desire to block reddit ads until the
| last ~6-12 months or so when it would autoplay ads when I scroll.
| I have "no thumbnails" so it doesn't show me the ad other than a
| line of text or so. I have "old" reddit enabled on my account --
| this works for desktop. And now I've started using the explicit
| "old.reddit.com" on mobile. But I would prefer mobile-optimized
| reddit without audio ads. I will probably give libreddit a try.
|
| [1] https://github.com/spikecodes/libreddit
|
| EDIT: of course, since it's privacy focused I can't login to my
| account and reddit is unbearable if you try and use it without
| your account to curate the subreddits. Whoops, scratch that idea!
| jneumann004 wrote:
| With libressit you can subscribe to subreddits. It saves to
| your browsers localhost (just like their settings), nothing is
| sent to their server.
| grimgrin wrote:
| Just bookmark a multireddit url, ala:
| https://teddit.net/r/mud+dcss+cataclysmdda (in this thread I
| show you teddit, another privacy focused frontend)
|
| teddit does actually have a subscription concept, accountless,
| but in general the multireddit solution would work for your
| libreddit example
|
| https://teddit.net/about Teddit is a free and
| open source alternative Reddit front-end focused on privacy.
| Teddit doesn't require you to have JavaScript enabled in your
| browser. The source is available on Codeberg at
| https://codeberg.org/teddit/teddit. No JavaScript
| or ads All requests go through the backend, client
| never talks to Reddit Prevents Reddit from tracking
| your IP or JavaScript fingerprint Lightweight (teddit
| frontpage: ~30 HTTP requests with ~270 KB of data downloaded
| vs. Reddit frontpage: ~190 HTTP requests with ~24 MB)
| mawise wrote:
| You can even aubscribe to an rss feed of a subreddit, I think
| each has a rel="alternate" link to the feed url
| visiblink wrote:
| On an Android device, Slide allows you to add subreddits
| without logging in. I follow several subreddits but have no
| account. I don't see any ads.
|
| Go to the hamburger menu > settings > manage your subreddits.
|
| Another mobile option is i.reddit.com.
| entropie wrote:
| Did you know there is a rss feed for every subreddit?
|
| https://www.reddit.com/wiki/rss
| visiblink wrote:
| Yes, but if you want to read the comments associated with a
| post, the link takes you right back to the regular reddit
| site.
| entropie wrote:
| You can also read comments via rss, but I see that might
| just be to much effort.
| visiblink wrote:
| I think so too. IIRC, you'd have to add a new feed for
| each thread.
| bityard wrote:
| RedReader is also a great choice on Android, I wish there was
| a native desktop version of it.
| thekingshorses wrote:
| You can use my personal reddit site. https://reddit.premii.com
|
| It has JS. Optimized for mobile. No tracking from my side.
|
| Open in congnito for NSFW subreddits. Enable pictures/NSFW mode
| to load all pictures in line. Close it when you are done.
| sorenjan wrote:
| I find that old.reddit.com is ok on desktop (with uBlock
| origin), and for mobile there's several third party apps that
| make for a better experience than a website. I personally like
| "Relay for reddit".
| whalesalad wrote:
| Apollo is a perfect example of a 10/10 iOS app.
| nebul wrote:
| > mobile-optimized reddit without audio ads
|
| I don't know if you've tried it already, but
| https://i.reddit.com might fit the bill.
| kornhole wrote:
| Infinity is found in F-droid store.
| Karrot_Kream wrote:
| I never understood why so many of these Reddit viewers have no
| JS in them (well it's generally a cultural preference among a
| certain crowd, but still feels irrational.) I usually open a
| forum like Reddit and have it open all day, I'd be fine with
| loading a SPA and having it make background requests to fetch
| API output and render them in page and give nice functionality,
| as long as the code is open and there's no ads. I've been
| building this myself because both Libreddit and Teddit don't
| use JS.
| PontifexMinimus wrote:
| How does this compare with Umbrel (https://umbrel.com/) which
| appears to be a similar project?
| ocdtrekkie wrote:
| Umbrel isn't open source, for one, and is heavily crypto
| focused, as it started as a Bitcoin miner and expanded out into
| being a selfhosting platform.
|
| Otherwise, pretty similar, it's Docker plus fancy glue. :)
| PontifexMinimus wrote:
| Would it make sense to merge the 2 projects, given that there
| is considerable overlap?
| ocdtrekkie wrote:
| From my experience everyone who makes their own has some
| reason they want it done their way. While I'd like to see
| more selfhosting platforms collaborate, I think it's also
| good we don't have a strong monoculture in the space.
| electrona wrote:
| 'OpenMediaVault + Portainer + Docker Compose' is my favourite
| setup.
| [deleted]
| kevincox wrote:
| There UI is frustrating to use because none of the links are
| actually <a> tags but JS divs. It makes it hard to open links in
| new tabs or copy them.
| wnscooke wrote:
| Not a fan of the name, and the image they use isn't _even_ a
| tipi.
| dudeinjapan wrote:
| It comes from the Lakota language.
| mr_woozy wrote:
| chrismorgan wrote:
| In their title, they use the character U+26FA TENT, which could
| be depicted as any kind of tent. In the body, GitHub replaces
| emoji with images for some reason, in this case a particularly
| weird thing that isn't even obviously a _tent_. (I presume this
| is what you're remarking on.)
|
| The screenshot shows what I presume is actually the logo, which
| is a tipi.
| croes wrote:
| Do you see something different than I do? I see a typical
| orange two-man tent
| sakras wrote:
| I feel bad that whenever I read the name I think "I AM
| CORNHOLIO, I NEED TIPI FOR MY BUNGHOLE"...
| croes wrote:
| Just a github issue. Here it's a tipi
| solarkraft wrote:
| I've seen many of these, but none that were all that promising.
| All I'm looking for is a thin layer over docker-compose - maybe
| this is that.
| singhrac wrote:
| Is there a reason it needs to be started as root? In similar
| self-hosted apps I've run into many issues from having scripts
| run as root. Often the individual apps don't play nicely enough
| with each other.
|
| Otherwise it looks interesting, I like the UI and the demo
| instance shows the UX well.
| Terretta wrote:
| Agree, I feel as though it should, itself, be a container, that
| manages a docker-compose file, then manages the apps using
| appropriate docker-compose commands. All tested against podman
| as well.
|
| Then the tool could be used readily on the many docker
| appliances (Synology, Qnap, etc.).
| feet wrote:
| My guess would be docker is the reason
| hatware wrote:
| You don't need to run a script with sudo to use docker. This
| is targeted at tech-agnostic users, really odd misalignment
| of goals to ask folks who don't know what they're doing to
| 'sudo run.sh'.
| feet wrote:
| Standard docker installation requires sudo to start
| containers
| unixhero wrote:
| Wohey, this seems like a freebie version of https://cloudron.io
| of which I really love. Can't wait to run Tipi at home. Cloudron
| will still run my businesses which is has been with incredible
| stability for 3 years, that includes email (sic). Not related to
| cldrn only a happy customer and impressed.
| kinnth wrote:
| i've always wanted to get my homeserver setup to really work for
| sabnzb/xbmc/kodi and all video files but it ALWAYS has never
| turned out quite right. Theres always some plugin or unzip that
| screws it up.
|
| This looks good but still doesn't look proper home media server
| enabled.
| chirau wrote:
| ELI5: What does a homeserver allow me to do?
|
| I am confused as what homeservers are. It seems this one is
| allowing me to run some apps. Does this mean I would otherwise
| not be able to use these apps if I did not have a homeserver?
| Also is there a difference between a homeserver and localhost?
| kornhole wrote:
| There is a saying that the cloud is just somebody else's
| computer, but with your own server, it can be your computer.
| You always need to trust the admin or company of any
| server/cloud service you use to not abuse you in some way, but
| if you are the admin, you only need to trust yourself.
|
| Some of these server apps are made available to others by hosts
| of servers. The more people hosting servers for their friends
| and family, the less we all rely on the big central services.
|
| I will let you lookup the definition of localhost. You will
| need to learn some networking if you decide to host your own
| services, and I encourage you to do so. It is fun and
| empowering.
| brudgers wrote:
| http://localhost a loopback address for network addressing.
|
| It means send this from my network connection to my network
| connection.
|
| This homeserver is kind of like a smartphone loaded with
| default apps (and kinda not like that, too).
|
| What I mean is that this homeserver is essentially a bunch of
| apps and a platform for running those apps all bundled together
| to make setup easier.
|
| You can setup and run all the same apps yourself if you want,
| but it might be a lot of melodrama for little, no, or negative
| advantage (or it might not).
|
| The same applies to the homeserver itself. It might not make
| your life easier and might make it worse.
|
| Which is to say it might not be for you -- it isn't for me,
| because it seems like a bit of bother to address things I don't
| really care about.
|
| But it might be perfect for other people anyway.
| arjvik wrote:
| I think your question is what does Tipi do?
|
| Essentially, it's a single-click installer and management
| interface for a bunch of apps that you might want on your home
| server. Tipi isn't a "homeserver" itself, but it's goal is to
| let you turn any old computer (even if it's somebody's Windows
| desktop while they're not heavily using it) into a home server
| without needing server OS administration or related expertise.
|
| Admittedly, a better title is "Tipi - a personal homeserver
| manager for everyone." But the idea behind the current title
| seems to be that it enables everyone--regardless of hardware
| and expertise--to run a homeserver.
| turtleyacht wrote:
| A home server is a separate machine from your main computer. It
| may not be connected to a monitor, or it may be a used laptop
| no one sits at. But it lives on your network at home.
|
| A server provides software _services_. Your router could be
| considered a server: it helps your wifi devices get online and
| manages the Internet connection.
|
| Tipi is an example of a pre-configured router, but as a server
| for certain apps: by using it, you don't have to set it up
| yourself. It comes with software that you can use, already
| available, installed, and configured. But it is a server too--
| and running in your home, it is a "homeserver."
|
| You could likely use those same apps without Tipi, with varying
| amounts of time spent configuring something similar.
|
| > Also is there a difference between a homeserver and
| localhost?
|
| Yes, it would be different. If Tipi is running on a separate
| machine (the server), its localhost may load some kind of web
| control panel. However, when you visit localhost on your
| personal machine, if a web server is not running, the browser
| may just load an error page.
|
| See this nearby comment for some advantages of running your own
| server(s) at home:
| https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32794629
| cma wrote:
| It is just a server in your home. Cloud hosts will all give
| access to your data to law enforcement without any warrant, so
| if you host a private message board with friends where you talk
| about smoking weed or getting an abortion it isn't so private
| and you can get arrested without them ever going through
| getting a warrant with any kind of probable cause legal
| procedures.
|
| In your home you are protected (this is why Hillary's email
| server was self-hosted, to get the same rights against
| unreasonable search and seizure you get with US Mail), on the
| cloud the third-party doctrine rules and they can just give out
| your private data at any time.
|
| (some providers have now said they won't give it out for
| requests about people seeking abortion, but that could end up
| in there when they search it based on a request about something
| else, and I don't know if any put the restriction on sharing
| abortion stuff with law enforcement in their actual legal
| agreements)
| micheljansen wrote:
| Really liking the UI design. For the (presumed) target audience a
| Raspberry Pi image would also be a nice way to get started.
| mikae1 wrote:
| _Exactly_ what I was researching only a few weeks ago. Did not
| find anything satisfactory. This looks very promising.
| mr_woozy wrote:
| ignoramous wrote:
| From their apps repo, https://github.com/meienberger/runtipi-
| appstore/blob/c86641b...: _Install the Syncthing app on your
| Umbrel and pair it with the Syncthing app on your phone or
| computer for a self hosted peer-to-peer backup solution._
|
| I hope meienberger here hasn't plagiarized source-available
| project named Umbrel.
|
| The comments in this file seems _similar_ too:
|
| https://github.com/getumbrel/umbrel-apps/blob/eb0f119df8ed89...
|
| https://github.com/meienberger/runtipi-appstore/blob/c86641b...
| X6S1x6Okd1st wrote:
| Judging by Meienberger's license they could have forked it, but
| they had to keep the license
| squarefoot wrote:
| > Install the Syncthing app on your Umbrel and pair it with the
| Syncthing app on your phone or computer for a self hosted peer-
| to-peer backup solution.
|
| This text is identical word for word in the Syncthing app file
| at the Umbrel repo.
|
| https://github.com/getumbrel/umbrel-apps/blob/master/syncthi...
| chromatin wrote:
| Kinda looks like it
| diptanu wrote:
| Can this support Cal.com in the future?
| https://github.com/calcom/cal.com
| mthld wrote:
| https://yunohost.org is a much more mature project, with a larger
| app ecosystem. Give it a try, you won't be disappointed.
| benou wrote:
| I highly recommend yunohost. I am using it since a few years,
| after a lot of years of maintaining my own "classic" mail + web
| server by hand [1].
|
| I deploy it in an unprivileged LXC container [2] and went
| through several upgrades already. It really worked great for
| me.
|
| [1] https://benou.fr/www/ben/14-years-of-self-hosting.html [2]
| https://github.com/bganne/yunohost
| bitxbitxbitcoin wrote:
| Is that read: "Why You No Host? dot org"
| tomcam wrote:
| A visit to the home page will give you the delightful answer
| layer8 wrote:
| Indeed it is:
| https://yunohost.org/user/images/dude_yunohost.jpg
| omgwtf1000 wrote:
| Love it!
| jacooper wrote:
| It isnt based on docker, so it heavily depends on unofficial
| packages.
| indigodaddy wrote:
| Yep and thusly also turns into somewhat of a spaghetti
| monster.
| julianlam wrote:
| I hate how it's just a drive-by criticism now that something
| isn't using Docker.
|
| You know we weren't in the dark ages before Docker, right?
| piaste wrote:
| Not the OP, but while I would have no problem using an
| orchestrator based on a different common packaging than
| Docker (e.g. RPM or AppImage), I would be very hesitant to
| use one that needs its own bespoke packaging. Because
| that's maintenance work and I would need to feel confident
| that someone will keep packaging future app updates.
| conception wrote:
| Its the technobro version of "I have to install this
| instead of just downloading it off the app store?? Nah
| brah."
| Karunamon wrote:
| Comparatively speaking, going back to how we deployed
| applications 10 years ago is the dark ages. Having
| everything in containers is objectively easier both from a
| getting started and ongoing maintenance standpoint.
|
| Now: making minimal edits to a provided compose file for
| initial configuration, run command to spin up everything
| application needs, and you're done.
|
| Then: install application package onto system (best: from
| developer package source/better: from old version in
| operating system repo/worst: by compiling from source after
| locating all dependencies and running make install),
| setting up any necessary databases or storage by hand,
| editing configuration files that are hopefully in /etc if
| the developer thinks the FHS is something to be honored,
| setting up init scripts/unit files so the application
| starts up in the environment it wants and when you want,
| and finally running the command which starts the
| application (which is probably distro specific).
|
| And that's not even getting into updates. I'll take pulling
| the latest version of the container and restarting over app
| specific update instructions any day of the week. Life is
| too short for putting up with that kind of minutia.
| sanitycheck wrote:
| I played with YunoHost a bit yesterday, and within a couple
| of hours hit a situation where a misbehaving application
| froze the whole thing requiring a reboot. That's after
| spending longer than I wanted figuring out why the ISO
| always locked up mid-install, starting with Debian 11 +
| nonfree drivers instead and installing Yuno on top.
|
| Really liked the concept, not the execution so much as it
| turns out.
|
| Thinking of taking a look at CapRover next, which is docker
| based. This Tipi thing might be worth a go too, though
| maybe when it's a bit more mature.
| wnscooke wrote:
| You'll like some of the apps available on CapRover, like
| PenPot. I've used CR several times just for a few apps
| they supply.
| nicoco wrote:
| Came here looking for this reference. A comparison table with
| existing similar projects would be nice.
| blfr wrote:
| Speaking of a multipurpose home server, how do you guys
| compartmentalize it so that one faulty or vulnerable app doesn't
| take the whole thing down?
|
| Docker/containers used to not be hardened enough. Are they now?
|
| Virtualization/VMs used to be the answer but it adds both
| performance and management overhead. Is there a good system here?
|
| Or something else entirely? Like old school separate users.
| kayson wrote:
| Docker is the de-facto standard in the community now (and, to a
| lesser extent, alternatives like LXC or podman). The daemon
| should be run rootless if possible, or the containers rootless
| if not.
|
| You can still use VMs, and some use that as an additional layer
| of isolation because they're virtualizing anyways (performance
| overhead is really negligible).
|
| I've been self-hosting on my home server for at least 5 years
| now, and I think I've only seen two or three vulnerabilities
| across all the services I know about, none of which were ever
| really exploitable.
| scrozart wrote:
| Have you tried using kubernetes to manage your containers?
| Wondering if the extra level of complexity is worth it for a
| home server.
| khimaros wrote:
| it isn't
| bongobingo1 wrote:
| Kubernetes alone recommends at least 1gb of ram just for
| itself IIRC, so that may push it out of some home servers
| such as RPIs or smaller nucs depending on the actual
| service load.
| robertlagrant wrote:
| K3s is half that. Still quite a lot, but not as much!
| chromatin wrote:
| Kubernetes is 1000% overkill for a home server, but
| Hashicorp Nomad is very manageable. It runs all my Docker
| containers at home.
| vineyardmike wrote:
| 100% not worth it. If you need multi-host for some reason
| (beyond "I want it" - and you don't) then try docker swarm.
|
| It's your home environment. You want it to be easy. You
| want to use the tools you run not maintain them. If you
| want to learn k8 for professional growth, learn it
| separately from a home server.
|
| Your home server can be more pet than cattle.
| enos_feedler wrote:
| And yet my iphone is cattle. Treating any machine like a
| pet seems like a recipe for disaster.
| zrail wrote:
| Proxmox + Proxmox Backup Server + external storage (I use
| my NAS) means I don't really have to worry about
| disaster, as such, because every VM is backed up nightly.
| VMs and the hypervisor can all be pets and I can just
| restore a backup if something happens.
| Karrot_Kream wrote:
| If you're doing something for a hobby, treat it like the
| special snowflake it is to you. If you're doing something
| just to get things done, treat it like the utility it is.
| If you're at home playing around with machines in a
| homelab, feel free to baby your servers.
|
| As far as disaster is concerned, it's not that difficult
| to install software that really needs minimal
| maintenance. But it comes down to what you want out of
| the software and hardware that you run.
| jyrkesh wrote:
| I went with Docker Swarm on the same advice from someone
| else, and tbh, it's unnecessary overhead as well. And at
| least on RPis, it's very fragile and not as self-healing
| as I'd hope it to be. My stacks are well
| compartmentalized, but weird database locks will still
| happen, or the swarm will just become unreachable, and I
| gotta go power-cycle a node or two to get things back up
| again. (I mean, we're talking once every few weeks or
| something, but still not okay.)
|
| I've been moving workloads to an old gaming rig running
| NixOS with varying levels of isolation (some containers,
| but really just good user/group/permissions management),
| and it runs super well.
|
| Of course, you could do the same with just Docker Compose
| and no Swarm, and I think you'd still be better off than
| using Swarm.
| adra wrote:
| I've dabbled, but really docker is way easier than k8s uses
| until you start moving into multi-server workloads
| onehair wrote:
| I use docker containers with separate dedicated users with just
| enough permissions for their purpose. For example my media
| server user can't touch anything other than the media files and
| isn't part of sudo.
| xxpor wrote:
| I use proxmox, which is more or less a VM and workflow manager
| on top of KVM.
|
| The overhead on something like an RPi would be ridiculous, but
| on modern x86 hardware with an IOMMU (VT-d in Intel speak, AMD-
| Vi for AMD), the overhead of passing through HW is, for homelab
| purposes, essentially 0. A lot more expensive, but the
| organization and extensibility is well worth it.
|
| I have anything that I expose directly to the internet on a
| separate VM from my "internal" services. If I were super
| paranoid, I'd expose them to separate VLANs, and then use my FW
| to control network traffic. The Intel 82599 can enforce
| different vlans on different VFs with SR-IOV.
|
| I have a VM that runs flatcar for docker for things that are
| too hard to set up otherwise, but I vastly prefer NixOS for
| most things.
| blibble wrote:
| it seems to be almost impossible to find a machine that is
| both low power and also supports SR-IOV ARI (more than 8 VFs)
|
| and the best reason to use SR-IOV with networking is you
| completely avoid the awfulness that is the Linux
| bridging/firewalling stack
| float4 wrote:
| > If I were super paranoid, I'd expose them to separate
| VLANs, and then use my FW to control network traffic
|
| This is exactly what I did initially, but it was indeed a bit
| of a pain to manage. Eventually I went with something in
| between, by first compartmentalizing services and then
| putting them in separate VMs with separate VLANs:
|
| 0. Router / FW.
|
| 1. WireGuard / reverse proxy.
|
| 2. Personal, e.g. file storage, backups.
|
| 3. Hosting. My personal site is reverse proxied through
| Cloudflare and only their IP ranges are whitelisted.
|
| 4. Compute, i.e. stuff I want to compile / develop / run on
| my server. Handy if I want to run a heavy simulation
| overnight or need more disk space / RAM / CPU power than my
| M1 MB Air has available.
|
| 5. Services. This runs many small tools / services that don't
| need access to my RAID pool or anything like that. If this
| gets infected I wouldn't really care.
|
| 6. VPN. This VM can only access the internet through a VPN.
| Doesn't have anything installed ATM, but has been used in the
| past for urlwatch and torrenting.
|
| 7. Test. This is where I try out new software before actually
| installing it on the correct VM. Once I've concluded testing
| I rollback this VM to a clean install.
|
| It takes a weekend to install Proxmox and set up the VMs /
| VLANs, but after that it easy to use.
| lostlogin wrote:
| Another option is the free tier of ESXi. It works well, but
| having tested Proxmox recently, I really liked it.
| the_third_wave wrote:
| ProxMox running containers wherever possible - which is nearly
| everywhere except for when you need to run different OSs
| (Windows, Android, etc.). Even the router runs in a container
| with all the other containers connecting to it through bridges.
| These bridges are assigned VLANs which are brought out tagged
| on one of the Ethernet ports which connects to a managed switch
| which takes care of untagging to specific ports and/or trunking
| VLANs to the different buildings on the farm.
| melony wrote:
| I miss sandstorm.
| ocdtrekkie wrote:
| It's still here and we're still working on it! It's 300th
| release just rolled out. I'm personally working on packaging
| three different apps right now.
| ryukafalz wrote:
| I still use Sandstorm! Some of the apps are a bit outdated
| but the security model means that mostly doesn't matter.
|
| The WordPress Sandstorm app is slow enough at rebuilding the
| static side of our large site that I've been meaning to try
| forking it or building my own though. But Sandstorm itself
| has been great.
| dontlaugh wrote:
| I use Unraid, which manages storage for you and lets you run
| Docker containers for apps.
| Spivak wrote:
| Containers are fine for this unless you reach the popularity
| where you are attracting dedicated attackers.
|
| Use userns-remap. Run the docker daemon rootless if you want
| but don't stress about it. Set up auth to the docker socket.
| Don't bother with running the processes in the container as not
| uid 0, with remap it's effort for little gain.
|
| Now breaking containment means having a local privesc on your
| Linux distro or breaking the auth on the docker socket. Like
| that's plenty for drive by attackers.
| sekh60 wrote:
| I use one VM per component. The overhead is pretty minimal and
| VMs I think are still more secure than containers. Maybe I am
| just a tech dinosaur though. I run my VMs on OpenStack for the
| networking flexibility, and use Ceph for block and file system.
| NexRebular wrote:
| SmartOS with zones. Mostly native but some LX thrown in for too
| linux-specific software.
| LaputanMachine wrote:
| I create a separate user for each app, and use the systemd exec
| configuration [1] for sandboxing [2]. Some apps only get read-
| only access to their own files, and no Internet access, for
| example (along with many other restrictions). I have some
| systemd drop-in units that I frequently reuse.
|
| For standard services, I use Apparmor with the default
| `apparmor-profiles`, as well as fail2ban with some additional
| firewall rules.
|
| [1]: https://man.archlinux.org/man/systemd.exec.5
|
| [2]:
| https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/User:NetSysFire/systemd_san...
| ocdtrekkie wrote:
| You're looking for Sandstorm containers. They are much more
| hardened and purpose-built for self-hosting. To my knowledge,
| nobody's ever reported a container escape that affects
| Sandstorm.
| indigodaddy wrote:
| Will this work on ARM? Wanted to try this on Oracle Cloud
| ed25519FUUU wrote:
| Nothing in here for email sadly. I think we're giving up on self-
| hosted email.
| jmconfuzeus wrote:
| I run my own email server with Postfix, Dovecot, Rspamd,
| Roundcube webmail, and a Sqlite database.
|
| I use it for my personal mail along with some clients.
|
| It was quite easy to setup by following this guide:
| https://workaround.org/ispmail/buster/.
|
| There's also an ansible playbook by the author to automate all
| of that for you.
|
| Other solid solutions include Mail-in-a-box and Mailcow.
| DuckDuckGo them to learn more.
|
| A lot of people say that you shouldn't waste your precious time
| hosting email. Then, these same people won't hesitate to spend
| countless hours browsing Pornhub or Netflix and playing video
| games.
|
| Forget about these losers and roll your own email for fun. The
| last thing you want is to be on your deathbed regretting not
| having had your own personal mail server.
| unstatusthequo wrote:
| Yes, life is too precious to self host email. Get a reasonably
| secure provider and don't put super sensitive information in
| it. Better channels for that type of information anyway.
| mfashby wrote:
| maddy.email could be a good addition
| djbusby wrote:
| I've recently found mxroute.com , next best thing to self
| hosted
| lordfosco wrote:
| Honestly, way better than self hosting if you're not an
| absolute expert in that field. I am a customer for years and
| Jarland is a legend when it comes to superb email delivery.
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