I recently discovered yunohost, a French project for easy selfhosting. Does anyone have experience with that?

  • @gkaklas@lemmy.zip
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    12 days ago

    Yes, it’s pretty good! I’m a DevOps engineer, and have experience with Ansible, Docker, etc, but I just couldn’t find time to deploy services the best way that I wanted™ for my personal server

    So, even though it e.g. doesn’t even use Docker, yunohost really helped me start using the many services I wanted/needed, which otherwise might take e.g. a few hours to a couple of days for each of them to research and configure

    So I have one “production” yunohost server, one “testing” yunohost server to test services that I don’t know if I’ll use yet (and I wouldn’t want them to interfere with production e.g. by using too many resources)

    and one server without yunohost for mailu, Docker, traefik, etc, which I can use to deploy services the correct way™ as I figure out the services that I really use and find the time to migrate them one-by-one

    Even when using yunohost, there are so many things to do after deploying a service (e.g. DNS, configure the server and client software), so it has been really useful to save time when deploying and configuring.

    I think it gets you ~80% there, makes self-hosting accessible to everyone, and helps democratize the Internet a bit 💚 It’s more important to have many people setting up e.g. Immich or Nextcloud for their family photos, than only a few Linux people being able to learn how to do it perfectly (Docker/kubernetes high availability, reverse proxies, etc) and have everyone else to need to resort to using centralized services

    • @WhiteHotaru@feddit.orgOP
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      210 days ago

      I think time efficiency and stability are the two traits I am looking for. Looks like yunohost can offer those.

  • @Marty_TF@lemmy.zip
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    12 days ago

    not myself, but my stepdad tried it with 2 decades of IT and linux sysadmin experience.

    basically, it is great if you want to host like 2 or 3 standalone services on a pi to get into understanding how the basics of selfhosting work, but for homelabs and deep customization, you’re better off with docker compose on debian/ubuntu server.

  • @RagingHungryPanda@lemm.ee
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    1612 days ago

    Elena Rossini (@_elena@mastodon.social) is a journalist who’s gotten into the fediverse and self hosting with Yuno Host. She’s documented it on her blog. It’s worked out really well for her.

  • @Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1212 days ago

    I’ve used it when I started out and it’s good, I can recommend it if you just want something where you can hit install and it works. I just use docker containers now though because I have more experience and it allows to set everything up exactly how I want.

    • @whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      512 days ago

      Same process here, started with yunojost and now using docker directly. Still Yunohost got me into self-hosting when I didn’t know anything about it, definitely recommended for starting out.

  • @philpo@feddit.org
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    11 days ago

    Yunohost is okayish. Some apps sadly are badly maintained and therefore upgraded with more delay than I considered acceptable (but that has improved afaik)and integration into a single “look and feel” is a bit lacking. Nevertheless it’s solid in the end.

    If you are willing to pay something Cloudron may be an alternative for you as well - very well maintained product, good support team and rock solid from my experience - and it’s a non-US/non-China company. (German to be exact) But it costs money for more than 2 applications. I nevertheless went with them - I don’t self host as a hobby, I self-host because I want shit to work. Between job and family I have no time to fiddle around with things and keep everything updated on a short notice. I have project where I can do that, but they are not something my family or myself depend on. (And they integrate nicely with Cloudron as you can add “custom” Apps/use it as a proxy and OpenID Provider)

    • @WhiteHotaru@feddit.orgOP
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      110 days ago

      Nice! I live in Germany and your situation looks similar to mine. I started with Linux 20 years ago and bought a Synology about a year ago. I have my most essential services (backup, photos, Media server and paperless) running on that machine in my local network. I started with a small VPS and a blog after this, to see if I could handle managing a server. It went well.

      We have a small cabin we share with others and I wanted to set up some basic services like a calendar. Went across a post about yunohost and gave it a try.

      • @philpo@feddit.org
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        310 days ago

        Have a look at Cloudron as well,then. It’s free for 2 Apps and Johannes (the founder) is a fairly nice guy from Bavaria.

        Anyway,yeah. I have a different post here what I self host (which doesn’t even include everything…) so it’s a slippery slope.

  • @koala@programming.dev
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    812 days ago

    I did some testing with it, because I believe more people should be able to self-host.

    I like how it is implemented. It has good support for email. Many apps support SSO.

    The critical part to me is how up-to-date applications are. I started a small project to automate version tracking, check out:

    https://alexpdp7.github.io/selfhostwatch/app/nextcloud.html

    ; so for example, the YunoHost Nextcloud app does not lag much behind upstream. My intention with this is to let people see that they have been updating Nextcloud dilligently for two years; they might pull the plug tomorrow, but it’s a good track record.

    (I’d like to add scrapers to other projects similar to YunoHost. My ultimate goal would be to be able to choose a list of apps you’d like to self-host, and see which projects like YunoHost carry the applications you want, and compare how they track updates.)

  • @Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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    712 days ago

    Used for years, then moved into docker containers.

    It’s pretty rad, especially as a domain controller.

  • @Samsy@lemmy.ml
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    612 days ago

    Looks good. But I got burnt with CasaOS. Only App organizer I still use is dockge.

  • @Allero@lemmy.today
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    512 days ago

    Nice as a starting point, but not enough features to make it worth it for advanced setups.

      • @Allero@lemmy.today
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        19 days ago

        Ability to properly work with apps outside the officially recommended list, to customize Docker containers etc.

        At least from what I can recall from 1-1,5 years ago that I used it.

  • mesa
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    412 days ago

    Use it everyday. I self host a number of fedi services. It’s a great os.

    Most of the apps are great, but there are a couple that are no longer maintained.