I saw this post today on Reddit and was curious to see if views are similar here as they are there.

  1. What are the best benefits of self-hosting?
  2. What do you wish you would have known as a beginner starting out?
  3. What resources do you know of to help a non-computer-scientist/engineer get started in self-hosting?
  • @Findmysec@infosec.pub
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    34 months ago

    Not needing Kubernetes is a broad statement. It allows for better management of storage and literally gives you a configurable reverse-proxy configured with YAML if you know what you’re doing.

    • Nomecks
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      94 months ago

      Yes, but you don’t need Kubernetes from the start.

      • @Findmysec@infosec.pub
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        24 months ago

        Well I guess podman works fine for the first few months. Interestingly I still use build-ah heavily for building my custom images

        • Nomecks
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          14 months ago

          I find a lot of stuff is using docker compose, which works with Podman, but using straight docker is easier, especially if it’s nothing web-facing

          • @Findmysec@infosec.pub
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            24 months ago

            Funnily enough Docker compose has never worked for me on Podman. There always seems to be something that is incompatible (also due to me running on Debian). However, I feel like it should become a standard amongst homelabbers and professionals to use Kubernetes manifests going forward, since it is the most portable.

    • @keyez@lemmy.world
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      24 months ago

      Heavy disagree on the storage statement from what I’ve used and seen but it works for lots of people so not going to detract. NFS is always a pain but longhorn seems to have advantages

      • @Findmysec@infosec.pub
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        24 months ago

        NFS is a pain, no question about it. I used to use longhorn but these days since I’m doing a single node k3s I’m just doing hostpath. It’s that PVCs make intuitive sense to me, but I guess podman will likely work just fine for such cases other than canary deployments and OOTB service-meshes