this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2023
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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.

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I've always been conservative about what kind of services I host because it takes time to get them set up. For example, there's no reason for me to set up music streaming when I only ever listen to music on my phone and all my music files are already on my phone. On the other hand, it's a good learning opportunity to set stuff up and have to fix it when it breaks. What do you think?

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Oh I have quite a few that I've set up then pulled out of service for various reasons. I'm always evaluating potential use-cases for new services and if a different service would better suit my needs than what I have deployed currently. It's definitely a hobby.

Some container-based projects that I'm loosely tracking updates for and have deployed, but since, have pulled out of service (non-exhaustive):

Media:

  • Calibre / Calibre-Web

    • Supplanted by Audiobookshelf. For tagging and book conversion I just temporarily install Calibre on my Workstation when the need arises.
  • FreshRSS

    • Did not end up using it for much at the time. Re-evaluating if I'd like to stand it up again.
  • Plex

    • Plex is nice but too many drawbacks that don't work for me. Supplanted with Jellyfin.
  • Overseerr

    • Didn't have much use for this, but it will likely change soon. Since I've stuck with Jellyfin I'll be going with Jellyseer if I decide to stand up this kind of service again.
  • Libreddit

    • Rarely made use of it. Nice project, but it's not feasible now for obvious reasons.
  • Miniflux

    • Same as FreshRSS, though I'm a big fan of go and rust projects in general so this is the one I'm more keen on re-implementing.
  • Tautulli

    • Part of the Plex ecosystem which I abandoned. It was useful software, but unfortunately locked to Plex.
  • Unmanic

    • Never really had a use for this, though I thought I would at the time.
  • TT-RSS

    • Project is decent but the author is a asshole and very user-hostile, so I dropped it when I retooled my homelab a few years ago.
  • Jackett

    • Supplanted with Prowlarr.
  • Ombi

    • Same as the reason for dropping Overseerr.
  • Neko

    • Did it's job, consumed lots of resources, and no arm64 docker image; though I managed to build my own. Got rid of it when I no longer had a use for the service.

Archival/Documentation:

  • Filestash

    • Something about the project rubbed me the wrong way, vague on the details though.
  • Shiori

    • Was decent but the lack of updates then subsequent maintainer turnover scared me off. I check in from time to time to see how the project's going.
  • Wallabag

    • Ended up being too slow and clunky for me, but that could be the hardware I was running it on at the time.
  • Archivebox

    • Same as above, but it definitely wasn't the hardware.
  • Bookstack

    • It was alright but decided I didn't need a separate service for documentation, I just use Code-Server with a documentation repo and raneto to give me a pretty page to navigate and for the family.
  • Filerun

    • Worked well while I was using it, not a fan of the closed-source nature and just didn't feel the need to redeploy when I retooled my infrastructure.
  • Wiki.js

    • Same as bookstack, didn't really have a use for a separate service.

Dashboards:

I'm going to preface this by saying I have some sort of addiction with dashboards, it's unhealthy really.

  • Organizr

    • Didn't like how everything was an iframe and it seemed particularly resource heavy for what I needed it to do.
  • Heimdall

    • My second dashboard. Liked the API integration not so much the design.
  • Homer

    • Wasn't a fan of the design.
  • Homarr

    • Also didn't like the design much.
  • Flame

    • Decent project, but decided to move on to something configuration file based.
  • Sui

    • Liked this one a lot and used for quite a while before homepage lured me away with API widgets.

Infrastructure:

  • Apt-cacher-ng

    • Inadvertently made my infrastructure brittle with how I had it implemented. Decided to just rebuild my cluster's cloud image on-demand instead of daily and update my apt distros the old-fashioned way.
  • LLDAP

    • Liked this project a lot, but added complexity to my infrastructure that could be more simply achieved other ways.
  • OpenLDAP

    • Same as lldap, but more feature rich and thus even more complicated.
  • Docker Registry

    • Set-up briefly but found a better use-case with Gitea's integrated package registry which I'd already had deployed.
  • Guacamole

    • Used this for a while, but the clipboard situation sucked at the time and I gravitated to just using SSH anyway, and since I have Proxmox on hypervisor duties just used xterm.js or noVNC for console access.
  • Watchtower

    • Did it's job but the :latest tag is dangerous to use. I like having change logs, an evaluation environment, and an approval based update workflow so I switched to renovate-bot.
  • Netmaker

    • Was a decent option for sure and faster than what I'm using currently in theory, but seemed a little to unnecessarily complicated to keep running for me.
  • Netboot.xyz

    • Definitely useful. Will probably redeploy it at some point.
  • OpenSSH-Server

    • Supplanted with Wireguard implementation in Tailscale.
  • Node-Red

    • Tried it very briefly but N8N fit my use-case better.