Hi, I recently acquired a pretty solid VPS for a good price, and right now I use it to run Caddy for two personal sites. When I moved to Lemmy I found about this awesome community and it got me really interested in selfhosting. I won’t be asking for tips on what to selfhost (but feel free to add what you use), there’s a lot of posts about it to look through, but I was wondering: how are you accessing your selfhosted stuff? I would love to have some sort of dashboard with monitoring and statuses of all my services, so should I just setup WireGuard and then access everything locally? I wanted to have it behind a domain, how would I achieve it? E.g. my public site would be at example.com and my dashboard behind dash.example.com, but only accessible locally through a VPN.
I started to learn Docker when setting up my Caddy server, so I’m still really new to this stuff. Are there any major no-no things a newbie might do with Docker/selfhosting that I should avoid?
I’m really looking forward to setting everything up once I have it planned out, that’s the most fun part for me, the troubleshooting and fixing all the small errors and stuff. So, thank you for your help and ideas, I can share my setup when it’s done.
exactly, when for example the nextcloud documentation says:
is not exactly clear that all the data will be 100% lost when the docker container is closed
And when it says more down in the docs “just use volumes to persist data” - yeah how to backup those volumes? No mention at all…
Should tell to mount a directory rather than a volume. Backup a directory is easy and everyone can do it, backup a docker volume, good luck, your data has an invisible time bomb
Docker volumes are just directories in /var/lib/docker/volumes
They can be, that’s called bind mounts, or they can be named volumes managed by Docker. Docker volumes take some getting used to but are considered much better practice than bind mounts. For trivial systems like more self hosting situations, I just use bind mounts.
Ref: https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/
yes but does a noob know that? A directory placed where he typed the command first is much easier to find