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Plexamp docker
Plexamp docker











  1. Plexamp docker full#
  2. Plexamp docker software#
  3. Plexamp docker windows#

"Cloud" (first Owncloud, then Nextcloud) with functional equivalents of e.g. web-related things (first Apache, then lighttpd, then nginx) running: mail services (Exim, Dovecot, Spamassassin, greylistd, dovecot-managesieve)

plexamp docker

Backup services (rsnapshot, custom backup scripts) Database services (Postgresql, Mysql, Redis) used for many of the mentioned services

Plexamp docker software#

Software router to bind them all together (OpenWRT in a container)

plexamp docker

One of the first things I did was change to a self-hosted mail server with my own domain, the rest quickly followed. I've self-hosted more or less everything from the get-go back when I was working at a telco which provided me with a 4 Mb/s fixed line back in 1996. m3u playlists i choose and then use the inverted ignore pattern so it will only sync those songs and ignore everything else. im thinking it might be possible with a quick script that would get a list of tracks from whatever.

Plexamp docker full#

im currently just syncing the full folder between every device which is not great due to the size. I still haven't figure out my music folder yet. i usually use some ignore patterns on those when syncing to my phone or tablet to reduce the size of the foldersĮach phone that i take photos on has a send-only sync folder which is synced to my home server, so i don't need to worry if delete a photo by accident or whatever I have separate sync folders for programming stuff, art, music making stuff, books/audiobooks, note taking stuff, openstreetmap. I have a 'config' folder with a huge alphabetical list of every program i use on any OS.

Plexamp docker windows#

I have a sync folder called 'drop' that gets added to every device, mainly just so i can quickly drop a file in and take it out on another device.Įach OS i use has its own sync folder, linux, android, windows etc. I haven't had to use it much due to not having many users, but I imagine it's pretty relevant for servers with more users.ĭefinitely syncthing, even though it pretty much blends into the background once its set up, but i really couldn't imagine going back to life before i started using it I can't really think of any other particular criticisms I have of it except that to administrate a server we still seem to have to lean on a third party application, synapse-admin (or hand write curl requests), it would be nice for it to just be incorporated into the client or into the server. The spaces feature needs a bit of UI polish but otherwise provides a similar hierarchical channel grouping system as Discord and Slack. Keeping a backup of the keys or having the key store setup) but that's reasonable. This made it relatively easy to set things up correctly for my network compared to Mastodon, where I finally just gave up and setup a digitalocean droplet instead.įunctionality wise, everything works pretty well, E2EE requires a bit of preplanning to maintain across devices (ie.

plexamp docker

The setup needed for networking is better documented and they have a tool for testing if federation is working (and if not, attempting to provide an explanation why). Recently when I was trying to setup Mastodon, I realized how much more mature the setup process for synapse was. There were a few early issues (relating largely to a slightly weird network setup) but otherwise it works very well once setup. My experience has been pretty great overall. I had tried out a bunch of other clients a few months ago, but found Element to be the most mature. I use synapse as the server and Element as the client. Besides that I have just one other active user. Yes, I do federate (I also use it for IRC and you need federation to access the liberachat IRC-Matrix bridge).













Plexamp docker