I have started setting up a server with three domains and three users using Yunohost, but I find it hard to get to work.

The documentation can be frustrating to go through and the community on the forum answers slowly or not at all (because due to the sparse documentation questions from beginners like me tend to touch similar topics I guess). A big part of the forum answers are in French, which I don’t read very well.

All in all I have been trying very hard to like the project. The work done by the developers really deserves all my respect and I would love to remain involved, but trying to get Yunohost to work as a non-techie leaves me often desperate and looking for alternatives with a more active community or a more thorough documentation.

I’m a bit divided here. I like the project but I’m a half-techie stoopid who needs more support. What do? And what would be my alternatives on a Linux VPS? Especially if I don’t want proprietary stuff?

  • schmorp@slrpnk.netOP
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    1 year ago

    I have been looking into docker and I’m afraid it looks rather complex, how much time did you have to invest to have something up and running?

    • schmurian@lsmu.schmurian.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Well, in terms of learning, I‘m still learning, and I‘m already a few years in. In terms of time in front of a screen, it depends on how much automation you throw at your services and builds. It will always come back to questions like: what if an update changes the way the software works? What if something breaks, like a config or a dependency overwrites another. How good do you know the parts of the services for troubleshooting? Do you have a backup? How fast can you rebuild your systems? If you have answers to these questions, you can feel confident in hosting services for yourself and others. If not, you can try but will run into these moments at some point, where you need to fix something fast. And that‘s the moment where you spent your time in front of a screen.

    • RandomLegend [He/Him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      It’s easier than it looks.

      In 99% of cases you can basically just copy paste the docker compose or the docker run commands and just change the paths for your system.