![](https://lem.nimmog.uk/pictrs/image/1627cf7d-669b-4e7d-b8de-bcb8d91519ae.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8286e071-7449-4413-a084-1eb5242e2cf4.png)
I was going to say that the big downside to that would be a lack of any kind of version control, but I guess if you need that you can always use git and just commit changes there and (optionally) push them to a repository somewhere.
I was going to say that the big downside to that would be a lack of any kind of version control, but I guess if you need that you can always use git and just commit changes there and (optionally) push them to a repository somewhere.
Ooo, I’ll add that to one of my planka boards for “things to look at later” thanks for sharing
I’ve been using planka and have been quite happy with my experiences for the last couple of months.
That’s interesting, because I was finding guides for traefik and caddy but not nginx (specifically swag in my case)
The issue I was having, in case it helps you, is that I was trying to expose 8448 on my synapse container which doesn’t have SSL instead of on my SWAG container and then redirect to my synapse one.
I personally use gitea but there is also a community version of gitlab that has way more power than I need.
Gitea can import a repo from GitHub but I don’t know whether it can also push updates out as one never tried to do that.
I picked gitea as I didn’t need all of the extra power of gitlab and they were the first two options I found. I don’t deploy it using portainer but all of my stacks are set up as git repos in portainer and using the webhook feature it’ll auto pull and redeploy whenever I push to it
One method that many people use to hide their IP address of their host is to use Cloudflare for DNS, that way you don’t directly expose your IP address to the wider internet. A nice bonus to Clouldflare is that it’s free too! Just get yourself a domain, get Cloudflare set up to provide DNS for it and you’re golden.
Thanks for confirming before I could bruise back to Lemmy world, find this post and confirm for myself.
I’ve just gotten my own instance of Lemmy running here and think I’m getting the hang of how to subscribe and link up to other instances. This is also a teaser to see if my first comment actually works!
On the uptime monitoring I’ve been quite happy with uptime kuma, but… If you put it on the same host that’s down… Well, that’s not going to work :p (I nearly made that mistake)