ansible-anu
pibox-os
ansible-anu | pibox-os | |
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1 | 34 | |
13 | 52 | |
- | - | |
2.7 | 7.1 | |
about 1 year ago | 16 days ago | |
Shell | ||
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ansible-anu
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Ask HN: How do you securely self-host a server?
I prefer to run Ubuntu machines and at least in terms of provisioning a new secure server I built an Ansible playbook I called 'ANU' (as in A New Ubuntu). I'd expand to other distros, but then I'd have to change the name!
https://github.com/MitchellCash/ansible-anu
It is based on the DevSec OS/SSH hardening playbooks, but I lean closer towards ease-of-use over security where I think it makes sense. For example, I disable forced password rotation and I keep the default umask value of '022' instead of the more secure '027'.
When I come across something the upstream playbooks change that "gets in my way", I will disable it if the security trade off makes sense for me. I'm not running highly sensitive systems, so these trade-offs make sense for me, and maybe they will for you as well!
In terms of ongoing security upkeep, I run the usual `apt update && apt dist-upgrade` when I can, but I’ll be keeping my eye on this thread for additional advice.
pibox-os
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I don't want to host services (but I do)
About my business? Sure! It's at https://kubesail.com and we sell our hardware at https://pibox.io :)
Our best feature is that the website will detect if you're on the same network as your machine and if so, offer "local" links instead of remotely proxied ones. That way non-technical users dont need anything fancy. On top of that, the "local" urls still get valid HTTPS certs for free, so non-technical users dont get any scary browser warnings.
We started out as a way to make self-hosting easier for corporations, but the users who joined our community were mostly home-hosters, so we leaned into that! Jellyfin is now our most popular app.
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Ask HN: What hardware are you running for your home server?
I built a small business around this idea (particularly your last sentence about it evolving quickly), so I can’t not promote https://KubeSail.com and our hardware at https://pibox.io
That said, I use an old workstation as my home router and server. It’s worth the power bills in saved subscription cost alone. Much more relevant is how much of my time I spend on it!
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Ask HN: Any Hardware Startups Here?
We make tiny Linux servers packed with real devops tools (but also sporting a somewhat-easy-ish-to-use UI) for home-hosting and self-teaching: https://pibox.io - works great with Jellyfin!
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Seeking advice for a tiny mini file server storage
I am really loving my https://pibox.io, it might fit the bill if you can get your hands on one. A raspberry pi 4 should be okay too with the usb 3, it just might be not as neat
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Running business while working full time DevOps
I do but my side business doesn’t make 6 figures! Curious why you don’t think focusing on growing that isn’t a better path forward. Obligatory link to said side business: https://pibox.io
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What is the hand off, least maintenance, low-energy consumtion home server solution?
I saw solutions like https://pibox.io/ which is interesting, maybe ticking all the boxes, but all the versions are sold out. While I am waiting for them to be back to stock, have anyone used it and what is your thought? Does it work for my need? What is the alternatives?
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Guide for a quiet, low-power DIY 2-Bay NAS?
I watched a video about OpenMediaVault and I don't like three things about it. Firstly the user interface doesn't look as user friendly as in TrueNAS for example, secondly the guy in the video I watched said there is no RAID with OpenMediaVault and thirdly the cheapest Raspberry Pi 4 Modell B, 8 GB costs around 160 USD where I live which is much more than I thought. There are Kits like the PiBox but they are very expensive too.
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Feasible ARM NAS Setup??
I am quite happy with pibox. It's only two 2.5" drives, but they are also working on a 5x3.5" version.
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ODroid HC1 Replacement
And Pibox from Rasperry pi too - https://pibox.io
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A good low power ARM SBC for running an (S)FTP server?
I am using the pibox as a NAS, but that might be an overkill for you.
What are some alternatives?
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awesome-selfhosted - A list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted on your own servers
Node RED - Low-code programming for event-driven applications