harbormaster
Dokku
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harbormaster | Dokku | |
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27 | 180 | |
- | 25,975 | |
- | 0.8% | |
- | 9.9 | |
- | 4 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.
harbormaster
- Harbormaster: The Tiniest Container Orchestrator
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Ask HN: What hardware are you running for your home server?
I use an HP ProLiant Microserver with four drives in a ZFS RAIDZ array and an SSD for the OS. For software, I mostly run it in Docker using a very small container orchestration program I wrote:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
- MRSK vs. Fly.io
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I am a one-man show: Deployment and infrastructure for a 150k/m visits webapp
I needed something that would restart containers automatically when I pushed to a branch, so I wrote a few lines of code to do it:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
As far as PaaSes go, it's probably the simplest, and works really well.
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My VM is Lighter (and Safer) than your Container
I was in the same boat as you and built something simple that I really like:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
It'll just pull some repos, make sure the containers are up, and make your configuration simple and discoverable. It really works great at that.
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Exposing a web service with Cloudflare Tunnel
I do this for our services, it works great and we can easily put SSO in front of them with CF Access. I publish a Docker container that you can use as a sidecar for your Compose deployments:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/docker-cloudflared
I use this with Harbormaster (https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster) so I can expose containerized stuff without ever forwarding any ports outside of Docker.
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I Miss RSS
I use Dokku for that (I can share my Bitwarden repo if you want, the entire thing is four lines or something). I also made https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster for things that weren't so "web server -> app -> database" and love it.
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Self-Hosting Dozens of Web Applications and Services on a Single Server
I had the same problem and didn't want to manage things by hand, so I wrote Harbormaster:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
It basically pulls Compose apps from the git repositories you specify, builds the containers and makes sure they're running. Pretty simple and works really well for me.
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Setting Up Cloudflare Argo and Access on a Raspberry Pi
(This post should read "Argo tunnel" instead of just "Argo")
I did the same to enable secure access to services via SSO at work. I used Harbormaster[1] to deploy Compose files, but it's otherwise the same setup.
One of the big advantages this has is that the services can't be accessed any other way (not even from the same host, as they only listen inside the Docker network). That makes it hard to forget some port exposed because you listened to 0.0.0.0 instead of localhost.
Cloudflare access is very easy to set up SSO with, as well. I'd recommend this setup if you need it, though for home usage I usually just set up Caddy as a reverse proxy with basic auth, as I'll be the only person using this and I don't want Cloudflare MITMing my personal stuff.
[1]: https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
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What is the cleanest way to deploy a docker-compose stack to a remote server?
Something like harbormaster? https://gitlab.com/stavros/harbormaster
Dokku
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Deploy Node.js applications on a VPS using Coolify
When I came across Coolify, I thought of giving it a try. I am aware of Dokku, but I never really tried it because it doesn't have a UI. I work primarily as a UI developer, so having a nice UI to work with is a plus for me.
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The Hater's Guide to Kubernetes
I run all my projects on Dokku. It’s a sweet spot for me between a barebones VPS with Docker Compose and something a lot more complicated like k8s. Dokku comes with a bunch of solid plugins for databases that handle backups and such. Zero downtime deploys, TLS cert management, reverse proxies, all out of the box. It’s simple enough to understand in a weekend and has been quietly maintained for many years. The only downside is it’s meant mostly for single server deployments, but I’ve never needed another server so far.
https://dokku.com/
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Netlify just sent me a $104K bill for a simple static site
Yeah there are a bunch of selfhostable things:
Caprover (https://caprover.com/)
Dokku (https://github.com/dokku/dokku)
But people still choose Netlify and Vercel for ease of use I think.
Maybe we need something that's just Netlify. The closest I've seen to the "right" UX is Ness:
https://ness.sh
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
The modern iteration of these tools has taken the developer experience learnings from the Platform as a Service (PaaS) category, and will bring them to your own VM, giving you your own personal PaaS. Example of this include Dokku, Coolify, Caprover, Cloud66 and many more!
- Ask HN: Is there an open source alternative to Digitalocean app platform?
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Ask HN: How are you hosting multiple small apps?
Based on the fact that your ideal is to have a similar experience to heroku than managing your own server setting up reverse proxies take a look at these options:
1) https://dokku.com - lets you turn your light sail instance basically into heroku
2) https://render.com
3) https://fly.io
4) If you have aws credits this is their heroku equivalent: https://aws.amazon.com/elasticbeanstalk
above is not what I do but would be the options I would pursue if I understand your preference and requirement correctly.
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The Best Way to Deploy Your Own Apps
All in all, I really recommend trying out Dokku if you are a developer interested in hosting your own projects. It makes it super easy to get everything you need to get up and running without having to worry about the specifics. And the price is impossible to beat!
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Zero downtime deployments of containers on locally running server
The installation instructions are on the frontpage of our site. Thats basically all you need to do to install Dokku. As far as using it, we have a simplified tutorial here.
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Top 8 Tools to Build Your Own PaaS
Dokku is a lightweight and open-source PaaS platform that simplifies application deployment by leveraging Docker. With Dokku, developers can easily push their applications using Git, allowing Dokku to build and run them in isolated containers. Its CLI-only approach and plugin architecture make it highly extensible. Dokku's modular plugins enable features like database integration, Let's Encrypt SSL certificates, and automated Slack notifications, giving developers flexibility and control over their PaaS environment.
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Need some guidance before learning rails
Also https://dokku.com/
What are some alternatives?
swarmpit - Lightweight mobile-friendly Docker Swarm management UI
coolify - An open-source & self-hostable Heroku / Netlify / Vercel alternative.
ufw-docker - To fix the Docker and UFW security flaw without disabling iptables
CapRover - Scalable PaaS (automated Docker+nginx) - aka Heroku on Steroids
nixos-infect - [GPLv3+] install nixos over the existing OS in a DigitalOcean droplet (and others with minor modifications)
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
docker-box - A lightweight docker application platform for single servers.
Docker Compose - Define and run multi-container applications with Docker
neural-hash-collider - Preimage attack against NeuralHash 💣
levant - An open source templating and deployment tool for HashiCorp Nomad jobs
porter - Kubernetes powered PaaS that runs in your own cloud.