Healthchecks
filemanager
Healthchecks | filemanager | |
---|---|---|
208 | 306 | |
7,369 | 23,891 | |
2.3% | 2.2% | |
9.7 | 8.8 | |
3 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Healthchecks
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Show HN: I built a self-hosted status page and monitoring tool for my projects
Hey mate, I'm using https://healthchecks.io/ for heartbeat monitoring my crons. It's been working flawlessly for quite some time now. The UI is super clean and easy to navigate. It's also free up to 20 monitored jobs. Note - I'm not in any way related to that project.
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Webhooks suck, but here are alternatives
In fact, your platform (https://healthchecks.io/) is a prime example of where running customer wasm would be really excellent.
Instead of sending webhooks out to customer configured URLs, you could run a Wasm environment to execute customer code. Off hand, a good use case here is to do further inspection of the event before it gets sent off to some other system - maybe there are cases where you send false-positives and needlessly trigger external system alerts. The customer Wasm could do more introspection on the healthcheck event and make a more informed decision about how to proceed.
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What do you use for external monitoring?
i use healthchecks.io and have been very happy
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Show HN: OnlineOrNot – Cron Job Monitoring
Is there anything different from https://healthchecks.io/ --- a service I've been using for free for a couple years now?
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Prioritize IPv4 over IPv6 in dual stack
Because of this block on the router, and the fact that IPv6 connections are by default preferred over IPv4, many things on the system now cannot access the internet. the only things that can access the internet are for accessing servers that ONLY support IPv4 like my mail.smpt2go or my uptime monitoring scripts for healthchecks.io.
- Ask HN: How do you monitor your systemd services?
- Show HN: Peeng – like Pingdom, but the other way around and simpler
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Detecting and alerting for power failures
i use https://healthchecks.io/ and highly recommend it.
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Managing re-occurring tasks - Daily/weekly/monthly
We use a heartbeat system. Basically the monitoring continuously sends an alert to a healtcheck system. If that heartbeat fails, PagerDuty sends an alert to the oncall.
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Uptime site monitor - notification solutions for home while sleeping
i like healthchecks.io
filemanager
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Ask HN: Online File Repository System?
Checkout https://awesome-selfhosted.net/tags/file-transfer---web-base...
I've used https://filebrowser.org/ and it's okay. I've also Seafile, but my current setup is sftp clients (Transmit nowadays) and Syncthing if I need the files on multiple computers.
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Homelab Adventures: Crafting a Personal Tech Playground
File Browser
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h5ai – modern HTTP web server index
Thanks for sharing. I wasn't aware of dufs and it looks very solid. Fileserver[0] is another popular choice, though it's more GUI-oriented for file operations.
[0]: https://filebrowser.org/
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Ask HN: Spreadsheets like Google Sheets but not from Google?
The OnlyOfffice desktop app is a pretty good and free alternative to Microsoft Office Suite. You can simply install it on your local machine for offline access.
OnlyOfffice is also self-hostable as a web app for a cloud alternative to Google Sheets.
Filebrowser is a self-hostable alternative to Google Drive.
There's a pull request open to integrate OnlyOffice with Filebrowser for self-hosted google-drive + google docs.
https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser/pull/1420
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Ask HN: What is the best FOSS file sharing protocol/app?
For strictly local use, Google's Nearby share is technically FOSS but the documentation is basically non-existent and a proper Linux implementation is not here yet. Alternatives aren't hard to find though, with Mint's Warpinator or KDE Connect having worked well for me.
For non-local use (everything out of Bluetooth range), you almost have to trust a third party and it really depends on your use case. Want to send your friend a file or host pictures of your birthday for multiple people to download? For the former magic wormhole works great, for the later you could almost spin up a nextcloud or similar (personally I like https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser ). Want to regularly send files from device 1 to device 2? Now classic sync solutions like syncthing become really viable.
If everything else fails, FTP always has your back
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Finally a decent file browser in Game mode
I have been looking for a file browser which can run in game mode and is reasonably user friendly for simple file operations (copy/delete/rename, etc). Most people recommend Dolphin. it does work but there are issues: the color scheme looks really weird in game mode. context menu does not like game mode, either. Got file browser working (https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser) in game mode, which essentially an Edge app accessing a web server on localhost (running as user service). It took some time to set up but the end result is exactly what I would like to have.
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List of your reverse proxied services
File Browser - For access to the files on my NAS
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Self Hosted File upload service
filebrowser has user management plus sharing capabilities
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Folder/File sharing with multiple links
Filebrowser suppports multiple shares with different expiration dates. It also offers file previews and generates QR Codes for the shares.
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I need help creating a diy nas for under $1000
NextCloud is great for this, but if we're talking sharing files from your sync'd project collection, I'd probably instead recommend Filebrowser. You can point it to the same data store that syncthing is using and it'll make it easy to share the projects. Note that in order to do this you'll need to open up and expose filebrowser publicly. The simplest way to do this would probably be a cloudflare tunnel and for sharing files like this ad-hoc I don't see any issues with their TOS. For things like SyncThing though you'll still wanna do conventional port forwarding. the DIY approach instead of CloudFlare tunnel would be to port forward, set up a dynamic dns record, and set up letsencrypt certs
What are some alternatives?
uptime-kuma - A fancy self-hosted monitoring tool
Nextcloud - ☁️ Nextcloud server, a safe home for all your data
cadvisor - Analyzes resource usage and performance characteristics of running containers.
Filestash - 🦄 A modern web client for SFTP, S3, FTP, WebDAV, Git, Minio, LDAP, CalDAV, CardDAV, Mysql, Backblaze, ...
gatus - ⛑ Automated developer-oriented status page
filegator - Powerful Multi-User File Manager
Netdata - The open-source observability platform everyone needs
OpenMediaVault - openmediavault is the next generation network attached storage (NAS) solution based on Debian Linux. Thanks to the modular design of the framework it can be enhanced via plugins. openmediavault is primarily designed to be used in home environments or small home offices.
Sentry - Developer-first error tracking and performance monitoring
h5ai - HTTP web server index for Apache httpd, lighttpd and nginx.
borgmatic - Simple, configuration-driven backup software for servers and workstations
tinyfilemanager - Single-file PHP file manager, browser and manage your files efficiently and easily with tinyfilemanager