favicon here hometagsblog

Self hosting is fun but...

#life #technology

uncomfyhalomacro | 2024-06-02 | reading time: ~7min

Hi!§

Hello there!

I have decided to start self-hosting my website! My current plans after this is to start donating to Codeberg, starting July. The reason why I decided to self-host is page load. My website, despite being a static website, is slow to load because of Codeberg Pages. Codeberg Pages is fine actually, but at some points in time it does a bit weird. This is probably because the data centers are in Germany or somewhere in Europe while I am in the Philippines.

The self-hosting provider I use for here is Linode. But I plan to change after a month. I think I am looking at Contabo next. More reasons why below.

About Linode§

Linode. Hmm. I can't give much opinions about it. This is my first time trying out self-hosting after all.

The pricing is in my opinion, could be better? Not sure. Now that I found out about Contabo, I plan to ditch this instance and move over.

Documentation is actually there in Linode but most of it is either outdated or possibly wrong? I have a lot of things I read from the docs that did not work well for me so I read official sources instead aka the documentation of the software I am going to use. They could have done it better I guess and they lack docs for openSUSE too 😢.

I plan to have two compute instances in Contabo because I plan to use the other instance for a database, and also self-hosting Woodpecker CI. Possibly I will add other services as well such as

  • NextCloud
  • VaultWarden (Bitwarden basically) or I just use password-store.
  • Collabora Office

I might share one of these services to my family or friends I guess.

The reason being, for experience and it's also very fun.

What I learned so far§

Experimenting Forgejo§

It would be a waste to not use the remaining compute resources so I decided to give Forgejo a Go. 😉

Forgejo is available now in openSUSE. Although, I am quite confused by the systemd service but now I understand the implications for why it was decided not to use the home directory of whatever invokes the forgejo binary. This was discussed in the https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Security_Features#Systemd_hardening_effort.

Anyhow, I had a lot of hiccups configuring Forgejo but I just decided to just use whatever that systemd script has and just edit the file to point to a custom config by running

EDITOR=kak systemctl edit --full forgejo.service

specifically, I edited the line containing ExecStart=.

EDITOR=kak is so annoying. openSUSE does have a way to set this by adding that to /etc/profile.local. Local configs or those that are suffixed with *.local is unique to openSUSE. Users are encouraged to edit the local configs rather than the defaults. This is how I got so confused at first when trying it out the first time. Also, this explains why I also edit the apache config at a different file instead of the httpd.conf file. Specifically, by editing /etc/sysconfig/apache2 🥴.

Anyway, the site is up at https://forgejo.uncomfyhalomacro.pl. Feel free to take a look around. However, registrations are closed so if you want to make an account, you are not able to unless we are friends. ⚠️ If you are my friend, do keep in mind that this is experimental and still possible that I will kill this instance. Once I get the hang of it, I will start putting my projects to the self-hosted vm.

Another issue I have is setting the [mailer] configuration. Because it seems to be not working to be honest and I am not sure why. I filed a ticket to my mail provider if MTA is part of their service because I might be mistaken.

Nginx§

To manage redirects and subdomain URLs, I tried my hand at Nginx. I read it as ngeenx and not like 'engine X' or like how I read Lynx.

First Impressions§

The language looks like KDL. I actually do not know what Nginx use but whatever. The syntax confuses me a lot to be honest and I really don't like how it looks when configuring. Some of you might find the language simple. But what really confused me a lot is doing redirects. I guess I didn't read enough documentation 🥴.

Certbot Integration Impressions§

Certbot integration is nice. The pressing issue is when certbot rewrites files for Nginx. This causes a lot of confusion to me because the rewritten configs to point to the SSL certificates are faulty and can cause misredirects. I have to manually edit the files to be honest.

Apache§

I am not sure why but after the onslaught of trying Nginx, I decided to use Apache.

First Impressions§

I got pampered by openSUSE because it contains templates at /etc/apache2/vhosts.d. At first, I was so confused because when I read the default config at /etc/apache2/httpd.conf, the documentation from Linode and other sources conflict because openSUSE's default config has a lot of comments to discourage the use of it. Instead, I have to edit /etc/sysconfig/apache2 and add a new file /etc/apache2/httpd.conf.local. This file is added to /etc/sysconfig/apache2, specifically, APACHE_CONF_INCLUDE_FILES. Here is a snippet of the updated sysconfig.

# Here you can name files, separated by spaces, that should be Include'd from 
# httpd.conf. 
#
# This allows you to add e.g. VirtualHost statements without touching 
# /etc/apache2/httpd.conf itself, which makes upgrading easier. 
#
APACHE_CONF_INCLUDE_FILES="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf.local"

Better syntax, plugins, and tooling§

I am not saying that I did not have difficulty using Apache. But as I roamed around the Internet, I just found out that it uses utility tools that helps installs plugins. As of writing, I have added the filter and deflate module. The latter was already added by default but the filter module was not. This was to enhance page loads (yeah I know it's a static site 🤣) but a small speed up helps 🤪.

It's also easy to just add additional subdomains as well in /etc/apache2/vhosts.d. You just have to configure if what you want is a reverse proxy and a redirect or serve directly the directory specifically those in /srv/www/vhosts.

Certbot Integration Impressions§

I am just going to say that the integration with certbot is amazing. Even as to correctly configure my configs. Running certbot --apache -d mydomain.com -d other.mydomain.com is a breeze. It will add a new file corresponding to the config name with -le-ssl.conf suffix. I just add a small modification but so far only to the one that contains www.mydomain.com.

DNS§

In regards to DNS, I have some issues configuring it. I manage to learn more about A/AAAA and CNAME records. So far, it's all good and working.

I am just surprised that I don't know how long it will really propagate. One hiccup I made before was a mistypo of configuring spam reputation for a mail provider I use for my custom domain. And yes, it did propagate the domain and because of that, I have or had an ephemeral URL domain autoconfig.mydomain.com which points to my atuin instance. It's gone now.

Closing Thoughts§

Self-hosting is a fun idea. Although, I might be looking at other hosting solutions like Contabo. I heard they have a good price over ratio but I also heard mixed reviews from different communities e.g. they lower the quality of network bandwidth (?) but I can't seem to see what's the issue yet so I might have to experience that myself.

Articles from blogs I follow around the net

Perma-Vuln: D-Link DIR-859, CVE-2024-0769

Recently Sift caught an interesting payload. As it turns out, the exploit was CVE-2024-0769, which is now tagged here: D-Link DIR-859 Information Disclosure Attempt . This vulnerability is a path traversal leading to information disclosure. But, perhaps mo…

via GreyNoise LabsJune 25, 2024

Synergy Greg

Synergy Greg would like to see you in His office, it is the one down the hall, past the cubicles and dreary faces, uplifted only when He deigns to venture forth. You will know Him when you see Him, He is the one composed, of a thousand writhing forms,…

via LudicityJune 22, 2024

Status update, June 2024

Hi all! This status update will be shorter than usual because I had a lot less free time for my open-source projects than usual this month. Indeed, I recently joined SNCF Réseau (the company responsible for the French railway infrastructure) to work on OSR…

via emersionJune 18, 2024

Why People are Angry over Go 1.23 Iterators

NOTE: This is based on, but completely rewritten, from a Twitter post: https://x.com/TheGingerBill/status/1802645945642799423 TL;DR It makes Go feel too “functional” rather than being an unabashed imperative language. I recently saw a post on Twitter showi…

via Articles on gingerBillJune 17, 2024

My RSS feed has been upgraded ✨

I did some integration work to include posts written for other publications in my RSS feed. Apologies if you see some duplicated items! 📪

via Rob O'LearyJune 15, 2024

Programming at the edge with Fastly Compute

So you’ve heard about computing at the edge, and you’ve heard that Fastly let’s you run JavaScript, Go, Rust and any other language that compiles to Wasm at the edge… well, let’s take a look and while we’re at it let’s try and understand how caching works …

via Posts on integralistJune 12, 2024

Generated by openring-rs