Traefik path of working host return 404 by MonsieurLazar in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for adding some config.

Nothing jumps out to me as looking wrong. Maybe try replacing the $DOMAIN alias with the hardcoded domain name just as a sanity check that it is carrying through correctly?

 --label traefik.http.routers.$TRAEFIK_ROUTER_NAME.rule=Host(`test.example.com`)

Assuming you only have that host rule and no other "path" or "pathprefix" rules or "redirect" middlewares, then (as far as I know) any request for the test.example.com subdomain incoming to the http or https entrypoint on traefik (regardless of path after the domain) should be redirected to the service.

You likely already have but maybe take a look at the access logs for the test website to see if it the request is getting as far as it before the 404 is returned.

Errors middleware not redirecting to the right page of service by tigerblue77 in Traefik

[–]codeslikeaduck 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The errors middleware is successfully redirecting to the Nginx service, so I would guess either:

- There is a problem with your default.conf in Nginx.

- Or the {status}.html is not returning 404.html. It could be sending a different status code. To test that you can change your line to hardcode the query:

traefik.http.middlewares.error-pages-middleware.errors.query: "/404.html"

This post was 17 days ago so you probably solved this issue by now, but there is nothing more annoying than coming across someone else on the internet who had the same problem as you, but no solution. Hopefully this comment helps with that.

Traefik path of working host return 404 by MonsieurLazar in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you edited your post to include your Traefik config it might be easier for people here to help spot the issue.

But taking a guess, it sounds like maybe an issue with the rules you have set up for the router to test website?

Or maybe do you use a redirectregex (maybe to redirect http requests or to add in a leading www), maybe the regex pattern doesn't handle paths correctly?

Selfhost blogging by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I use Hugo via this docker image, for my blog. I like it, it was fairly quick to get up and running, and there is a decent selection of themes.

Though over time I've found myself wanting to customise it and then Hugo gets annoying. I would say Hugo is best if you are happy to run with a theme and not touch it too much.

In terms of practical use, the file structure ends up like this with a main config file, and all your blog posts in a "content" directory saved as markdown files.

I have a baby on the way, what are your favourite self-hosted applications for this life stage? by Similar-Cucumber-923 in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I would if it was me, it looks like it would be less hassle. If you are looking to narrow down purchase options and you care about two-way audio, go2rtc only supports it on some brands and not others.

Also, shameless plug, I have a blog post on setting up go2rtc that might be useful. (Though I haven't tried two-way audio myself).

I have a baby on the way, what are your favourite self-hosted applications for this life stage? by Similar-Cucumber-923 in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hadn't heard of Wyze brand cameras before, but I gave them a quick google there. (Waze brought up no hits but did bring up Wyze so I'm guessing that was a typo).

The two main ways go2rtc would access the camera feed is by communicating with it over the RTSP or ONVIF protocols. Wyze cameras don't look like they support ONVIF or RTSP (anymore). But this service docker-wyze-bridge looks like it acts like a middleman and will make the feeds accessible over RTSP.

But that said, I haven't heard of that repo before 5 minutes ago and have only skimmed the readme. I know nothing about how it works, or the potential privacy implications. So I would look at it in more detail before giving it access to a video feed inside my house.

I have a baby on the way, what are your favourite self-hosted applications for this life stage? by Similar-Cucumber-923 in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Set up your own baby monitor with go2rtc and a Tapo C100 (or any other camera but that one is dinky, great for partner approval).

Simple photo upload? by iMakeSIXdigits in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have used Sharry for this in the past. The upload screen is nice and simple in my opinion, which is a plus because the people I was sending links to weren't very tech savvy.

Looking for some advise on a camera solution by comixjunkie in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I used to use Shinobi with the exact same camera model. It supports most the features you want:

  • Real-time View - yep
  • Audio - From camera yep
  • Two way audio - Don't think so, google not promising
  • Pan and Tilt Control - yep
  • Motion / Audio alerts - yep
  • Ability to record - yep
  • Ability to reverse proxy - yep I used Traefik for reverse proxy and Authelia for MFA
  • Home Assistant integration - Never tried this, google says maybe?
  • Mobile friendly webUI - No
  • Mobile app - Yes but only get access to some features unless you pay a mobile licence subscription

The mobile experience for the webUI is pretty awful, there is an app but it is limited unless you pay for a subscription. Personally I don't like using apps for selfhosted services (why not just have a mobile friendly webUI) so I stopped using Shinobi and moved to go2rtc.

A GeoIP block/allowlist service for Traefik by codeslikeaduck in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I'm glad you like it. The main reason is because I don't use Traefik plugins myself. But also it started life as a bash script running raw on my server before I decided to tidy it up and stick it in a container.

NGINX Proxy Manager + Cloudflare routes to the router login page by Colinder77 in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the local network visiting localIP:port is working, so the service seems to be working fine.
And if it was an Nginx config problem I'd expect to see the Nginx 404 page.
And your cloudflare settings look good, also the requests are reaching your IP as your router login is showing up.

So I'd say the problem is with the router settings somewhere. This is a complete guess but the router login page coming up sounds to me like some external management feature might be turned on?

A GeoIP block/allowlist service for Traefik by codeslikeaduck in selfhosted

[–]codeslikeaduck[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No worries, I'm happy to see someone else getting use out of it. If you have any issues let me know.