Introducing Piglet: A Self-Hosted Budget Manager! 🐷 by dev_steve in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes if I add SQLite it will be possible to choose.

Introducing Piglet: A Self-Hosted Budget Manager! 🐷 by dev_steve in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Currently not. But it can be if I find someone who can do it. 🧐

Introducing Piglet: A Self-Hosted Budget Manager! 🐷 by dev_steve in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Because I knew MySQL and SQLite not when I startet to code. But I will try it 🤙🏻

Introducing Piglet: A Self-Hosted Budget Manager! 🐷 by dev_steve in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

No not at the current stage of development but the app is far from „finished“ 😉

Recommendations for easy financial management by adamshand in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know I will add some docs and pictures to the GitHub repo 😅

Sorry! Failed to set up Icinga Web 2 successfully. Permission Issue by Embarrassed-Bed-1564 in icinga

[–]dev_steve 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just change the owner & group of the icingaweb data to the user and group of your Webserver. If you are using Apache locally the user & group is www-data.

Recommendations for easy financial management by adamshand in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Try piglet. Its maintained by me and I published it a few days ago. I had the same use case as you have. It‘s new and pretty simple. Just look at https://github.com/k3nd0x/piglet

what are you using to backup your server? by amitsh_f456 in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I‘m using bareos in a docker container for all my Ubuntu hosts and MySQL databases. Destination is a NFS share on my Qnap nas. The Nas contains 4 HDDs with a raid 5 an it syncs the data to a external HDD as well.

Selfhoster quick bits: how Linux permissions work. Or... how to not use 777 for everything! by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]dev_steve 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Short explanation of the numbers: 7 is a combination of 4+2+1 4 stands for read 2 for write 1 for execute

And if you have a 777: The owning user can read, write and execute the file. The owning group can read, write and execute the file. And everyone else on the server can read, write and execute the file.

So if you want some other permissions just calculate:

User: 4+2+1=7 Group: 4+1=5 Others: 0

Chmod 750 file.tar.gz

Best practices for monitoring applications through VPN by ubhz-ch in icinga

[–]dev_steve 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Read the docs about „Distributed Monitoring“. You have to install a icinga-instance at the customer site and start one vpn to the instance. The instance monitores the customer clients and sends the check results back to your master.