Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)S
Posts
18
Comments
109
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I'm now morbidly curious for my own sake...

  • Sort of liminal space vibes

  • You haven't mentioned your distro. Are you using systemd-homed? There are some footguns there that can manifest like this.

    As another poster mentioned, btrfs quotas or subvolume allocation could be a favtor as well.

  • Hey thanks so much for the engagement. I was trying to run it on a VPS that cost $35/year. 2GiB of RAM wasn't quite enough to make it work for me, granted that was with the webserver and ancillary supporting services.

    I'll find an opportunity to test it out though, as rybbit looks great. I appreciate the mention on the other FOSS products, that's a good look for you. I have plenty of experience with umami already. Cheers!

  • Glad to see you post this here. I've been experimenting with selfhosted analytics for a while now and have attempted your project here a couple times. The thing that kills me is the Clickhouse requirement. It makes it impossible to host on a lightweight VPS. Like why should my analytics platform require so much more compute than my simple static site? Am I missing something?

  • Okay this is excellent content, thank you!

    I went through and fiddled with some more stuff to try and get this working to no avail. However, it inspired me to take apart netboot.xyz a bit more, and I was able to grab an efi and get next boot to load the efi file. It took me too long to realize you need the console tty arguments as part of the boot cmdline to get it working interactively, but after I got there I got it netbooted. Sadly though, it almost immediately runs into an OOM condition and thus isn't practical on a free tier x86 asset. It would probably work on an aarch64 node, but I already have my allotted arm node spun up and working so I don't have a free one to practice with.

    Solid write-up though, thank you for putting that together!

  • The "gotcha" with Oracle free tier is that you can't install from arbitrary media, so the typical netboot.xyz or any iPXE workflow is out. No console access, no pre-bootloader access, nothing.

    I've been fiddling with kexec, but it doesn't seem like a supported method of loading the lkrn file from netboot...

    This is super interesting to me, so by all means, if you have the kung-fu to show how this works I would happily read through that!

  • Interesting. I've had two instances running for over 2 years and haven't noticed that. It might be that I just don't notice it though. I'm not scrutinizing it much.

  • I am not well versed with kexec but I always understood it to be a kernel reboot without power cycling the "metal." Please enlighten us with an example! I don't see how you'd replace the entire userspace (and possibly filesystem) with simply kexec.

  • Certainly! As others have said, don't hang anything worth value on it without an out of band backup strategy, they're famous for unscrupulously deleting things with no warning. Oracle is a miserable company.

    Free is free though!

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    How to Run Custom Linux Images on Oracle Free Tier

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/custom-oracle-image
  • Mullvad Leta is the way

  • I would recommend giscus over discus, but yes, certainly a valid approach!

  • Agreed, prosody is great! I've been doing some experimenting with ejabberd and it seems more enterprise-ready, but I haven't found anything that is discernable as far as feature advantages.

  • Sounds like a great opportunity to breath some life into it! If you really have the itch for IRC, there's a slidge bridge to connect IRC to XMPP!

  • Agreed! Runtime environment management is so much nicer with modern containerization. You or ally can't overstate how much better it is to have app stack state be entirely divorced from OS state. I'm very pleased they're back on the bandwagon as well.

    Stand up a server and come join our MUC!

  • UPDATE: For anyone who comes back to this, or any new readers -- I have added a MUC (chat room) on my XMPP server for discussion of any tech-related things, akin to the subject-matter of this blog. Hope to see you there!

    xmpp:roguesecurity@groups.hackofalltrades.org?join

  • I have experimented with Simplex, but it feels less tuned toward hosting federated infrastructure and more tuned toward participation with the greater network in a pseudo-anonymous fashion.

    Adoption is also always a hurdle with any ecosystem like this, and XMPP is certainly ahead of Simplex in that avenue.

  • It has a long healthy life ahead! Come join the party, the proof is in the pudding.

  • XMPP @slrpnk.net

    End-to-End Encrypted Chat that YOU Control: Hosting XMPP (Jabber) with Prosody

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/xmpp
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    End-to-End Encrypted Chat that YOU Control: Hosting XMPP (Jabber) with Prosody

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/xmpp
  • Linux @lemmy.world

    Systemd Service Hardening

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/systemd-hardening
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Systemd Service Hardening

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/systemd-hardening
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Self-host Meshtastic Metrics in Grafana

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/meshtastic-metrics
  • Meshtastic @mander.xyz

    Self-host Meshtastic Metrics in Grafana

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/meshtastic-metrics
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Monitor your AREDN Node with Prometheus and Grafana

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/aredn-metrics
  • Amateur Radio @lemmy.radio

    Monitor your AREDN Node with Prometheus and Grafana

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/aredn-metrics
  • Cybersecurity @sh.itjust.works

    Intercept and Monitor TLS Traffic with mitmproxy Using Podman - Infosec.Pub

    infosec.pub /post/28887455
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Intercept and Monitor TLS Traffic with mitmproxy Using Podman

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/mitmproxy-podman
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Leveraging Authelia for OIDC Single Sign-On (SSO) with Headscale

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/headscale-oidc
  • networking @sh.itjust.works

    Monitor Your Network the GPL Way with LibreNMS

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/librenms
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Monitor Your Network the GPL Way with LibreNMS

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/librenms
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Monitoring OPNSense Logs with Grafana Loki (Part 2)

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/opnsense-loki-part2
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Monitoring OPNSense Logs with Grafana Loki

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/opnsense-loki
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    How to Host Headscale on a Linux Server with Podman Quadlets (Part 2)

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/headscale-quadlet-part2
  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Traefik with Socket Activation via Podman Quadlets

    roguesecurity.dev /blog/headscale-quadlet