this post was submitted on 27 Nov 2023
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I am hosting more than 10 services currently but only Nextcloud sends me errors periodically and only Nextcloud is super extremely painfully slow. I quit this sh*t. No more troubleshooting and optimization.

There are mainly 4 services in Nextcloud I'm using:

  • Files: as simple server for upload and download binaries
  • Calendar (with DAVx5): as sync server without web UI
  • Notes: simple note-taking
  • Network folder: mounted on Linux dolphin

Could you recommend me the alternatives for these? All services are supposed to be exposed by HTTPS, so authentication like login is needed. And I've tried note-taking apps like Joplin or trillium but couldn't like it.

Thanks in advance.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (14 children)

This is concerning to me because I’ve been considering ditching Synology and spinning up nextcloud. I like Synology drive but I’m tired of the underpowered hardware and dumb roadblocks and vendor lock-in nonsense. I’m very curious what you end up doing!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Not OP, but I run it on docker with postgres and redis, behind a reverse proxy. All apps on NC have pretty good performance and haven't had any weird issues. It's on an old xeon with 32gb and on spinning rust.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Do you have redis talking to nextcloud over the unix socket or just regular TCP? The former is apparently another way to speed up nextcloud, but I'm struggling to understand to get containers using the unix socket instead.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I have both Postgres and Redis talking to Nextcloud through their respective unix sockets; I store the sockets in a named volume, so I can mount it on whatever containers need to reach them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Do you mind sharing your docker config, so I can try and replicate it. Thank you

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

Sure:

POSTGRES


version: '3.8'
services:
  postgres:
    container_name: postgres
    image: postgres:14-alpine
    environment:
      POSTGRES_PASSWORD: "XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
      PGDATA: "/var/lib/postgresql/data/pgdata"
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./data
        target: /var/lib/postgresql/data
      - type: volume
        source: postgres-socket
        target: /run/postgresql
    logging:
      driver: json-file
      options:
        max-size: 2m
    restart: unless-stopped
networks:
  default:
    external:
      name: backend
volumes:
  postgres-socket:
    name: postgres-socket

REDIS


version: '3.8'
services:
  redis:
    image: redis:7.2-alpine
    command:
      - /data/redis.conf
      - --loglevel
      - verbose
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./data
        target: /data
      - type: volume
        source: redis-socket
        target: /var/run
    logging:
      driver: json-file
      options:
        max-size: 2m
    restart: unless-stopped
networks:
  default:
    external:
      name: backend
volumes:
  redis-socket:
    name: redis-socket

Here's redis.conf, it took me a couple of tries to get it just right:

# create a unix domain socket to listen on
unixsocket /var/run/redis/redis.sock
unixsocketperm 666
# protected-mode no
requirepass rrrrrrrrrrrrr
bind 0.0.0.0
port 6379
tcp-keepalive 300
daemonize no
stop-writes-on-bgsave-error no
rdbcompression yes
rdbchecksum yes
# maximum memory allowed for redis
maxmemory 50M
# how redis will evice old objects - least recently used
maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru
# logging
# levels: debug verbose notice warning
loglevel notice
logfile ""
always-show-logo yes

NEXTCLOUD


version: '3.8'
services:
  nextcloud:
    image: nextcloud:27-fpm
    env_file:
      - data/environment.txt
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./data/html
        target: /var/www/html
      - type: volume
        source: redis-socket
        target: /redis
      - type: volume
        source: postgres-socket
        target: /postgres
      - type: tmpfs
        target: /tmp:exec
      - type: bind
        source: ./data/zz-docker.conf
        target: /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.d/zz-docker.conf
      - type: bind
        source: ./data/opcache_cli.conf
        target: /usr/local/etc/php/conf.d/opcache_cli.conf
    networks:
      - web
      - backend
    logging:
      driver: json-file
      options:
        max-size: 2m
    restart: unless-stopped
  crond:
    image: nextcloud:27-fpm
    entrypoint: /cron.sh
    env_file:
      - data/environment.txt
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./data/html
        target: /var/www/html
      - type: bind
        source: ./data/zz-docker.conf
        target: /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.d/zz-docker.conf
      - type: volume
        source: redis-socket
        target: /redis
      - type: volume
        source: postgres-socket
        target: /postgres
      - type: tmpfs
        target: /tmp:exec
    networks:
      - web
      - backend
    logging:
      driver: json-file
      options:
        max-size: 2m
    restart: unless-stopped
  collabora:
    image: collabora/code:23.05.5.4.1
    privileged: true
    environment:
      extra_params: "--o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true"
      aliasgroup1: 'https://my.nextcloud.domain.org:443'
    cap_add:
      - MKNOD
    networks:
      - web
    logging:
      driver: json-file
      options:
        max-size: 2m
    restart: unless-stopped
networks:
  backend:
    external:
      name: backend
  web:
    external:
      name: web
volumes:
  redis-socket:
    name: redis-socket
  postgres-socket:
    name: postgres-socket

The environment.txt file is hostnames, logins, passwords, etc...

POSTGRES_DB=nextcloud
POSTGRES_USER=xxxxxxx
POSTGRES_PASSWORD=yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
POSTGRES_SERVER=postgres
POSTGRES_HOST=/postgres/.s.PGSQL.5432
NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_USER=aaaaa
NEXTCLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD=hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
REDIS_HOST=redis
REDIS_HOST_PORT=6379
REDIS_HOST_PASSWORD=rrrrrrrrrrrrr

The zz-docker.conf file sets some process tuning and log format, some might not even be necessary:

[global]
daemonize = no
error_log = /proc/self/fd/2
log_limit = 8192

[www]
access.log = /proc/self/fd/2
access.format = "%R - %u %t \"%m %r%Q%q\" %s %f %{mili}d %{kilo}M %C%%"
catch_workers_output = yes
decorate_workers_output = no
clear_env = no

user = www-data
group = www-data

listen = 9000
listen = /var/www/html/.fpm-sock
listen.owner = www-data
listen.group = www-data
listen.mode = 0666
listen.backlog = 512

pm = dynamic
pm.max_children = 16
pm.start_servers = 6
pm.min_spare_servers = 4
pm.max_spare_servers = 6
pm.process_idle_timeout = 30s;
pm.max_requests = 512

The opcache_cli.conf file has a single line:

opcache.enable_cli=1

I don't remember why it's there but it's working so I'm not touching it :-D

Good luck :-)

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