this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2024
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Hello there lemmings! Finally I have taken up the courage to buy a low power mini PC to be my first homeserver (Ryzen 5500U, 16GB RAM, 512 SSD, already have 6TB external HDD tho). I have basically no tangible experience with Debian or Fedora-based system, since my daily drivers are Arch-based (although I'm planning to switch my laptop over to Fedora).

What's your experiences with Debian and Rocky as a homeserver OS?

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[–] [email protected] 17 points 11 months ago (8 children)

Debian stable is a very solid choice for a server OS.

It depends on how you're going to host your services though. Are you going to use containers (what kind), VMs, a mix of the two, install directly on the host system (and if so where do you plan to source the packages)?

I've kept my Debian system very basic, installed latest Docker from the official apt repo, and I've installed almost every service in a docker container. Only things installed directly on host are docker, ssh, nfs and avahi.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 11 months ago (7 children)

I'm going full container mode if it's possible, or just make the docker images myself then.

  • Jellyfin
  • Onedrive alternative (probably Nextcloud)
  • Personal website + it's backend, or just the backend (Might won't host this tho, since it's a high security risk to my personal data)
  • Pi-hole
  • Probably other ideas which seems fun to host
[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 months ago (6 children)

Make sure you use a docker image that tracks the stable version of Jellyfin. The official image jellyfin/jellyfin tracks unstable. Not all plugins work with unstable and switching to stable later is difficult. This trips lots of people and locks them into unstable because by the time they figure it out they've customized their collection a lot.

The linuxserver/jellyfin image carries stable versions but you have to go into the "Tags" tab and filter for 10. to find them (10.8.13 pushed 16 days ago is the latest right now).

To use that version you say "image: linuxserver/jellyfin:10.8.13" in your docker compose instead of "linuxserver/jellyfin:latest".

This approach has the added benefit of letting you control when you want to update Jellyfin, as opposed to :latest which will get updated whenever the container (re)starts if there's a newer image available.

While upgrading your images constantly sounds good in theory, eventually you will see that sometimes the new versions will break (especially if they're tracking unstable versions). When that happens you will want to go back to a known good version.

What I do is go look for tags every once in a while and if there's a newer version I comment-out the previous "image:" line and add one with the new version, then destroy and recreate the container (the data will survive because you configure it to live on a mounted volume, not inside the container), then recreate with the new version. If there's any problem I can destroy it, switch back to the old version, and raise it again.

[–] idefix 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

The official image jellyfin/jellyfin tracks unstable

Why did they make that choice? I am on this version right now, didn't know it was unstable. I found it very difficult to have information regarding the docker images in general, it's a pity we don't have a few lines explaining what the content is.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

It's more like "latest" tracks unstable, because unstable evolves much faster and it puts out versions more often. Unfortunately there's a practice going around that makes people just the :latest tag for everything and they don't always stop to consider the implications (which may be different for each project).

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