Guess the cool thing about coolify is that it aims to be an open source indie alternative for Vercel & co: You just connect your GitHub repo and go on from there. 1/
Firefly III (personal finance),
GlitchTip (Sentry-like error tracking),
Plausible (privacy-focused analytics),
Uptime Kuma (uptime service),
and a few Django side projects.
All of these are running on a cheap ($5.5) VPS from Contabo using CapRover.
By the way, most of the apps described above are one-click deployable.
There is no way, no freaking way that there is a PaaS provider out there that can offer a VPS with the specs I'm getting at this price. And if there is one, please, I want to know.
The specs :
4 vCPU
6 GB RAM
100 GB NVMe
It's even weird that these guys can afford to be this cheap. Feels like there is something fishy going on. Maybe because of the trash UI? Anyway, I've had no issues with them for years.
I've seen a lot of enthusiasm for Fly in the Django community lately. I've tried them once. I'm sure I was doing something wrong or had a trash setup, but I was paying more than $5 for frankly less than a third of the performance I'm getting on this $5 VPS. Platforms like Fly, Vercel, Heroku offer mainly convenience over your average VPS, but I can get 80% of the convenience with CapRover.
Testuję aplikację #Mixpost, służącą do publikacji treści jednocześnie na Mastodon, Facebook i Twitter:
> "Self-hosted social media management. Schedule and organize your social content."
Open-source (wersja Lite), PHP i Laravel, MySQL i Redis.
Całość dość łatwa do postawienia na CapRover. Osoby zainteresowane zapraszam przed przerwą świąteczną na zajęcia z selfhosting z pomocą również #CapRover.
Aw shucks, it seems like deploying from #SelfHosted#Git is only available on #Netlify's enterprise plan, somehow. That throws a minor wrench into moving away some of my repositories from GitHub.
I'll have to take a closer look at self-hosted Netlify-like alternatives. #AskMastodon#devops does anyone have any experience with #Dokku, #Coolify, #Meli, and #CapRover? Which do you prefer? Does it work with self-hosted Git, too? Please do share, I'd love to hear your thoughts!
I ended up making a composite #GitHub Action and publishing it to the marketplace. That'll be much easier than copying and pasting a bunch of yaml around!
I enjoy much of the built-in security practices #yunohost offers, but I'm willing to evaluate alternatives that offer some server hardening baked in and that simplify deployment.