@yunohost@mastodon.social
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yunohost

@yunohost@mastodon.social

Linux distribution aiming to democratize server administration

[FR/EN]

N.B : this account is not for support or bug-tracking ...
see yunohost.org/#/help

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

arth, to random
@arth@fedia.social avatar

doesn't make it at all obvious how to install a new server with your original domain with their dynamic DNS system. If you try to use the original domain during install, it will tell you that domain is already in use. To get around this, they say you need to post a request on their support forum to manually delete that domain so you can set it up again. This is unacceptable to me, so I searched around until I found the answer. Here it is: forum.yunohost.org/t/solved-re-use-of-a-domain-name-for-a-new-installation-of-yunohost/2063/3

This process isn't covered anywhere that I could find in their official documentation, and I don't know why. There should be an option to import your original domain configuration during install to make this easier. Of course, that would depend on if you still had your original domain configuration in the first place.

I did. I mounted the old hard drive on my desktop to copy what I needed to a thumb drive, then copied that to my server. It was easy and painless once I finally discovered what I needed to do.

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@arth Since YunoHost 11.2 release 7 months ago, YunoHost will now recommend to set up a "recovery password" for your nohost.me/noho.st/ynh.fr domain which you can use to recover the domain if you somehow need to reinstall from scratch. The appropriate credential is also part of the backup, so just restoring it (possibly on another system) means you get the domain back.

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@arth Yes, going in the webadmin > Domains > yourdomain.tld > DNS tab > Dyndns recovery password

yunohost, to random
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

Dear YunoHost community,

please note that we just announced the end of life for YunoHost 4.x/Buster that will be effective on February 29th.

We encourage anybody still running YunoHost 4.x to upgrade to YunoHost 11/Bullseye using the provided migration.

https://forum.yunohost.org/t/end-of-life-for-buster-yunohost-4-x/28235

yunohost, to random
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

📦 Dear YunoHost packagers,

please note that if you maintain YunoHost apps, we just announced this roadmap regarding the depreciation of the packaging "v1" format

➡️ Soft-depreciation starting on February 1st - v1-apps will be capped to level 6
➡️ Hard-depreciation on February 1st, 2025 (one year from now), v1-apps will be capped to level 4 and be flagged as bad quality / broken and won't be advertised anymore
➡️ We will completely drop support in YunoHost 13/Trixie

https://forum.yunohost.org/t/packaging-v1-to-be-soft-deprecated-starting-on-february-1st-2024-hard-deprecated-on-february-1st-2025-and-dropped-in-yunohost-13-x-trixie/28232

yunohost, to random
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

Dear YunoHost community,

we are happy to announce that we're publishing an alpha-stage testing of YunoHost 12.0 / Bookworm !

Please note that this is absolutely not meant to be used in production, things will break 🔥 :pika:, we are just hoping to gather feedback - in particular regarding the important rework of the user portal :thinkerguns:.

More info in the corresponding release note :clippy: 😋

➡️ https://forum.yunohost.org/t/alpha-stage-testing-for-yunohost-12-0-on-debian-bookworm-but-not-yet-for-the-bullseye-bookworm-migration/28188

berndchen, to random German
@berndchen@dresden.network avatar

Anfrage an die LinuxCommunity hier.
Ich habe einen gebrauten Mini BlueChip NUX i5 zugelegt und hatte vor, mir YunoHost (Debian) zu installieren. Also Iso heruntergeladen, USB 'gebrannt', der BIOS erkennt den USB-Stick nicht als bootbar.
Iso von Fedora heruntergeladen, gleiches Prozedere, USB-Stick wird als bootbar erkannt.

Hat irgendjemand eine Idee?

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@tpheine @berndchen

>do you have an idea why your iso is not bootable on an USB stick, but others do on the same stick? Flashed with Etcher.

I have no exact answer, but it sounds like creating universally bootable ISO is definitely not a simple task, especially because of stuff like UEFI.

We use tools provided by debian like build-simple-cdd meant for this, but even then there are various subtleties, and when you search on the internets there is like 3 or 4 possible workflows

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@tpheine @berndchen

I was looking recently at https://wiki.debian.org/RepackBootableISO which may allow us to customize an existing official Debian ISO and maybe improve support, but I have no time in the near future to actually experiment with it ...

yunohost, to selfhosted
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

Dear self-hosters,

We are proud to present you an all new applications catalog for :tada:

🏷️ Categorized view inspired by your own server’s webadmin.
🔍 Searchable list, including apps alternatives
⭐ Use your forum account to star apps that you like, use, or long for
🚀 Longing for, we said? The catalog now integrates the apps wishlist. You can star them and propose your own.

and much more, enjoy!

https://apps.yunohost.org/

tux, to RaspberryPi German

Wisst ihr, was wirklich genial wäre. Wenn es ein Projekt geben würde, dass einen fertigen anbietet, den man nur noch anstöpseln muss, und beim ersten Start dann nur noch aussucht, welche Software man für die nutzen möchte. So könnte ein Großteil eine eigene Instanz (Server) betreiben.
Und nein, ist für die „Allgemeinheit“ immer noch zu technisch. 😉

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@tux Installing the hardware+software is "easy" (b this I mean somebody could clearly create such a device you describe)

The real challenges are : 1) how do you actually expose the service to the internet, 2) how to configure DNS +where does the domain name comes from?, 3) how are upgrades handled, both for the app and the base system (automatic upgrade can be nice, but can also spontaneously break everything), and 4) how do you somehow backup it, all of this in a secure and user-friendly way

yunohost, to random
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

We are happy to announce the release of 11.2 🥳. This is a relatively small release compared to previous ones:

  • 🔑 Add support for recovery password for DynDNS domains
  • 📫 Allow apps to send DKIM-signed emails
  • ✨ Various technical changes / minor fixes for packaging and everyday life, a lot happened since the early 11.1 😋

More info on the release note: https://forum.yunohost.org/t/yunohost-11-2-release-sortie-de-yunohost-11-2/25531

yunohost, to random
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

Hi there 👋 !

🔴 We released important security fixes a few hours ago as part of version 11.1.21, and advise to upgrade your system as soon as possible.

More info on the corresponding forum thread: https://forum.yunohost.org/t/important-security-fix-please-upgrade-your-system-to-11-1-21/25098

tilvids, to random
@tilvids@mstdn.social avatar

In order for to work, the server install process for services is going to HAVE to improve. If I'm interested in running a federated instance of a service, and the first thing I see is a 35-step tutorial about how to configure nginx or arcane PHP requirements, I'm going to bail.

I think about Nextcloud, and how I installed a snap for it, and it's updated through 8 major upgrades of the service without me ever doing anything to admin it. That's where we need to get to.

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@moanos @tilvids

You said it yourself, it "certainly does not fit all", but honestly nerds/geeks should stop advertising Docker or Ansible as "simple" and think twice about what the word "simple" really means. Sure, Docker is simple if you have a PhD in CS

When people complain about the lack of simple ways to setup and maintain instances on the long term, and how it impacts the development of the fediverse, hearing "Just learn Docker / Ansible / whatever" is not an acceptable answer...

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@moanos @tilvids

Imagine a world where Linux would have no friendly distro with GUI. People would rant about how they'd love to leave Windows yet how painful it it is to configure 100s of files to have a usable setup. Nerds would proudly encourage people to "just learn apt"

Fortunately we live in a world where Ubuntu/Mint exists and a random tinkerer can spin it up in a couple hours and your grandparents can use and keep up to date and never touch the CLI.

We need this, but for servers.

tierce, to random French

@bortzmeyer Yunohost offre des (sous)domaines en .noho.st, ynh.st ou comme le fait eu.org.

Yahoo® teste si bidule.nohost.me a un SOA si non, rejette le mail. Voir Unresolvable RFC.5321 from domain sur https://senders.yahooinc.com/smtp-error-codes/

C'est techniquement possible de mettre en place un SOA par (sous)domaine ?

cc @yunohost @ffdn

yunohost,
@yunohost@mastodon.social avatar

@tierce @bortzmeyer @pb @ffdn (En gros on a un maxi fichier de conf named.conf qui configure les credentials : https://github.com/YunoHost/dynette/blob/master/templates/named.conf.j2

et chaque instance push ses enregistrements (ou sa zone ? Je connais pas assez le jargon) à coup de nsupdate, le tout étant stocké dans un seul méga fichier genre nohost.me.db dans bind.

Jamais compris si on peut split, tout ça a été designé y'a 10 ans et on a pas d'expertise bind/DNS 😬

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