I’ve seen a lot of people saying things that amount to “those tech nerds need to understand that nobody wants to use the command line!”, but I don’t actually think that’s the hardest part of self-hosting today. I mean, even with a really slick GUI like ASUSTOR NASes provide, getting a reliable, non-NATed connection, with an SSL certificate, some kind of basic DDOS protection, backups, and working outgoing email (ugh), is a huge pain in the ass.

Am I wrong? Would a Sandstorm-like GUI for deploying Docker images solve all of our problems? What can we do to reshape the network such that people can more easily run their own stuff?

  • pixxelkick@pathofexile-discuss.com
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    2 years ago

    I would say specifically the hardest part for self hosting is the grok’ing of how SSL works and setting it up right with automatic renewal.

    There’s a lot of extra steps involved often.

    Id also say understanding how routing works and why you need a reverse proxy is the other big one.