

Then I give praise to you, for you are more prepared than any other individual I personally know of and even some smaller companies I had worked with.
Then I give praise to you, for you are more prepared than any other individual I personally know of and even some smaller companies I had worked with.
Okay so not critical, just mildly inconvenient if lost.
I wouldn’t put it at “mildly inconvenient”, as the photos I could lose can never be restored. Most of the other things can. I’d be really sad if I lost all the photos, but it wouldn’t threaten my existence in any way.
I’m sorry, I should have specified in more detail what I meant by “critical”.
It’s not life-threatening, it’s just critical to me. It’s kinda like “my priciest possession” could mean a yacht or a half-dead car, depending on the context.
[EDIT]
a disk failure is probably the most likely failure scenario. Corruption is the second most likely
Yes, these are things that are 100% going to happen at some point. I cannot guarantee theft, floods, earthquakes or anything like that, but hardware degrades with time and use, so at some point things are going to fail.
Not make or break by any means
That’s great to hear. I can always buy better hardware later and first test if things run with what I already have. I don’t like to have my IT wasting in some drawer.
Thank you for your advice!
tailscale with headscale over openvpn
Is a vpn inside a vpn really improving security at all? Or is there a different reason to use tailscale inside a vpn?
you can’t seem to restrict people commenting on a file you shared
That’s okay. My circle of friends I’d share files with is not all too big. So everything stays between a few people anyway.
Nextcloud often updates and sometimes breaks small things
Does breaking stuff happen often? I plan to use the docker image nextcloud:stable-fpm in the hopes of bypassing some bugged releases.
I’ve done nothing special regarding security and have it exposed to the public internet. I intend on having fail2ban look at its logs but I’ve not yet set that up
That sounds kinda dangerous. I remember years ago, when I rented my first vcloud-server, within the first 10 minutes I had bots trying to get in via SSH. I’d be way too paranoid.
I would recommend having it entirely behind a VPN
Yes, that’s my plan. I intend to create a new OpenVPN server on my pfSense with access only to the nextcloud VM. This would also allow me to share the vpn config files with my friends without a password, as the authentication is done by inline-cert vpn config.
Memos is pretty usefull for me. App on fdroid momemos is superb. Syncthig takes care of google drive ish needs. Immich for photos. Mealie keeps food interesting.
I’m going to have to test a lot of new android apps, I guess. Thanks for the mentions!
Regarding syncthing, according to gedaliyah’s answer here, syncthing will be dropping the android app :(
Thank you for answering!
Good to know that most things I would need seem to be already working nicely in nextcloud :)
It should respect permissions though, so if you share a file with read access only, they won’t be able to edit it in the editor.
I’ll definitely have to try that before trying to send out links.
Thanks for the tipp!
I’ll definitely try the native file editor and collabora, just to see how they compare for me. I even found a tutorial by nextcloud on how to integrate collabora (see this post)
Except for maps. Man, there just is no substitute especially when mobile.
I thought there was an android app for open street maps, but I couldn’t find any on play.google.com either.
I do not recommend an external enclosure […] you’ll come to hate it for lack of ability
I feel kinda the same, but on the other hand, having a full-blown ATX system running in my living room isn’t going to be my first choice. If I can’t manage with the zotac mini PC, I can still take the drives out of the enclosure and put them in a full ATX case. That’s more of a “last resort” though.
A docker AIO version of nextcloud running on as close to bare metal as you can is probably the best option for performance.
I’m not worried about performance all too much. The only thing constantly connected will be my phone, for syncing contacts, calendars and, every now and then, a new photo or two. Sometimes I open the calendar in my browser on my desktop or laptop to add / change an event. I really don’t use it too extensively.
And to aid in CPU and performance of the VM, I can always have a VM with the “host” CPU type, which should forward CPU capabilities and features to the VM.
Thank you for the tipps!
A quick google search even reveals a nextcloud tutorial on how to install it . I’ll definitely try that out.
DAVx5 basically acts as the connector between your server and your calendar/contacts/files apps
Thank you for the explanation. I’ll probably be testing a lot of FOSS apps on my current android before I make the switch, so it’s good to know that I have to look out not just for usability, but also connectivity!
You’ve got a point, but now I gotta ask: Where do you store your original paperform documents? You know, the real-life critical things. Maybe I’m wrong, but I feel like most people store these things at home, possibly tucked away in a neat, little, sorted folder, for preservation. Which would be a nightmare for all the same reasons, but seems strangely accepted and widely practiced.
No data I own is life-or-death critical. Losing everything would be really bad, but many things can be restored in alternative ways, except the photos.
Also, I may be able to backup the most important stuff (which would only be a few GB at most) to an offsite server, as long as nextcloud (or an alternative) is able to export contacts, calendar and photos, or I can single these out in some other way. As long as this somehow works, I can rent a cheap hetzner server with a few GB of storage and have that be the backup target for the most critical stuff.
Yes, you’re right. As David From Space said in this comment, the real critical data is far less then all of the backed up data.
So I definitely can have an offsite-backup, it just depends on if I can single these things out in nextcloud, possibly via regular export to the filesystem.
If you really mean life-or-death critical
No data I own is “life-or-death” critical.
I can ask around for contact info again, same with calendar events I had planned. Some documents can be restored via the original service or by paying a fee to get a new original document, I still have folders full of originals in paper form. Some info can be restored by looking through my bank account or online buying activity. Losing my photos would be really sad, but nothing of that will kill me or destroy my life.
But I definitely can save the most critical stuff (probably a few GB only), if nextcloud (or some alternative) has the ability to regularly export these to an on-disk location. This way, some backup utility like restic or rsnapshot shoud be able to do the job.
Now, just to throw it out there, my actual ‘critical data’ is way smaller than my total backed up data
That’s also the case for me. I’d probably count a few GB as critical. Contacts, Calendar, some photos, some documents.
If nextcloud (or some other alternative) has the ability to regularly export these things to an on-disk location, I could definitely backup that to some cheap hetzner server. This will not be a pbs backup, but I can get by with an offsite-backup done by something like restic or rsnapshot
Thank you for your advice!
Thank you for sharing your experience of the process!
On my phone, I use DAVx5
I’m a little confused after looking at the website. What exactly does DAVx5 do? The regular re-sync of contacts, calendar and files itself? Shouldn’t that be done by the contacts app / calendar app on regular intervalls?
with Fossify apps
I just downloaded fossify calendar on my android a few days ago to test it and got to see the other fossify apps :)
syncthing phasing out android support
Oh man, I already use syncthing for ~5 GB of files and I use it on my android too. Seems I’ll be trying syncthing-android-fdroid in the future then.
There are tons of notes apps
There really are a lot! NotallyX looks nice and simple, but memos also looks very interesting. And thank you for the link, I’ll go dive into that tomorrow.
The one Google feature I am not able to reproduce is Google Messages
I do not need RCS-compatible messengers. What I send via SMS is nothing more than pure text, also no group chats. I use signal and element for my “fancy” messaging needs :)
I use Tailscale
I’ll look into it some more over the next days, but on a quick glance, this seems like it is an online service where you need an account? If that’s the case, I’d prefer using my already running OpenVPN server to do the job.
Thank you for the tipp!
Though I gotta ask: would ZFS still bring an advantage, considering that the RAID is going to be managed inside the external RAID enclosure, so ZFS would never see the actual disks? Or did I misunderstand how these enclosures work?
Are the documents you edit with the online editor files which are visible in the online drive? Does nextcloud use the open document specifications for saving documents (e.g. .odt, .ods)? Can you view these files without opening them in the editor (like the preview in google drive)?
If so, that is acceptable. The document thing is more for completion, I don’t handle documents all too often. And if the online editor is bad or not working but the files are visible and offline-syncable in the drive to some desktop client and they are using the open document format, I can edit them with libreoffice.
Thanks for the heads-up!
I see 3600 stars and I guess that’s kinda trustworthy :) I also do like some of the enhancements listed on the github page. I’ll try it, thank you very much!