My Services
I have a bunch of services accessible to me, my friends and family.
I'll go through some of them here.
I exported my families ancestry data into Gramps Web for privacy reasons,
and it ended up being way better than whatever we were using lol.
Mealie is a great platform for everything digital about cooking.
Recipes, shopping lists, meal planners, it's got it all.
Immich is a sort of self-hostable Google Photos. They just released
their first stable version (October 2025), and the move from Google Photos has been smooth sailing.
Similarly, OpenCloud is a self-hostable Google Drive, which integrates well with self-hostable projects
Collabora and OnlyOffice.
Memos is a cute and convenient journal / diary server. That's about it lol.
FreshRSS is an RSS client as a server. It keeps your RSS feeds synced across all your devices,
and makes them available on the web! I find it's a great replacement for social media.
RSS is really cool btw, check it out :).
Donetick is a todo-list sort of thing. It stands out for two main aspects:
1. Delicious WebUI and shortcuts
2. Ticketing-system like setup.
Foundry is a self-hostable virtual tabletop used by geeks to play DnD type games online.
Once you get set up, it's a BIG upgrade over Roll20, a competitor with ads and limited features.
Technical Services
Outline is a self hostable knowledge base, and before you glance away, it's not as boring as it sounds!
You can use it for yourself, but you can also give your technologically helpless friends and family access!
PocketID is an SSO, like Authentik on Authelia, but it only supports passkey authentication. I really love it because
I've seen first-hand just how awful my family members' password storage methods are. Not on my server lmao.
Cloudflared tunnels are creepily useful tools for self-hosting public facing web servers when you can't port forward!
There's also other benefits, but this is the only one that keeps me using them. There's also a huge downside...
Tailscale is to VPNs what Cloudflared tunnels are to web servers. It uses NAT traversal to create what are essentially
P2P VPNs, so you don't need to mess with port forwarding!
ntfy is handy for sending notifications from your server. It works great and fully supports iOS push notifications!
Gramps Web
Gramps Web is a self hostable ancestry archiving server. It's like ancestry.com but hosted by you so you
know where all your data is. I'm using this to build up my family tree because I know I'll probably care about
this stuff one day lol.
Here's the link to the demo, the username and
password are both "owner." If you're already using another ancestry site to do these things, you should know that
it's not as hard as you'd think to transfer your data into Gramps Web.
Here's the official docker-compose.yml file.
Update: a few weeks ago (around November 2025) they finally added OIDC (SSO) support to the main branch, and they added DARK MODE!!
Mealie
Mealie is great for all the normal functions, but the best one imo is the import function that
imports recipes from online recipes you find. If you find a random recipe on the internet, you can
put the url in mealie and it'll import it in a single click :D.
You should definitely set this up if you're tired of cookbooks or if you're in a shared living
environment where you buy groceries together but don't have a shared notes app (it has a shopping
list feature).
Immich
Immich is amazing, and it doesn't even take that much setup! It looks just like Google Photos
so nobody's out of their depth, and there's even this beautiful tool called
google-photos-exit
that'll fix the broken photos Google gives you when you prepare to make the switch!
OpenCloud
OpenCloud pretty cool. I use Samba for my file management, but I like these guys as a pair so
OpenCloud will stay on my server for vanity's sake.
It is really great though, better than it's competitors
(NextCloud, OwnCloud, etc.) in my opinion.
Memos
Memos is a cute little journal / diary server. If you're like me, you unfortunately don't have the patience
for the inefficiency of hand-written journaling. That's where Memos comes in. Unfortunately, the only compatible
iOS client doesn't support the latest API, so you need to use a boilerplate server to convert the new API to the old one.
Otherwise, Memos works great!
Another great thing about Memos is the filtering and tagging, which can help you keep track of whatever you want.
Donetick
Doneticke is a todo-list that stood out to me because of it's UI. When I got it running though,
I noticed the handy shortcuts it has, which made my workflow a little more efficient over Vikunja.
Other than that, it's just a todo-list. Do with that what you will lol.
I'd imagine it'd be really useful for parents now that I think of it. Simple enough UI with enough mobile
support for it to be kid friendly, ah it's literally on their website as an intended use case: chores lol.
Foundry Virtual Tabletop
Foundry is my favorite virtual tabletop, even if I wasn't considering the fact that you can self-host it.
The alternative for me was roll20.net, and the difference between the two is like night and day.
Not only are there way more cool features in Foundry, but there's also many open source mods you can use to
enhance your gameplay. In my opinion, it is well worth it to buy and host Foundry if you're into that sort of thing lol.
Outline
Outline is perfect for keeping your thoughts together and recording the nitty gritty details of
the processes you repeat frequently enough to warrant it but infrequently enough that
you're always forgetting them.
It's also super helpful for when you're helping your friends and family with tech support.
Everyone knows some people are just hopeless with this stuff, but it's good to be able to direct
people to resources you've made when you're too busy.
Outline
PocketID is a popular new OIDC provider, and I love everything about it except for how new and untested it is 😅.
It's super easy to use once you get the hang of it, and it makes user management incredibly easy in the ways
I'm sure all SSOs do. They even have an ever-growing webpage of integration methods for various projects.
Cloudflared
Cloudflared tunnels are convenient ways of exposing HTTP services running on your machine to the public
internet without forwarding ports. I use them to expose literally everything I have running except for game
servers which don't use HTTP traffic. They use Playit tunnels instead, check that out too!
You can run it as a systemd service or in a docker container.
Here's the official setup page.
ONE CREEPY NOTE: they terminate TLS as the traffic passes through their servers to do all their protective things. Ew.
Playit Tunnel
A Playit tunnel is very similar to a Cloudflared Tunnel, only it's used for game data,
so it works with UDP and non-HTTP traffic.
Tailscale
Tailscale, specifically the server portion (which isn't Open Sourced), is used to initiate P2P VPN
connections between your hosts.
There's a great alternative whose server is fully open sourced, it's called NetBird.
I've been meaning to migrate from Tailscale to NetBird for a while now, but there's always something more interesting to do lol.
ntfy
ntfy is incredibly useful because it lets you send notifications to your devices. Normally
this wouldn't be all that special, but that's not the only cool part. It also lets you send push
notifications to Apple devices :D. Along with the fact that it's relatively simple to set up, I
really love this project.
One problem I had with NTFY is that for an embarrassing amount of time I couldn't find the correct
AUR to install it. There are a couple different ones, ntfy, ntfy-git, ntfy-alertmanager, ntfysh, and ntfsh-bin.
The correct one turned out to be ntfysh-bin lol.
Thankfully, the Docker container is super easy to find and set up, so don't even worry about that.
Pi-hole
Pi-hole is a DNS caching service and proxy / DNS firewall thing. It get's all the DNS queries from the devices on your network, and allows / blocks / redirects them based on your settings.
For example, the default blocklist will block things like your Amazon Firestick sending telemetry to whatever random Amazon domain. It also blocks a lot of ads if you want, specifically the ones that are loaded from known ad domains.
About Me
I'm a 2nd year Cybersecurity Engineering Major at Iowa State University.
I'm currently working as a Systems Support Technician on campus, and (obviously) I love hosting services for my friends and family!
Here's my Mastodon!
Production Servers
Yes I've named them, sue me!
Potential Employers look here!
Veldor is my current production server.
Luckie was my first production server. No picture tho, coming soon.
Steeve was never a production server, but he was so cool you should look at him anyways.
Technical Overview
Right now I'm running Proxmox, with separate production and testing VMs.
Over the years though I've hosted services on a large variety of hardware and software, including
Jailbroken Chromebooks, android phones, old computers, and a rack server.
I've used Arch, Fedora, and Debian. I've run services with Tmux, Systemd, Docker containers, and more recently LXCs and VMs.
Veldor
Veldor is a monster compared to what I was using before. I got it for $40 at ISU Surplus at the end of my Freshman year. 😌
It's currently running on the bottom of our TV stand, because that's where the router is. It actually looks pretty cool tbh.
Model: Dell Precision Tower SFF
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1240 v5 @ 3.50GHz (8 cores)
RAM: 32GB DDR4
GPU: None 😱🤯
Luckie
I can't find any pictures of Luckie right now, but it was my first ever real "production server".
Before Luckie, I was just messing around by myself, now I host Gramps, Mealie, Audiobookshelf, and Samba for actual users (family and friends lol).
Model: HP EliteDesk 800 G1 SFF
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4770 CPU @ 3.40GHz (8 cores)
RAM: 12GB DDR3
Steeve
This is Steeve, the HP DL380 G7 server I got off Facebook Marketplace for $10 in my freshman year of college. I picked it up with my roommate Craig.
Steeve had an old Intel Xeon CPU, 32GB DDR3, and a really big server graphics card I never cared about.
Steeve was super loud even when idle, functioning well as a space heater + white noise machine after the many midnight fire alarms at Friley (Iowa State dorm).
I had to give up Steeve when moving out of Friley, since there was no chance in hell I was going to move him anywhere (he was chonky). He'll be remembered fondly.
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