Landing page for all my services
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Im using homarr it works really good and is easy to configure
+1 for Homarr. I didn't need to learn how to write any configs. Everything can be setup in realtime, in the GUI, and is immediately testable. Homarr brought a homepage down to my skill level.
My only wish is to lock homepages behind user permissions but it's fine, my family friends don't intend to explore, just to get to where they're going.
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
I've been using a modified and simplified version of Prismatic Night it's somewhat basic but I'm pretty happy with it. I've got startpages for my personal stuff, one for my wife and her personal stuff, and a couple for work.
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I've been using a modified and simplified version of Prismatic Night it's somewhat basic but I'm pretty happy with it. I've got startpages for my personal stuff, one for my wife and her personal stuff, and a couple for work.
Ah personalized ones, also a good idea
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I use organizr. It can use iframes to load the pages which makes for a very integrated experience. It can be a little more complex to get going and get your apps playing nice with the iframes. Also the development on it has slowed down a lot. I'm hoping it gets more love soon, but that alone has me looking for alternatives. There are several others I have seen. I'm looking at Homepage currently.
So far nothing seems better than organizr for my uses.
That's what I use. It goes under the radar a lot and I don't know why. I love that it shows me my sabnzb downloads and what streams are happening on Jellyfin at a glance.
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+1 for Homarr. I didn't need to learn how to write any configs. Everything can be setup in realtime, in the GUI, and is immediately testable. Homarr brought a homepage down to my skill level.
My only wish is to lock homepages behind user permissions but it's fine, my family friends don't intend to explore, just to get to where they're going.
I think this is possible nowdays.
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
Static, hand coded html. You can be as pretty as you want to be. A good learning exercise and since it is all static it will be fast and won't have more security issues.
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This is what I use. I tried other ones, but this one is simple to set up and edit. It's very clean and has a ton of widgets for services. I would like it to have a login option, but that isn't a deal breaker.
Yeah; the lack of authentication options is a bit of a bummer if you're going to expose/share this page. There is always basic_auth in nginx or whatever proxy you're using if you really want.
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I think this is possible nowdays.
In that case. Homarr is awesome, no complaints.
I probably won't retroact this, my family aren't going to explore and it was more to keep them on their specific homepage and stop them getting lost. New users will be locked to their specific page, I don't expect they'll ever go exploring to find out.
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Static, hand coded html. You can be as pretty as you want to be. A good learning exercise and since it is all static it will be fast and won't have more security issues.
Or if you want to learn a JS framework, you can also do it that way.
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Gives you a nice dashboard that you can configure however you like. It includes integration with a ton of existing services, as well as docker.
My setup:
Clicking on each service will open it's respective url.
The 'healthy' indicator at the top right of each service is it's container health. Clicking on that will expand to show cpu, ram and network usage;
There are a bunch of other static site generators as well. They're mostly targeted at blogs and whatnot, but maybe that's a good thing if you want to leave some instructions/documentation about each one.
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
If you want some ideas, there are plenty of examples here:
https://old.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/search?sort=new&restrict_sr=on&q=flair%3APersonal%2BDashboard
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
I use wiki.js in the linuxserver.io flavor. I have 3 URLs for every service I run: public, LAN, and tailscale url. My "homepage" is a big markdown table with links to all the services. It's not pretty by any means, but it's very functional
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
Homepage.dev
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Homepage.dev
I like homarr.
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Over the years I accumulated very many services which I host myself and each of them has it's own URL:
- 6 websites, mine and my sisters
- 3 instances of home assistant
- Uptime Kuma
- Synology with photos on it
- Matrix server
- Firefox sync
- TinyTinyRSS
- Mastodon
- PeerTube
- PieFed
- Immich
- Open WebUI (for local large language models)
- UniFi (CCTV)
- Baïkal (Cal- and CardDav)
I'm probably forgetting some of them now and I'm planning to host more in the future.
The problem is how to remember all of those URLs or domains. I have a system how I call them, but my extended family can't really remember them.
I think it's time for a landing page. Do you guys have any suggestions?
I just made a landing page in HASS, if you're already running three instances could you make a page in one?
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Do you guys have any suggestions?
Because I don't like software getting in my way I just cobbled together some HTML and CSS and call it a day.
Similar, but more fancy, I have a bash script that runs every 15 minutes and ingests a config file. The config file has a super simple CSV format of every service I have. It checks that all the services are operational and generates an HTML file from it. If any services are down the HTML will show its down, otherwise its just a helpful link.
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I just made a landing page in HASS, if you're already running three instances could you make a page in one?
Hm, so you just used some cards to make links and icons somehow for that? But then I would need to replicate it on at least my dads and our instance.
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Hm, so you just used some cards to make links and icons somehow for that? But then I would need to replicate it on at least my dads and our instance.
Yep, here is the yaml but redacted
- type: entities title: Communication entities: - type: weblink name: Webmail url: https://postale.io/ icon: mdi:email - type: weblink name: Mattermost url: https://mm.stuff.com icon: mdi:chat - type: weblink name: Mumble Server url: https://mumble.stuff.com icon: mdi:radio-handheld
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Similar, but more fancy, I have a bash script that runs every 15 minutes and ingests a config file. The config file has a super simple CSV format of every service I have. It checks that all the services are operational and generates an HTML file from it. If any services are down the HTML will show its down, otherwise its just a helpful link.
I run my website as static site from within a Docker container, I wonder how I would get the information about the other containers into that site.
Do you directly serve that site from the host or do you run the script and write something in a volume the site has read access to or bind a file?
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I run my website as static site from within a Docker container, I wonder how I would get the information about the other containers into that site.
Do you directly serve that site from the host or do you run the script and write something in a volume the site has read access to or bind a file?
I host it on the host that runs the script and proxy it. I have one mission critial pi that is my uptime bot, pi hole and backup VPN if my elaborate server falls on its face. But you could easily use docker volumes too, and have the script push to that folder.