schmonz.com is a Fediverse instance that uses the ActivityPub protocol. In other words, users at this host can communicate with people that use software like Mastodon, Pleroma, Friendica, etc. all around the world.
This server runs the snac software and there is no automatic sign-up process.
The amazing folks at @yunohost are running a fundraising campaign to cover their operating costs for 2026.
I personally make a monthly recurring donation to them but wish I could give more 🥲
If you use their services and you can afford it, please consider donating to their project. Every Euro / Dollar / Yen counts:
🔗 : https://yunohost.org/donate.en.html
#NotAllHeroesWearCapes #SelfHosting #empowerment #resist #YunoHost
Curious what kind of luck people have had running a single-user, self-hosted @gotosocial instance instead of joining a larger shared node.
With relays in GotoSocial, my feed is great—I can discover pretty much everything I care about. My bigger question is the *other* direction. I've heard some instances de-prioritize or outright limit federation from low-volume, self-hosted, or otherwise unknown nodes.
If you're mostly consuming content, I imagine it's a non-issue. But if you actually want to participate in conversations, are you giving up reliable interaction by running your own tiny instance?
Curious to hear real-world experiences. #Mastodon #Fediverse #SelfHosting #GoToSocial
I keep hearing friends on/off Fedi worry about aggressive AI/web scrapers or mention them hitting their servers.
I've been experimenting with different defenses for the last few months and want to share this setup, even if helps just one other person directly or indirectly. It has reduced the load on our servers usually by 80% by CPU as well as log entries.
Pretty funny that the most often requested file from my small kitchen-server is "/robots.txt". Pretty surprising, since a lot of LLM-bots usually ignores this file 
The other requested files are just some js crap, which is obviously don't exist on my server — possibly some script-kiddies tried to find some entrypoint (see "config.js" and "env.js").
The funny part: the referrer URLs. Hope, the default content of NetBSD /etc/passwd from inside the sandbox was made someone happy 
Anyone out there running a backup MX that I could add my domain to for a few days? My only internet connectivity right now is tethering my phone, and I can't route incoming email server connections that way (afaik). #selfhosting
European institutions seem to be all in when it comes to introducing age verification mandates for citizens in member states: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/commission-sets-out-common-approach-eu-wide-age-verification-technologies
I now have daily anxiety thinking about the future of the fediverse.
So how do I channel this fear and turn it into something constructive? I'm going back to writing #selfhosting guides for newbies.
It's a great distraction, which gives me a bit of hope. Especially the next guide, which will cover my favorite fediverse software - #GoToSocial (which is powering this instance) - and how to install and configure it. Your own little home on the fediverse! Lightweight and features-packed.
Surely something like this would fall outside the scope of regulation. Right? Right?
#MySoCalledSudoLife #YunoHost #VPS #AgeVerification #privacy #EUBigTech
@labellaragassa It's a bunch of tradeoffs. There are acceptable solutions where trust is warranted, but they're less convenient, and require more #SelfHosting skills. How far down the rabbit hole of inconvenience are you willing to go, to satisfy more of your ideals?
Doing a mastodon *minor* update is still a mess in 2026 requiring manual steps to trigger db migrations pre and post update. And that's using docker. Without containerization its even more steps to do. Just in case anybody is still wondering why people do not "just self-host"...
I haven't turned on this raspberry pi 4 8gb of ram in like 3 years. I've been feeling like resurrecting it and setting it up again.
What services should I install on it?
What casing or peripherals should I use?
RE: https://mastodon.bsd.cafe/@subnetspider/116758330967344651
Bastille makes a great self-hosting platform! Look at this absolute list of self-hosted software ⬇️
nsd, unbound, acme, adguard, gitea, haproxy, homebox, mail, netbox, nextcloud, plex, rustdesk, samba, syncthing, tor, unifi, vaultwarden, and more on one box.
The webserver for my websites (https://blog.hofstede.it and others) is now runing on 15.1-RELEASE arm64 with PKGBase 🙂
Upgrade from 15.0 to 15.1was pleasantly boring:
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/cutting-edge/#pkgbase
- Creating a BE for the new version
- Mounting the BE to /mnt/upgrade
- Executing "env ABI=FreeBSD:15:aarch64 pkg-static -c /mnt/upgrade upgrade -r FreeBSD-base"
- bectl activate -t 15.1-RELEASE
- Rebooting the system
Everything working fine, all lights green
It is surprisingly easy to get a locality domain.
I followed this guide and had one in 18 minutes:
https://fredchan.org/blog/locality-domains-guide/
Kinda postmortem:
1) The maximal log size before rotation and count of gzipped logs to store should be increased in the newsyslogd configuration. This should be applied to any service, which is looking into the void^WInternet. So, I will not loss log records, related to the start of attack…
2) Also, Asterisk log should be added to newsyslogd configuration first. It weren't added here, so *.log files became too big (> 1 Gb) and of course fail2ban ate a lot of memory while parsing these big logs. If they were rotated properly, then fail2ban will not eat so much memory, parsing small enough files.
3) Since start of attack in logs were lost, then I could only imagine possible root cause of an attack. By default, any IP, which once failed to provide the proper credentials to login somewhere in my kitchen server, is banned immediately and forever.
But somehow those attackers managed to use just 2 IPs to make an attack and they weren't banned before manual intervention 
According to fail2ban logs they were banned, but they were obviously not banned by npf. So, I think, they started attack right in time when my blacklists were successfully updated and npf was reloading — as a result their IPs appeared as "banned" in the fail2ban, but the fail2ban failed to ban them via npf, so "IRL" their IPs still weren't banned. Time to revisit my script to update blacklists 
4) Looks like I need to install some Intrusion Detection System (possibly snort
since it is mature enough). It isn't good to rely only on one mechanism (fail2ban + blacklists + npf) to protect my precious machine.
Oh fuck, I was mistaken — it was a real attack, not LLM bots
— someone, using machines from French hosting, was trying to connect to my Asterisk box, using various SIP endpoints.
The attack was started at Monday's night and was found only because monit reported about too much memory eaten by fail2ban 
Interesting, why fail2ban didn't banned attacker's IP, because it should do that right after failed attempt to login?
Tine to revisit fail2ban jails configs…
Kinda postmortem:
1) The maximal log size before rotation and count of gzipped logs to store should be increased in the newsyslogd configuration. This should be applied to any service, which is looking into the void^WInternet. So, I will not loss log records, related to the start of attack…
2) Also, Asterisk log should be added to newsyslogd configuration first. It weren't added here, so *.log files became too big (> 1 Gb) and of course fail2ban ate a lot of memory while parsing these big logs. If they were rotated properly, then fail2ban will not eat so much memory, parsing small enough files.
3) Since start of attack in logs were lost, then I could only imagine possible root cause of an attack. By default, any IP, which once failed to provide the proper credentials to login somewhere in my kitchen server, is banned immediately and forever.
But somehow those attackers managed to use just 2 IPs to make an attack and they weren't banned before manual intervention 
According to fail2ban logs they were banned, but they were obviously not banned by npf. So, I think, they started attack right in time when my blacklists were successfully updated and npf was reloading — as a result their IPs appeared as "banned" in the fail2ban, but the fail2ban failed to ban them via npf, so "IRL" their IPs still weren't banned. Time to revisit my script to update blacklists 
4) Looks like I need to install some Intrusion Detection System (possibly snort
since it is mature enough). It isn't good to rely only on one mechanism (fail2ban + blacklists + npf) to protect my precious machine.
Huh, looks like the new ASes, with LLM-bots attacking servers, just dropped
TLDR: there are AS12876 and AS16276 — both located in France (Scaleway SAS and OVH SAS). My Asterisk self-hosted box was attacked from the next IPs: 62.4.15.81 and 51.222.38.229.
Today, after I was checked my e-mail, I found three warnings from Monit about fail2ban exhausting limits in my small server in the kitchen (Intel Atom N2800 1866 MHz and 4 Gb of RAM). First e-mail warns about fail2ban ate 200 MB of RAM, next about 500 MB of RAM and the last e-mail warns me that fail2ban ate 2 GB of RAM 
Then, I logged into my box and found that fail2ban, Asterisk and PostgreSQL aren't feeling well. The system load and the traffic amounts was unusual — the parameters are completely differs from which I used to see since server installation.
I checked fail2ban logs and found that it is still parses the data from Asterisk log which were happen at near 5 hours ago
And there were total mess in the Asterisk security.log (see screenshot) — some dumb (as it programmers
) LLM-bots were constantly trying to connect to my Asterisk server with HTTP protocol, evaluating it as a web-server, I dunno
And the Asterisk logs became enormously big — while newsyslogd wasn't invoked — they eat at near 4 GB
. I didn't specify the maximal size of Asterisk logfiles in the /etc/newsyslog.conf, because I wasn't expected a lot of lines in the PBX logs, which is in use only for my relatives.
Some graphs
from #Munin with LLM-bots attacking my kitchen server.
Graphs spans to the whole week, so on the left there is a normal state of my server. And on the right — attack is happening.
It's currently just a simplified version of my existing blog, but I'm hosting this website on my Raspberry Pi Zero for testing purposes:
We will see how things go over time, then possible port over the "real" thing 😛
We were without power for ~18 hours yesterday, but I’m still determined to eventually switch hosting my personal blog over to my local Raspberry Pi Zero
If you run your own local DNS servers at home, do you: (select all that apply)
Comment with your preferred DNS stack and privacy friendly DNS providers.
#FreeBSD #Linux #selfHosting #DNS
| Forward to ISP's DNS servers.: | 4 |
| Forward to a DNS service (1.1.1.1, 9.9.9.9, etc).: | 17 |
| Recursively resolve from root servers directly.: | 16 |
| Encrypt my DNS using DoH, DoT, etc.: | 14 |
TFW you realize you've had your MX entry set wrong for over a month.
Yet somehow I've still been getting (some) mail? 🤔
Is there anyone out there running an AMD 5650GE based system running Linux or BSD?
Can you tell us your CPU and GPU idle power numbers as displayed in btop?
Maybe this is an "easy button" of sorts to reduce power on an existing AMD AM4 system without going through the machinations of new mobo, ram, etc., etc. Get most of the way there?
#Linux #RunBSD #AMD #5650GE #PowerConsumption #Power #HomeLab #SelfHosting #SelfHosted #SOHO
Is there anyone out there running an AMD 5825U based system running Linux or BSD?
Can you tell us your CPU and GPU idle power numbers as displayed in btop?
#Linux #RunBSD #AMD #5825U #PowerConsumption #Power #HomeLab #SelfHosting #SelfHosted #SOHO
boostedPleased to announce another edition of Cloudbreak, taking place May 28.
For those that don't know already, this is a 6hr fully-supported live training opportunity leading participants with no prior experience in system administration through the process of building up their own #sovereign & secured cloud server.
Hosted in the EU on renewable energy, the finished server also offers both Zoom & Google Docs alternatives.
Info & signup here:
👩💻 My So Called Sudo Life - day 500: still a newbie edition 🆕
Dear Fedi friends,
Today marks the 500th day of my self-hosting adventures and I'm celebrating it with... a slice of humble pie:
Also: please remember to update your Linux system to patch the critical vulnerability that has been found.
#Linux #CopyPaste #security #MySoCalledSudoLife #SelfHosting #YunoHost