I recognize this will vary depending on how much you self-host, so I’m curious about the range of experiences from the few self-hosted things to the many self-hosted things.

Also how might you compare it to other maintenance of your other online systems (e.g. personal computer/phone/etc.)?

  • ssdfsdf3488sd@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Almost none now that i automated updates and a few other things with kestra and ansible. I need to figure out alerting in wazuh and then it will probably drop to none.

  • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    6 months ago

    Huge amounts of daily maintenance because I lack self control and keep changing things that were previously working.

  • CronyAkatsuki@lemmy.cronyakatsuki.xyz
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    6 months ago

    Minimal, I have to force myself to check the servers for updates atleast once a week.

    Main problem for me is I automated podman and docker updates with their respective autoupdate mechanisms and use ntfy for push notifications so I know if a service stops working and I had an update recently on it that it’s an update issue.

    Also have uptime monitor wih uptime kuma to monitor state of my services to catch them not working before I do, also ntfy for push notifications.

    Also have grafana+prometheus seted up on my biggest server for monitoring and alerting with alertmanager+mail to get notifications on even more errors.

    So in general I only have to worry about occasional once every few months error and updates of the host system (debian).