{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","title":"gudnuf wrote","author_name":"gudnuf (npub1ce…v3d7m)","author_url":"https://yabu.me/npub1ce7d8cdg8k49dnl3da34mvhah8kevxfsq2vdguq6trngapqfsdzsnv3d7m","provider_name":"njump","provider_url":"https://yabu.me","html":"Holesail.io is next level\n\nI've always wanted to self-host, but for most pieces of software this is no simple task. A while ago I attempted to set up sovereign-stack.org by  nostr:npub1j4z7qht2yntl6tw7f48cj92dtm7nfsa8jnjklshj5yvug42nvykqxlwuxp (which I still think is the ideal solution), but the necessary network configurations are over my head.\n\nI just set up a test mint running on hardware I own! You can use it at https://testnut.brownduff.rocks (no promises on how long it will be up).\n\nFor this setup, I am still relying on AWS to connect me to the broader internet, but that's it. I am running nginx on a free AWS instance with 1 GB memory and 1 CPU, then connecting to my home server via holesail. I outline the basics here: https://gist.github.com/gudnuf/d3f797a7f69a819c12ae7765e288cf8b \n\nMy next steps are to make the AWS deployment more automated and be able to handle any number of domains/holesail connections.\n\nI've been trying to figure out how to self-host for a long time and be able to expose things like a mint or a blog without using tor or VPNs. Holesail knocks everything else out of the park in terms of complexity and ability to just make it work."}
