i prefer homepage https://github.com/gethomepage/homepage
you add a label in the docker compose and the dashboard follows.
I use it and my biggest issue is the ram usage, it’s like 500mb for a dashboard, the other ones I tried were much lighter
I use a manually edited yaml home assistant page. Beat that on number of integrations.
30+ integrations seems like a really small number.
You’re mostly adding dozens of hyperlinks, like your own homapage, but some of them (30) can provide direct info from said integration, so a button for your Torrent Client also has the current download speed for example
I use homepage and pretty happy with it. “Drag and drop configuration, no yaml” actually put me off.
Drag and drop isn’t for me either but it’s nice to have more beginners-friendly options in the self hosted community. Not everybody like to live in the terminal.
I wish we would all start switching over to JSON for configuration files. It’s so much easier to parse, and you can’t screw it up with too many spaces or not enough.
Why not just write your YAML files in JSON syntax?
JSON is a valid subset of YAML
I used to think that until I figured out yaml and now yaml isn’t so bad.
It helps that text editors know what yaml is now so insert spaces when you hit tab etc
My biggest gripe with yaml (especially in docker-compose files) is that l, for me at least, it is absolutely not clear when I need to add dahes (-) in front of multiple entries and when it’s just linebreaks.
And there are no easy accessible docker-compose validators…
No thanks. Yaml isn’t perfect but by God json is best used to return and parse data, not input it.
My biggest peeve with JSON when I’m forced to use it as a configuration format is that it doesn’t have any syntactical support for comments.
So I can’t even add any notes to the file.
Yea, this is a deal breaker imo. My code tends to be 10 to 1 comments to lines of code ratio. Configuration even more so.
jsonc/json5 exists for this use case, but few tools actually use it, yaml is far more popular
Instead you can screw it up by having too many commas or not enough. Hardly that much of an improvement.
No support for comments? Hard pass
Yeah, this is my biggest annoyance with JSON. As a data structure it’s very elegant, but it only really makes sense to people who know how to code, and without the ability to add comments you have to rely heavily on external documentation to make it readable to most users.
And like yeah, both the wonderful (and foss!)
.json5
and Microsoft’s semi-proprietary(?).jsonc
exist, but most projects just use their language’s default JSON parser that doesn’t recognize them. What I would personally love to see is.json5
support baked into the default JSON parsing libraries of Python, Go, etc. (Enabled by a flag, likely.) It’s a superset of regular JSON and fully ES2019 compatible, so there shouldn’t be any issues.
It’s IMO also so much clearer regarding data types. You can’t accidentally write a boolean when you want a string.
Yeah i was wondering how you actually use versioning with that drag and drop. Homepage seems better for that IMO
Same, homarr is decent but I prefer my configs, quick edits from whatever device is in hand, easy peasy.
This is a great platform, especially if you are just beginning in self-hosting. I don’t use it on my deployment “version 2.0” because I found it unnecessary once learning a little more about docker, etc. While I was using it, I loved it, and would definitely recommend it!
If any of you can get the Pi-hole integration to work, let me know how you did it. There’s a github thread about it, but I haven’t heard any progress
I’ll take a look when i get home tonight. I do have mine working.
Nice to know it’s not just me battling with that