this post was submitted on 25 Feb 2024
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One thing that goes a long way toward making self-hosting easy is to minimise dependencies.
In order of preference (best to worst):
Mind the version numbers, too; try not to depend on library features that aren't widely packaged/deployed yet.
Bonus points for supporting multiple OS, like the various BSD flavours.
Being conservative with dependencies makes it more likely that someone will be willing to install, package, or administer your software. It also helps limit the attack surface, potentially avoiding exploits in the future.
Great point, I always consider dependencies from a security perspective, but for management/setup sometimes I am like "the devops are going to figure it out"...
To clarify, would an example be supporting sqlite, so people won't have to deploy postgres unless they need to?
My plan is to offer a docker-compose configuration people can tinker with. I had the mindset that whatever happens in the container stays in the container, but your comment made me realize I should be mindful of other installation methods. Thanks ๐
Supporting SQLite as an option for people with modest needs is not a bad idea. As long as you keep your SQL simple and avoid vendor-specific extensions, adding support for it at any point shouldn't be difficult.
Providing a Docker config is fine, but I would never lean on it as a substitute for conservative dependency choices and good build scripts. Many people don't use it and never will. If you instead design your software to be easily built/installed/packaged natively for any distro, then it will reach more users, and as a side effect, will also be easy to package for just about any container system (Docker, Kubernetes, LXC, etc.)