Most importantly, this helps make WebRTC calls in XMPP more reliable
when either (or both) endpoints are behind NAT (as is the case with most
mobile devices), and avoids depending on a third-party service.
Default configuration has been applied in the virtual environment file;
this allows for setting up most host-dependent configuration easily.
This commit integrates WriteFreely as a systemd service, set up as a
single-user instance by default (as is probably appropriate for a
home-server setup); a default administrator is set up, and whoever
is managing the home-server is expected to update the username and
password after first login.
Though WriteFreely expects to have a hostname set up for the instance,
we do not listen on any specific hostname by default. It is expected,
rather, that the `nginx-proxy-http` service is used with a drop-in for
using the correct `writefreely` upstream.
Configuration for this will continue to evolve as required.
Navidrome is a Subsonic/Airsonic-compatible music server with a built-in
web interface, and can be used as a quasi-self-hosted-Spotify-alternative.
By default, music files are read from an empty `navidrome-music` volume,
which is expected to be populated via whatever external means are
available to the server. The workflow here might be improved in the
future.
The `discord-ircd` service has been removed as of a few commits ago, but
references to this were not removed entirely. In addition, we now mask,
not disable, the `coreos-home-server-update` timer to ensure this cannot
be re-enabled spuriously.
This is a basic implementation on top of the venerable `rss2email`
script, and is intended to be driven by a timer and the
`rss2email-subscribe` service, which manages the subscribed feeds.
System files are moved to `/etc/coreos-home-server` to be unambiguous
in relation to other, pre-installed system files. Long-running services
are also now defined as `Type=notify`, which helps improve ordering and
dependencies.
This contains the culmination of work done privately for a few months,
and is intended to be a solid basis for other peoples' experimentations
with setting up single-node, home-server setups using Fedora CoreOS.