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selfhosted·SelfhostedbyLegoraft

How do you manage your server files?

I'm currently debating on how to manage files on my servers. I have a jellyfin and a minecraft server on which I need to add, remove or download files quite often. I don't really want to use scp for everything, so I was wondering what everyone uses.

Edit: I'm looking for a gui solution, but a somewhat automated process of backups etc. is also nice

Edit 2: For anyone wondering what my final solution was: I am currently using a wireguard vpn on a raspberry pi to access my servers. I use Xpipe as a gui interface to transfer my files. I also just use tmux and ssh to execute commands and run services.

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lemmy.ca

Linux?

I just use sshfs to mount ssh shares and move files between them like any other folder.

Same with samba shares (windows).

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Klajanreply
lemmy.zip

You can do the same on Windows (mount ssh shares), there is an Fuse like project for Windows: WinFsp.

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lemmy.ml

IDK what OS you are on but on Linux most file managers have support for remote filesystems. SFTP (SSH-FTP, not to be confused with FTPS which is FTP-secure) is ubiquitous and if you use scp then you already have SSH set up.

If you need Windows support it is more of a pain. You may need to set up Samba or WebDAV and permissions can suck. But you can also download a third-party file browser that supports remote protocols.

So basically SFTP, and I fairly regularly just use a graphical file manager when I am doing one-off operations.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

I'm using debian, so sftp would be an option, do you use a graphical client?

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kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

Right now I am just using nautilus (default GNOME file manager) but in past I was using Thunar (default XFCE file manager). I'd be pretty surprised if whatever file manager you are currently using doesn't support SFTP out of the box. Typically you can just enter something like sftp://myhost.example into the location bar. They may also have a dedicated network connection section with a wizard to add it.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

I'm considering this, as I can see by your example, you can add a domain name to the server. How would you go over doing this?

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kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

You should look into DNS or maybe mDNS or even local DNS aliases.

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nemo for a gui, or midnightcommander after logging in via ssh for managing/moving files on the server.

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lemmy.cafe

NFS comes to mind, naturally.

I remember some years ago scp had a big issue, can't recall what, though. But that made me have a look at rsync, and I've been using that ever since. Flags are a bit atteocious, but I've aliases rsync -avz status=progress to copy and it's been happy days. One other benefit - incremental copy. Helps in cases where a copy procedure had been stopped for whatever reason.

11

I wouldn't really recommend NFS unless you need to remote mount as a "true filesystem" with full support for things like sockets, locking and other UNIX filesystem features or you need top performance. It is so difficult to do authentication and UID mapping that it typically isn't worth it for simpler use cases like "add, remove or download files".

scp can be slow with large numbers of small files. rsync is much better at that and can do differential transfers if you need that. Since rsync can also run over SSH it can be very easy to just use it as a default.

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Sftp using the KDE file browser Dolphin. Keeps it simple for my monkey brain as if I'm accessing the drive locally.

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dubvee.org

NFS, SMB, and/or sshfs

  • NFS for my media shares between servers (Emby, MPD, etc)
  • SMB for accessing from workstations
  • sshfs when I need a quick, one-off file session (or if I'm accessing remotely)
8

Sshfs is also a good candidate if for whatever reason you want security / encryption

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

I mostly want to upload to a media server from my desktop, as that is where I download and manage the files before they go on the server

1

Plex/Jellyfin is automatically managed by Sonarr/Radarr so I don't touch those.

But for game servers I use Pterodactyl which has a nice WebUI to manage the server and its files, and has automated backups.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

pterodactyl looks really neat, will definitely look into that. I have a manual system for my media library, so I want to add the directories with artwork and movies manually to the directory which jellyfin reads.

2

I would just use rsync on the whole folder.

Rsync is smart enough to be able to only send files you didnt' have previously like a regular mv command.

Or you can sync the whole directory and have it also delete removed files.

Edit: If you wan't something to automatically "sync/backup" the data, why don't you try and use syncthing? P2P syncing solution that might be exactly what you need in your hse case.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

I'm now considering syncing my minecraft world with syncthing, I already use it for some things but don't know why I didn't think of doing that.

On the other hand, if I have a 100+ gb media library, it seems kinda over the top to also have it fully copied on my local machine. Do you do this?

2

When it comes to media like my music library and comics for example I just use rsync to move new ones to the server every time I collect some new (I have about 60gb of it)

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

so you basically have a copy of your media library on a local machine?

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No, I only have new files on my local machine, and as I collect new stuff I move them to my server with rsync and just remove it onthe local machine.

Rsync is more than smart enough to, if you keep same folder structure to easilly move the files to the server without you having to manually copy other each file.

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lemy.lol

Can you tell us what's your issue with scp? It'll help us make better recommendations.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

I mostly want some sort of graphical way, I'm often moving a bunch of loose files and seeing them is a lot easier for me when transferring

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lemmy.world

sftp://USERNAME@SERVER:PORT in the address bar of most file managers will work. You can omit the port if it's the default (22), you can omit the username if it's the same as your local user.

You can also add the server as a favorite/shortcut in your file manager sidebar (it works at least in Thunar and Nautilus). Or you can edit ~/.config/gtk-3.0/bookmarks directly:

file:///some/local/directory
file:///some/other/directory
sftp://my.example.org/home/myuser my.example.org
sftp://[email protected]:2222/home/otheruser my.example.net
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lemy.lol

I would recommend you mention "graphical" or "GUI" in your main post. Most suggestions to be assuming CLI.

Some suggestions mentioned NFS / SSHFS. Those would allow you to use any GUI file manager for moving stuff over.

Sorry I can't help more. Don't have a lot of knowledge in gui tools

3

I'm not losing them, I have a lot of single files. For example during a Minecraft update, I have to move ~20 jar files and other things to the server. I also try to make frequent backups and I upload new movies somewhat frequently to my jellyfin server, so I want to have an easy way to transfer files.

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lemmy.world

Nemo/most file explorers have a remote server option. For nemo, "Files > Connect to server". Once configured, you should be able to view your server files from your file explorer and uploading files should be as easy as drag and drop. I'm pretty sure nautilis has something similar too!

It's not the best for security because if someone gets your computer, they can access your server through the file explorer. But it's fast and convenient if you are already using your file explorer.

3

Generally you can even just type it into the location bar, no need to find a specific dialog. For example if I type CTRL+l then sftp://myserver.local into Nautilus it pops up a username+password dialog (or just logs in using my keys).

2

It's not very sexy, but I just use SFTP and filezilla. Filezilla is available for all the major operating systems, and an ssh server is basically required anyways.

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lemmy.jlh.name

scp is one of the best options. You could also try sshfs if you want something more interactive.

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

sorry, should've clarified: secure copy, it's an ssh kind of way of copying files to a server

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Yeah, I had to look it up but the above was the first search result 🙂

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Legoraftreply
reddthat.com

Do you automate your backups in some way? And can you also use samba remotely

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For automatic stuff I use synching to keep my home an documents in sync.

I don't normally use samba remotely but I have a wire guard VPN that I connect to if I'm not at home and that gives me access to samba or any other "local" services I might need when away

1

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:

Fewer LettersMore Letters
DNSDomain Name Service/System
HTTPHypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web
PlexBrand of media server package
SSHSecure Shell for remote terminal access
SSLSecure Sockets Layer, for transparent encryption
TLSTransport Layer Security, supersedes SSL
VPNVirtual Private Network

7 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 6 acronyms.

[Thread #576 for this sub, first seen 5th Mar 2024, 18:25] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

1

Being the weirdo I am I have 2 things I use.

WinSCP to get that classic FTP look of file transfers and VS Code when working on smaller compose files.

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kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

ftp ans sftp are completely different things. ftp is a very old protocol and can be run encrypted as ftps. sftp runs over SSH and is pretty common to use.

Naming is truly one of the hardest problems in computer science.

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FabianRYreply
lemmy.world

Thanks😅. I wasn't aware, and until today thought that sftp is just like "the secure version of ftp" (never heard of ftps), and not different things at all. I have still a lot to learn in this field.

Edit:I deleted the comentarios because i am unsure on what i am using right now and i don't want to confuse people. I'll check it when i have some free time

3

Unless you went out of your way to set up FTP and get a TLS certificate I would put my money on you using SFTP which uses SSH for authentication and transport security. It doesn't require anything to set up other than TOFU server keys and a client key or password for authentication.

Which is probably the right thing to use. Really you shouldn't be using FTP anymore. Probably you just want HTTP for public data and SFTP for private authenticated data.

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blotzreply
lemmy.world

what! thats so dumb xD. so ftps stands for file transfer protocol secure, and sftp stands for ssh file transfer protocol? we have reached recursive acronyms.

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kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

Yup super confusing. The way I remember it is that https is http + SSL so ftps is ftp + SSL. The weird one sftp is an entirely different protocol that uses SSH to transfer files.

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blotzreply
lemmy.world

Okay this has made it so much worse. i figured that the s in https and ftps stands for secure like a reasonable person. of course it doesnt xD. you would think that this is at least consistent but alas. guess what s in ssh doesnt stand for :)

1

I don't know if the s is actually "SSL" or "secure" but the point is that the are the same protocol, running over an encryption layer. So adding an s suffix is running the same protocol over some encrypted transport. You see this s suffix for lots of things like irc/ircs and dav/davs.

This is different to sftp which isn't related to ftp at all other than they are both protocols that transfer files.

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