this post was submitted on 05 Mar 2024
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I'd like to start doing a better job of tracking the changes I made to my homelab environment. Hardware, software, network, etc. I'm just not sure what path I want to take and was hoping to get some recommendations. So far the thoughts I have are:

  • A change history sub-section of my wiki. (I'm not a fan of this idea.)
  • A ticketing system of some sort. (I tried this one and it was too heavy. I'd need to find a simple solution.)
  • A nextcloud task list.
  • Self-host a gitlab instance, make a project for changes and track with issues. Move what stuff I have in github to this instance and kill my github projects. (It's all private stuff.)

I know that several of you are going to say "config as code" and I get it. But I'm not there yet and I want to track the changes I'm making today.

Thanks

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[–] Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de 3 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (2 children)

My recommendation would be to use Logseq.

It's similar to Obsidian ("Second Brain"/ PKM), but with the journal function as backbone.

It relies heavily on crosslinking, is markdown-based, very efficient and a joy to use once you "got" it, and supports a hell lot of features, including TODO, plugins, a knowledge network ("graph view") and much more.

I use it for everything (external brain) and pretty much never loved a piece of software this much!
It sounds like it is THE tool you're searching for!

I'll definitely take a look.

[–] Cyber@feddit.uk 1 points 8 months ago