chistev 3 days ago

My personal blog is -

https://rxjourney.com.ng

I self host because I love writing code. It's inspired by Medium. It was built with Django and Svelte. I could have written the whole thing with Django but I wanted to learn Svelte, and I had plans of making it bigger and more interactive initially.

It's hosted on Render.

alp1n3_eth a day ago

A lot of aggregators will also not allow your blog to be posted if it's on a newsletter site like Substack, Patreon, etc.

I use GitHub Pages for hosting, Porkbun for the domain, and Astro for the blog itself. EZPZ to manage and very straightforward, plus Astro's docs are great.

boricj 3 days ago

It's hosted on a computer located inside my apartment. It used to be hosted on a cheap Synology NAS. No Cloudflare or CDN or anything like that, just a bare NGINX server.

The website itself is built on Jekyll, but I want to switch to something else because I don't use Ruby/Gem for anything else and I can't be bothered to commit that stack to memory just for that.

  • solardev 2 days ago

    Is there a particular stack you prefer?

    If JS, maybe consider Astro (for simple blogs)? It has built-in MDX support and deploys in a few seconds.

    There's also Ghost, but it's a bit more complex. It has both a paid cloud version now and also the FOSS self-hosted version: https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost

    If PHP, maybe https://getgrav.org/?

    For Go or a prebuilt binary, maybe https://gohugo.io/?

    • boricj 2 days ago

      I'm a low-level kind of person, both at work and at home. My requirements are static site only, hosted locally and no fuss (if I need to look up how to install the associated ecosystem or deal with a package manager it's out).

      If I had to migrate right now I'd probably go with Hugo.

      • solardev 2 days ago

        Fair enough! I can't be of any help there then. Hope you find something!

LinuxBender 2 days ago

Just nginx and static pre-compressed html and txt files. Publishing stack is my fingers and vim to get spell check. Backups are automated.

krapp 2 days ago

Nikola to generate a static site and blog that I never bother updating because Mastodon is easier, and some shell scripts. The script that publishes the site creates a git repo, adds the static files and the remote host, force-pushes to origin and then gets deleted. It's as elegant as it is useless.

bvnierop 2 days ago

Static website written entirely in Emacs' org-mode with a slightly customized publish script that gets executed on a push to `main`. Hosted on GitHub Pages.

lappet 3 days ago

Hugo, s3 and CloudFront. I use GitHub actions to push to s3, that is my deployment pipeline.

bergie 2 days ago

https://lille-oe.de/

Jekyll on GitHub Pages with various actions to automate stuff like calculating mileage statistics.

Editing via the GitJournal app.

asukachikaru 2 days ago

Hosted on GitHub Pages, built with React. For now I'm using nextjs, but a self-made static site generator is on the roadmap.

petabyt 3 days ago

I use a from-scratch python script that generates a bunch of html files which are pushed to GitHub pages

aosaigh 3 days ago

Next.js with SSR, hosted for free with Vercel. I’ve used Jekyll, Django and Craft CMS in the past.

brokegrammer 2 days ago

Astro hosted for free on Cloudflare Pages.

skwee357 3 days ago

Astro, netlify (in a process to move to a VPS), neovim

ridiculous_fish 3 days ago

Jekyll and nginx in Docker on Hetzner for €4.49/mo

quintes 3 days ago

Jekyll s3 cloudfront

sharmi 3 days ago

Astro blog deployed on Github Pages.

VS Code for editing.

Points to Ponder

-> Use the basic Astro template for blogs. It is basically enough for a self-hosted blog needs. Using any of the third party themes/templates with a list of features has a bunch of disadvantages. It takes more effort to customize and upgrading to newer versions totally breaks the setup, sucking in hours of your time.

-> VS Code has plenty of Markdown Extensions. Markdown Preview and Frontend Masters come to mind.