Hi! I’m currently looking onto perhaps running Jellystat. But the instructions seem to be a bit…lacking? Is there a step by step guide on how to get it up and running?

Thanks!

  • MeatsOfRage@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    There’s a link in their Read Me on GitHub under the title about launching with Docker. Are you familiar with Docker?

    • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
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      3 months ago

      Thanks…Yeah I saw it. I have a few docker things deployed. But the “getting started” section completely ignores setting up the Postgresql DB, which very clearly it seems to want. This is not listed as a requirement, but still hinted casually around whenever it mentions the user/pass, environment variables etc.

      So…is there anywhere mentioned how to get the whole thing up and running, including docker and postgresql?

      • bobslaede@feddit.dk
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        3 months ago

        They have a docker-compose.yml file in the repo. It looks like it has everything all ready for you.

        • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
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          2 months ago

          Yeah…I copied the whole of it onto my docker-compose.yml. But after running a docker compose up, and after getting:

          docker-compose.yml: the attribute `version` is obsolete, it will be ignored, please remove it to avoid potential confusion 
          [+] Running 3/3
           ✔ Network jellystat_default           Created                                                                                                                         0.1s 
           ✔ Container jellystat-jellystat-db-1  Started                                                                                                                         0.9s 
           ✔ Container jellystat-jellystat-1     Started       
          
          

          I still can’t get to connect on http://myIP:3000, I get nothing, just a “unable to connect” firefox error. Is there anything I should set up/modify on the docker-compose.yml?

          • bobslaede@feddit.dk
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            2 months ago

            There will probably be something in the logs that tells you what is going wrong. Maybe it can’t connect to the db, or maybe it’s starting on a wrong port or something.

              • bobslaede@feddit.dk
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                2 months ago

                In the same place as you run your docker compose up command you just type docker compose logs

                • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
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                  2 months ago

                  Huh…so the log is just an almost infinite loop of these:

                  jellystat-1     | Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND jellystat-db
                  jellystat-1     |     at GetAddrInfoReqWrap.onlookupall [as oncomplete] (node:dns:120:26)
                  jellystat-1     | [JELLYSTAT] Database exists. Skipping creation
                  jellystat-1     | FS-related option specified for migration configuration. This resets migrationSource to default FsMigrations
                  jellystat-1     | FS-related option specified for migration configuration. This resets migrationSource to default FsMigrations
                  jellystat-1     | node:internal/process/promises:391
                  jellystat-1     |     triggerUncaughtException(err, true /* fromPromise */);
                  jellystat-1     |     ^
                  jellystat-1     | 
                  jellystat-1     | Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND jellystat-db
                  jellystat-1     |     at GetAddrInfoReqWrap.onlookupall [as oncomplete] (node:dns:120:26) {
                  jellystat-1     |   errno: -3008,
                  jellystat-1     |   code: 'ENOTFOUND',
                  jellystat-1     |   syscall: 'getaddrinfo',
                  jellystat-1     |   hostname: 'jellystat-db'
                  jellystat-1     | }
                  

                  Just for clarity’s sake, here’s my docker-compose.yml:

                  version: '3'
                  services:
                    jellystat-db:
                      image: postgres:15.2
                      environment:
                        POSTGRES_DB: 'jfstat'
                        POSTGRES_USER: postgres
                        POSTGRES_PASSWORD: mypassword
                      volumes:
                      - /postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data # Mounting the volume
                    jellystat:
                      image: cyfershepard/jellystat:latest
                      environment:
                        POSTGRES_USER: postgres
                        POSTGRES_PASSWORD: MyJellystat
                        POSTGRES_IP: jellystat-db
                        POSTGRES_PORT: 5432
                        JWT_SECRET: 'my-secret-jwt-key'
                      ports:
                        - "3000:3000" #Server Port
                      volumes:
                        - /backup-data:/app/backend/backup-data # Mounting the volume
                  
                      depends_on:
                        - jellystat-db
                      restart: unless-stopped
                  networks:
                    default:
                  
                  

                  I literally haven’t changed anything from default as it was a test, even the password fields.

      • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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        3 months ago

        Seems pretty creepy to be collecting logs about what people watch. Why do people use this?

        • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          Is it creepy what people collect data on their own viewing habits so they can visualise data for fun and keep track of things they’ve watched? I’m not sure I understand why that is creepy TBH. It’s not like people are collecting data on viewing habits of random strangers.

          • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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            3 months ago

            It’s the duality (hypocrisy?) around a lot of selfhosters.

            They’re self-hosting for “privacy” from Google/Microsoft/whatever, but then install enough surveillance software that the CIA might think you’ve over done it and then watch everything they and any friends/family they share access with are doing.

            I mean that’s cool if that’s what you want to do, but it’s still a weird thing.

            • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
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              3 months ago

              Depends on your judgement of other people, i guess. I have thousands of movies taking TBs of space on my NAS and lots of users. I’d like to have easy reports such as “movies never watched in a year with a low imdb score”. So i know what can I delete if needed. But to each their own.

              • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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                3 months ago

                I mean, I don’t much care either way; I don’t expect privacy if I’m doing something on a computer owned by someone else so if they want to log everything that’s great.

                It’s just that, personally, I don’t want to know what my friends and family are posting, or watching, or listening to (unless we’re like, having an actual conversation about it) and keep as much logging as remotely feasible turned off.

                I’d be a LOT happier if the tools to do logging were just aggregate stats: in your case, you don’t need to know WHO watched it, just if it was watched, which is still very privacy respecting.

                But uh, mostly all these analysis tools/log analyzers/metrics api endpoints are designed to log every single detail of every single interaction and that just… makes me feel skeezy.