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submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by BruisedMoose@piefed.social to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Like soup-to-nuts. I know I need to document what I'm doing and I've started several times, but then I never go back and make updates. I don't know if it's just the ADHD or if I'm just going about it or thinking about it in the wrong way.

So I'm curious about:

  • what you use for your documentation
  • how you organize it
  • what information you include
  • how you work documentation into your changes/tinkering flow

Edit: Dang, folks! You all have given me a lot to read through, think about, and explore. Thank you!

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[-] shrek_is_love@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

I currently push to a private GitHub repository (planning on moving to a self-hosted Forgejo instance soon).

Although making my nix configuration public would be safe anyway since I use sops-nix which encrypts all my passwords in the repo using a key derived from my SSH key. During nixos-rebuild it decrypts them and puts them each in their own text file at /run/secrets, with permissions set so you need sudo to view them. (The permissions can be tweaked as needed)

It was a pain in the neck to get started with initially (like NixOS itself), but it was very much worth it. (Basically a necessity since putting secrets even in a private repo is considered bad practice)

[-] captcha_incorrect@lemmy.world 1 points 13 hours ago

I was considering putting the secrets somewhere not in /etc/nixos/ and just point to them. Then I could push my nix files without worry. My plan was to use my other server as a remote with just git and ssh, but that server is not responding and is ~6 by car away from me (I don't own a car). It will be traveling here soon so I can configure it and send it back though.

Thanks for the link to sops-nix, I will check it out. As you said, NixOS is great when you have it running. I can't see myself going back to debian now.

this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2026
106 points (100.0% liked)

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