I’ve gotten a bit tired of Nextcloud as of late an I’m curious it is a viable alternative. I like having Nextcloud Talk but I can live without it.

  • xrun_detected@programming.dev
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    1 hour ago

    Owncloud seems to be pretty much over IIRC.

    The company behind it got bought be some american company in 2023, that promised that everything will “stay as open as it is” - you won’t believe what happened next ;)

    Then recently many of the developers left to join OpenCloud, which seems to be a fork of owncloud, lead by a german open source veteran.

    https://github.com/opencloud-eu

  • samc@feddit.uk
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    4 hours ago

    Be aware there are basically two different things called Owncloud. There’s still the original php version, which is similar to nextcloud but worse (not open source, smaller plugin ecosystem I think)

    On the other hand is owncloud “infinite scale” (or ocis). This is the thing entirely written in go. But as others have pointed out, it’s little more than a file server at this point.

    IMO the self-hosting community is really missing a self-contained “all the DAVs” server (files, calendar, contacts). Baikal etc seem like a great start, but it would be great to have somewhere to get those parts pre-assembled. Until then, nextcloud works for me.

    • MaggiWuerze@feddit.org
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      1 hour ago

      Yeah, I thought that as well. Just give me a headless Dav Server and have people create frontends for it

  • unlogic@lemmy.zip
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    4 hours ago

    Tried it but couldn’t get the Linux client to connect to it no matter what I tried. I went back to NextCloud. But as I only ever used the file sync I ultimately switched to Seafile

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    9 hours ago

    If you’re looking for a good Nextcloud replacement I recommend Seafile. Been using it for years, very solid.

    • xi00@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      I can second that, I’ve been using seafile and Baikal for about a year now coming from next cloud. The systems are so much smoother and less resource hungry. Next cloud is good when you have a small company, which I don’t think applies to many self hosters. I have everything inside a docker compose setup, so everything from backups to updates is much easier, and with a nginx proxy and proper network isolation I don’t have security concerns with running smaller tools such as Baikal on my machine.

  • JakeSparkleChicken@midwest.social
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    12 hours ago

    In the beginning, there was ownCloud. They were a good FLOSS offering that decided to start catering solely to corporate customers in the hopes of juicy support contracts. The community who had been contributing the majority of the code gave them a mighty “Fork you” and created NextCloud.

    That was about ten years ago. I haven’t looked into ownCloud for the last seven or so, but it had stagnated pretty badly by that point. Maybe they’ve gotten some fresh blood since then, but you’ll likely find it to be quite lacking in features and plugins comparatively.

      • ilmagico@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        I had heard they had rewritten it in go and got a lot more performant, not sure what else they have done. I don’t care much about the politics as long as it’s still open source (is it?).

        That said, I’m a happy nextcloud user and I don’t see a reason to switch (after moving both data and db onto SSDs it’s much faster, so maybe php wasn’t the bottleneck).

  • bigDottee@geekroom.tech
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    12 hours ago

    Like others, I started with owncloud but when Nextcloud forked I switched within a year. I haven’t looked back and is working without any issues and is performant.

    I don’t really care about the enterprise shit since it’s not being shoved in my face 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • Scrubber0777@lemmy.ml
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    9 hours ago

    I am using Owncloud OCIS now. A much leaner version and provides just the file sharing and doc editing feature.

    Hosting with docker with just one container is fairly straight forward and easy if you don’t need document editors.

    So far has been very performant.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        9 hours ago

        How is it set up? What are you running it on?

        My Nextcloud instance doesn’t use a ton of resources. But I’m on a somewhat beefy machine (16GB RAM, 8-core CPU), so YMMV.

      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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        10 hours ago

        You running it on bare metal? Much better that way vs docker in my experience

        • MaggiWuerze@feddit.org
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          1 hour ago

          I’ve been using a docker stack for Nextcloud for years without issues, after switching to postgres it also got a lot faster

        • PatrickYaa@lemmy.one
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          1 hour ago

          I have yet to install it, but I plan to run it “baremetal” in a Debian VM, would that be better than in a docker, or do I actually need to run it baremetal, in parallel/ on a different system than proxmox? (Or it’s own LXC container)

        • Possibly linux@lemmy.zipOP
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          10 hours ago

          I might switch to AIO. Maybe podman if I get inspired. Bare metal is just way to hard to maintain. I could automate it with Ansible but at that point I might as well use containers.