With jitsi meet now requireing registration (something I do understand, … but I just happen not to have a google, MS or meta account), I am looking at selfhosting a jitsi meet for personal use.
Has somebody already done this? What are your experience? What are the hardware requirements? Docker or native? Linux or other OS? (FreeBSD)?
It’s extremely easy to set up with docker, I’ve been using a self-hosted instance for about 2 years now. Contact me if you need help setting it up or if you just want to test it.
Hardware requirements depend on how many users will be using it, I use an old i3 NUC as a home server and it can easily handle a room with a dozen people, especially if it’s just audio, it gets heavier on the CPU if a lot of them have their webcams on but generally speaking if you have a decent internet connection you’ll be fine.
Follow these instructions: https://jitsi.github.io/handbook/docs/devops-guide/devops-guide-docker/ You will need to set up HTTPS unless you’re already using a reverse proxy.
Hi, I have it running as of today. apache reverse-proxy native on the server and “stable-8922” in docker.
I have been wondering if it makes sense to move the jvb from docker to the server. I guess that is the part of the system that pulls most of the traffic. I don’t know if this make any real difference for performance or not.
Anycase. All, thanks again for the help. Appriciate it. :-)
Kr.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters More Letters HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web HTTPS HTTP over SSL LXC Linux Containers NUC Next Unit of Computing brand of Intel small computers SSL Secure Sockets Layer, for transparent encryption VPS Virtual Private Server (opposed to shared hosting) nginx Popular HTTP server
5 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 8 acronyms.
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I ran it via Docker, it was easy enough, consumed close to no resources, upgrading was tricky a few times. Then I got rid of that server and did not continue hosting Jitsi, started freeloading on Freifunk Munchen public instance.
Any particular reason to use the ffmuc? Are there other instances worth considering?
No real reason. It’s stable so I keep using it. Look at the official list: https://jitsi.github.io/handbook/docs/community/community-instances/
https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/install-jitsi-meet-ubuntu-22-04
I used this tutorial to run an instance for like 2 years on a $5/mo digital ocean droplet. I set it up super quick.
I install/configure/manage it using this ansible role that uses native debian packages. Experience up to 4-5 users is good on a low-end cheap VPS (2GB RAM, 2 vCPU)
I have a native install on a Debian LXC - 16GB storage, 2GB RAM and 1 core, that I’ve been running for over 2 years behind nginx. Doesn’t need much. If you want to record via Jibri, you need more juice. I will be redoing my install as they now offer an all in one Docker stack with recording capabilities. With the native install it is recommended to have a separate Ubuntu 18.04 server for Jibri just for recording, which is a hassle and outdated.
I haven’t begun the Docker setup yet, but I imagine it has to be a more pleasant experience to admin.
If you already have a NextCloud instance, NextCloud Talk is easy to install in your instance. It uses webrtc so your instance won’t do any video processing or routing at all, so server load is minimal. You’ll need to setup a stun/turn server to make it work in double-nat situation though.
Hi all. Thanks for the feedback. Very much appreciated 👍. … I will set it up in docker.
What about Yunohost? Its made for newbies getting into selfhosting and has Jitsi support.
Hi Neutrom, I don’t know this one. I’ll check it out. Thx! 👍
There are other public Jitsi Meet instances out there anyone can use without an account.