# Self-hosting Siftlode Run your own private Siftlode instance with Docker. You don't need the source code — the app runs from a prebuilt image, and everything user-facing (your admin account, Google sign-in, email) is configured in a web wizard on first start. There's no editing of config files by hand. ## What you need - A machine with **Docker** and the **Docker Compose plugin** (Docker Desktop on Windows/macOS, or Docker Engine on Linux). - A few hundred MB of disk and ~1 GB RAM free for the app itself. The optional Download Center stores media too — budget disk for whatever you download (it's bounded by per-user quotas you set as admin). - Optional: a domain name + reverse proxy if you want HTTPS / public access (see below). ## 1. Get the files Download these into a new, empty folder: - `docker-compose.selfhost.yml` - `install.sh` (Linux/macOS) **or** `install.ps1` (Windows) The app image is published at `forge.b1fr0st.eu/peter/siftlode` (public — no login to pull). ## 2. Run the installer **Linux / macOS:** ```bash chmod +x install.sh ./install.sh ``` **Windows (PowerShell):** ```powershell ./install.ps1 ``` The installer asks for the **public URL** where the instance will be reached (just press Enter for `http://localhost:8080` to try it locally). It then: - generates the secrets it needs (`SECRET_KEY`, `TOKEN_ENCRYPTION_KEY`, a database password) into a local `.env` file — keep that file private, - pulls the image and starts the app + database, - prints the **setup wizard URL**, which looks like `…/setup?token=…`. ## 3. Finish in the web wizard Open the printed setup URL in your browser. The one-time token in it means only you (with access to the server logs) can run setup. Then click through: 1. **Admin account** — your email + a password. This is how you'll sign in. 2. **Google sign-in** *(optional)* — paste a Google OAuth client ID + secret to enable "Sign in with Google" and pulling your YouTube subscriptions. Skip it to use email + password only. 3. **Email / SMTP** *(optional)* — an SMTP server so the app can send verification and notification emails. Skip it — without email, new registrations are simply approved by you (the admin) instead. 4. **Finish** — the wizard disappears, the instance is now configured, and you land on the sign-in page. Log in with the admin account you just created. That's it. You can change any of the optional settings later under the admin **Configuration** page. > The setup wizard only exists until you finish it. After that, the setup routes are disabled and > the token is invalidated — there's no setup surface left on a configured instance. ## Getting a Google OAuth client (optional) Only needed for "Sign in with Google" / YouTube access. In the [Google Cloud Console](https://console.cloud.google.com/): create a project → **APIs & Services → Credentials → Create credentials → OAuth client ID** → *Web application*. Add your instance's `…/auth/callback` URL as an **Authorized redirect URI**, then copy the **client ID** and **secret** into the wizard's Google step. (Enable the **YouTube Data API v3** for the project too.) ## HTTPS / public access The app is served on port `8080` over plain HTTP, which is fine for a LAN or a quick trial. For public access, put a reverse proxy (Caddy, Nginx, Traefik…) in front to terminate TLS, and set the **public URL** in the installer to your `https://…` address (this also marks the session cookie secure). If you've already run the installer, edit `OAUTH_REDIRECT_URL` in `.env` to the https callback URL and `docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml up -d`. ## Download Center (media storage) The stack includes a **Download Center**: an admin-enabled feature that saves videos to the server with yt-dlp (Plex-friendly folders + `.nfo`/poster), lets users trim/crop/join clips, and shares them. It runs two extra containers that come up automatically — a `worker` (the download/edit job loop) and a small `bgutil-pot` sidecar (mints YouTube tokens so downloads aren't bot-blocked). No configuration is required; per-user storage quotas are set on the admin **Downloads → System** page. By default the media lives in a Docker-managed volume (`siftlode_downloads`). To keep it somewhere you can reach from other apps — e.g. a folder your **Plex** server indexes — point it at a host directory by adding this to `.env` and re-running `up -d`: ```bash DOWNLOAD_HOST_PATH=/mnt/media/youtube ``` The directory must be writable by the container user (uid `1000`): `sudo chown -R 1000:1000 `. ## Day-to-day ```bash # Update to the latest release docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml pull docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml up -d # Logs / status (api = web, worker = downloads/edits) docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml logs -f api docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml logs -f worker docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml ps # Stop docker compose -f docker-compose.selfhost.yml down ``` Your data (accounts, subscriptions, playlists, the video catalog) lives in the `siftlode_pgdata` Docker volume — back that up to keep your instance's state. Database migrations run automatically when the app starts, so updating is just pull + up.