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Yarr | LandChad.net
Yarr (yet another rss reader) is a web-based feed aggregator which can be used both as a desktop application and a personal self-hosted server. It is written in Go with the frontend in Vue.js. The storage is backed by SQLite. Installing Yar...
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Yarr (yet another rss reader) is a web-based feed aggregator which can be used both as a desktop application and a personal self-hosted server. It is written in Go with the frontend in Vue.js. The storage is backed by SQLite. Installing Yarr Firstly, we have to download yarr binary from github on our system wget https://github.com/nkanaev/yarr/releases/download/v2.3/yarr-v2.3-linux64.zip Unzip the archive unzip -x yarr-v2.3-linux64.zip Move the binary to your bin folder mv yarr /usr/local/bin/yarr Configuration Now we need to create a auth.conf file that include user and password to create a local yarr account. I personnaly store this file in a directory called yarr in ~/.config folder, but you can place the file wherever you want. mkdir ~/.config/yarr echo 'landchad:password' > ~/.config/yarr/auth.conf Creating a service Create a new file /etc/systemd/system/yarr.service and add the following: [Unit] Description = Yarr [Service] Environment = HOME=/home/landchad ExecStart = /usr/bin/env yarr -addr 0.0.0.0:7070 -auth-file=/home/landchad/.config/yarr/auth.conf -db=/home/landchad/.config/yarr/feed.sql -log-file=/home/landchad/.config/yarr/access.log Restart = on-failure [Install] WantedBy = multi-user.target After creating the config, load, start and enable the service with the following commands. systemctl daemon-reload systemctl enable --now yarr Nginx configuration Create an Nginx configuration file for Yarr, say /etc/nginx/sites-available/yarr and add the content below: server { listen 80 ; listen [::]:80 ; server_name rss.example.org ; location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:7070/ ; } Now let’s enable the Nginx Yarr site and reload Nginx to make it active. ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/yarr /etc/nginx/sites-enabled systemctl reload nginx Encryption You can encrypt your yarr subdomain as well. Let’s do that with certbot: certbot --nginx -d rss.example.org Now you can go to rss.example.org, login and start to add your feeds! Contribution Author: Jppaled - jppaled.xyz -- XMR: 86bVp8bcx1F3y3NsfuTRs6D7FfnDyLomV7dLJmus2YMiY9Aat6W5m8JGwuvH39HKrq3immS7noKq8HeW4gb4BFbyLoz5WSZ {.crypto}