Does anyone have a working nextcloud server?

Thanks all for your time.

After many hours wasted, I’m at the point where I started.
I decide to leave it as is and not waste any more time on OpenSource. Tried exactly one week, started before last weekend.
Maybe your clouds are working fine, maybe your devices don’t have such a bug console. Maybe I shouldn’t be looking there, since everything works.
Now let someone write under the article about synology that “I have a nextcloud and it’s ok” then I will destroy such a person with an orgasm in my head.
Have fun searching for bugs. (No offense) I have better jobs.
If you ever throw a COMPLETE tutoral how to do it, call me.
Don’t let your work go to waste, let people use it too, since it’s free.

I have found one: czsz.

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No errors without ddns? Maybe check the syntax of your config file, the ddns entries in the trusted_domains array look like the , should be ’ …

@czsz i consider it understandable to lose your mind about the repeating problems you face trying to install NCP to your RPi (you really DO try to install it on a Raspberry Pi, yes? Which model? And I’m asking that because I read something about Synology and wasn’t sure what you meant by that)

But at the same time, there are 10s of thousands instances running more or less flawlessly using NCP. And the documentation at nextcloudpi.com is pretty clear on how to set it up correctly.

So most probably the problem you’re facing is on your side (i’m not saying it is you!). It could be a defect hardware-part or an unclear envorinment or whatever.

Meaning to have at least a fair chance to help you successfully the forum really needs pretty detailed infos about everything. Like your hardware, like your environment, etc.

And yes, of course it’s work-intense to gather all these informations. But you might have a running instance in the end. For storing pictures of your cat and everything else (don’t regard NC as being a backup-solution, as it is NOT)

So it’s up to you.

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Can’t help you with your challenges but came here to say that I’m running NextCloud 19 on a Pi4 using DietPi. Ridiculously easy install and it just works alongside a ton of other apps too. Never had any challenges in keeping it up and stable. It just works.

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First of all, to answer your initial question: yes, I have NextcloudPi running smoothly on a Raspberry Pi 3 model B. The same Pi also runs Kodi, Transmission, Gerbera and a couple of other bits and bobs. So yes, it can be done!

There are lots of people on this forum that know far more about the inner workings of Nextcloud than I do, and going on the information you posted, they don’t see an obvious reason this isn’t working for you, so I’m not going to figure that out either. My initial install of NextcloudPi went very smoothly, especially compared to the Nextcloud (and Owncloud before that) installation I used to run on an old laptop, so I don’t have any magic extra steps for you. But I’ve spent a good many years tinkering with a number of different Raspberry Pis (and many other devices) trying to get all sorts of projects up and running, and a lot of that time involved banging my head against the wall and yelling “why won’t this just work?!?”. So at least I understand your frustration. The issue usually turned out to be something very basic, but that doesn’t make the process of pin pointing that issue any quicker or easier.

So, based on that experience, my advise to you is to eliminate as many interfering factors as you possibly can. Look at every step you’re taking for granted and think of another way of doing it. Download that .img file again (downloads do go wrong sometimes!) or better yet: try an older version this time (you can always update later).
Try using a different SD card (you don’t want to know how much time I’ve wasted on this one SD card that was only pretending to work correctly…) - your errors mainly seem to be file not found or write permission errors, so that’s definitely something you want to eliminate. Also, try using Win32DiskImager or another alternative to Etcher just to see if it makes a difference - it shouldn’t make any difference, but honestly, some cards just can’t seem to play nice with Etcher or vice versa. If you have another card reader handy, just give it a go.
Don’t bother with the external harddrive during initial setup - just put your data dir on the pi for now and change it later: external HDDs can throw up a lot of permission errors. If it works with the data dir on the card, but not with it on the HDD, you’ve obviously found your problem; if it doesn’t make any difference, you have eliminated one more possible cause and that’s valuable information too. Similarly, don’t bother with external access or encryption - just keep it local during setup and sort all that out once you have things up and running smoothly.

And if all else fails, you can always start out with Raspberry Pi OS (what used to be called Raspbian) or any other Linux flavour, make sure that’s all running smoothly, and then install Nextcloud on top of that. If anything, that’ll help you to eliminate a number of possible causes.

Good luck!

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Hi,
There are many tutorials to install OC or NC on Pi and I started with that couple of years ago and it worked fine for me.
Later I moved to a real PC server which I host on my side running v.18.0.11, the updates goe very well without a glitch, I am not comfortable with virtual installations, I bumped many times into errors and worked it out, we just need to pay attention about all details and learn from our mistakes.


Here is another:

I could have helped you more if I was there but never get discouraged and when it gets on your nerves just leave it for a while then come back to it. Good luck.

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Mine is stable and has seen several major version upgrades.

If you’re interested in trying a configuration similar to mine, I wrote a guide in it.

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Run:

ls -la /media/myCloudDrive/ncdata

check or confirm if user is correct for the server “user” to your data directory

sudo -u www-data ls -la /media/myCloudDrive/ncdata

if not you need to chown to user www-datat:www-data, use the -R to make command recursive.

sudo chown -R www-datat:www-data /media/myCloudDrive/

sudo chmod -R 0770 /media/myCloudDrive/

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To answer the first question: Yes, I have NextcloudPi running on a Raspberry Pi 4B 4GB, with data on a USB SSD. It’s stable and has seen many upgrades without problems.

A HDD would normally need its own power supply, the Pi is not able to provide enough power for a HDD. What is your setup?

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I have Nextcloud running on a Raspberry Pi 4, actually. Manual install. It’s running for months now.
Before that, the Nextcloud instance was running on a Raspberry Pi 2B with 1 GB of RAM. It worked for years. I began with Owncloud, Nextcloud was not forked at that time.
It works without errors.

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