Any good RSS Feed service for self-hosting?

savbran@feddit.it to Selfhosted@lemmy.world – 44 points –

Hi guys, do you know if there is a good RSS Feed service that can be self-hosted which also exposes a good front-end to read the subscribed news? Thanks in advance.

34

FreshRSS is great. Container is easy to run.

Agreed. Easy to setup on my synology NAS, and it works so well.

My only issue I've been having, which is not related to FreshRSS, is getting RSS in twitter to work reliably. Nitter hasn't been reliable at all over the last year.

I used to use a self hosted nitter for FreshRSS too. I gave up completely. I pruned all the Xitter feeds and looked for other sources.

Unfortunately, some orgs I need to get information from ONLY use social media and twitter was the easiest to get working via RSS, but not anymore.

So incredibly frustrating that accessibility isn't a consideration when picking a platform to update customers/residents/members.

The new oAuth feature is also great and integrates well with my other services for family (immich, seafile, etc)

This. I moved to FreshRSS from TT-RSS a while ago and am extremely happy with it. It just works.

Being hosting miniflux on OCI free tier for a few months. No complaints.

OCI free tier as in Oracle Cloud? How's that working out for you? Not miniflux... the cloud...

Solid so far. Running two instances for some services I used to host at home.

For a self-hosted RSS feed service, there are several options:

  1. Tiny Tiny RSS: It's an open-source web-based news feed reader and aggregator for RSS and Atom feeds, praised for its Android client availability.

  2. FreshRSS: A free, self-hosted RSS and Atom feed aggregator that is known for being lightweight, powerful, and customizable. It also supports multi-user access, custom tags, has an API for mobile clients, supports WebSub for instant push notifications, and offers web scraping capabilities.

  3. Miniflux: A minimalist and opinionated feed reader that is straightforward and efficient for reading RSS feeds without unnecessary extras. It's written in Go, making it simple, fast, lightweight, and easy to install.

Not self hosted but I did it this way:

https://sturlabragason.github.io/blog/2023/06/15/Curated-News.html

I've been running Miniflux on a free tier GCP instance for a few months now. Then I use RSS Guard on my desktop and FeedMe on my phone to read stuff.

I'd like to try FreshRSS, but just cannot get my URLs to resolve correctly with it. After a few hours of trying, I reverted to if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Miniflux all the way for me (for now).

I use Yarr (Yet Another RSS Reader). It can be easily deployed with Docker Compose and does the job nicely:

https://github.com/nkanaev/yarr

Just found it and tried on my home server, it works:

version: '3.3'
services:
  yarr:
    container_name: yarr
    image: maskalicz/yarr:latest
    ports:
    - 7070:7070
    volumes:
    - ./yarr-data:/data:rw

Anyway, it just have one view mode with 3 panels and it's not customizable. At the moment, the most featured and exstesible RSS Feed service seems to be FreshRSS as suggested in the thread by @specseaweed@lemmy.world.

2 more...

I run RSS2email and… read my RSS as emails, delivered fresh every morning :)

https://github.com/rss2email/rss2email

I like the idea, that might actually get me to pay attention to my RSS feeds. I wonder if anyone has stood up a docker image because it looks like a pain to install and update.

Tt-rss has been reliable for me, and the frontend is decent. Not to mention you can just republish feeds for a different frontend to use.

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
NAS Network-Attached Storage
nginx Popular HTTP server

2 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 6 acronyms.

[Thread #408 for this sub, first seen 7th Jan 2024, 19:45] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

I've used tt-rss in the past. Don't know what state it's in currently.

If you have Nextcloud they also have an RSS app.

It is very stable. Just don't visit the forum for help. The dev regularly roasts people, which leads to a very toxic environment.

I switched to FreshRSS which works just as well, and doesn't have a toxic dev

I remember years ago it already was like this in the forums. It actually made me stop using it and running a custom made web based reader for some time.

I wouldn't use it anymore nowadays.

FreshRSS is the way to go. It even has plugins (and a plugin for YouTube channels as RSS feeds, very convenient).