Hey everyone,

I’m looking for a system that:

  • I can self host
  • Is slim, because I don’t have beefy hardware (Intel J5040, 32GB RAM, shared by all VMs/containers)
  • can be used to create an inventory of all the tech/hardware that I have in my house (not exclusively IT, I also wasn’t to track things like warranty for my chainsaws and the like)
  • does take at least the device make/model, serial number (for insurance cases) and warranty dates
  • is not some kind of enterprise-how-many-items-of-this-article-do-i-have-in-stock-things, because that seems to be the only thing I seem to be able to find, and they neither match my use case nor do they seem to be lightweight enough.

… and honestly, I don’t even know where to start looking. Do you guys have any recommendations?

Of course, I could just use a spreadsheet, but where’s the fun in that?

EDIT: Thank you all so much for the engaged discussion and all the suggestions, you’re the best!

  • Señor Mono@feddit.org
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    3 days ago

    This might be an unpopular opinion/solution but even for two small size sister companies we are doing inventory in a version controlled markdown file 🫣

    • DasFaultier@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      3 days ago

      Not at all, I like .md, and I’m familiar with Git. A spreadsheet is not something that I would throw into Git, but an .md

      • 2910000@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I use markdown too, except I keep the markdown file in a self-hosted wiki (wiki.js)

        It’s versioned and accepts git as a backend

      • Señor Mono@feddit.org
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        3 days ago

        That is the reason Markdown and Git are used for a lot shenanigans these days. Knowledge bases, awesome-lists, documentations. You name it.

        If you got the right tools (sphinx, typora, mkdocs, …obsidian) you got a powerful toolchain.