I have a bunch of plain text recipe files on a NAS. If a family member wants to cook something, they ask me to print them a copy.

I’m looking for a simple as possible way to put them on a local web server via a Docker image or similar.

Basically all I need is to have http://recipes.local/ show the list of files, then you can click one to view and or print it.

Don’t want logins. Don’t need ability to edit files. Want something read-only I can set and forget while I continue to manage the content directly on the NAS.

What would you suggest?

  • dan@upvote.au
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    3 days ago

    Install Nginx, add autoindex on; to the default site config, throw the files into /var/www/html or whatever default folder it uses, and delete the default index.html file. If you need to do it via Docker then use the official Nginx image https://hub.docker.com/_/nginx

    You could also just share the files via SMB. Easy to use on a PC - you could configure their computers to mount the share as a network drive on boot (e.g. R:, for recipes). Not sure about other phones but the built-in files app on my Galaxy S25 Ultra supports SMB too.

    • deegeese@sopuli.xyzOP
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      6 hours ago

      I already have SMB but want something easier for non tech family members.

      Nginx sounds like the way to go and just symlink www -> recipes

      Thanks.

      edit to add final update:

      • Installed nginx docker image on NAS
      • Mapped html and config paths to host
      • Enabled directory listing support
      • Added recipes.local to NAS reverse proxy
      • Added recipes.local to RPi CNAMEs
      • Bookmarked the site on kids’ computer
  • lorentz@feddit.it
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    3 days ago

    Just use the directory listing of your favourite web server. You have a HTTP read only view of a directory and all of its content. If you self host likely you have already a reverse proxy, so it is just matter of updating its configuration. I’m sure it is supported by Apache, Nginx, LightHttpd, and Caddy. But I would expect every webserver supports it. Caddy is the easiest to use if you need to start from scratch.

  • Tramort@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    sandstorm is dead simple to host and crazy secure.

    it handles user accounts for you and there are lots of apps to serve files or track text files.

    it rocks.