portal/README.md

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# Homelab Portal
This repository provide some simple scaffolding to build a landing page for your homelab.
You can link to all your stuff,
including pretty icons,
and your apps will show up under the same top URL,
like they all work together somehow.
![Screen Shot](docs/screenshot.png)
# portal.json
You define all your services in `/web/portal.json`.
It works like this:
```json
[
{
"name": "My Thing",
"href": "https://myhost.example.org/path/to/my/thing/",
"icon": "https://myhost.example.org/path/to/my/thing/icons.png"
},
{
"name": "Another thing",
"href": "https://example.net/",
"target": "_blank"
},
{
"name": "Stat",
"href": "/stat.html",
"app": "stat"
}
]
```
Some notes:
* `"target": "_blank"` will cause clicks to open in a new tab
* `"app": "stat"` makes the icon be the built-in CPU stats pie chart
# Other uses for this
Since the portal stuff is all static files,
you could just not use any of that,
and instead use this as a service to provide CPU stats.
Just open `/stats.html` instead of `/`.
Or write your own ECMAScript code that imports `stat.mjs`.
# Alternatives
There are lots of other things like this around.
Probably the shiniest is called "Heimdall".
I made this one because I didn't want to run yet another database
or a PHP server
when I am perfectly happy editing a JSON file
and having my browser do all the work.
Because this runs so much in the browser,
no resources are used when no users are active,
and when there are users,
it's still very light:
less than 1% CPU on my Raspberry Pi.