## Summary Fixes the Facebook crawler spider trap that's been generating infinite recursive URLs like `/how-to/tutorials/tutorials/how-to/explanation/...` for several days. **Root cause:** Quartz SPA mode + nginx `try_files` fallback to `index.html` meant any fabricated URL returned the root HTML shell with HTTP 200. Crawlers followed relative links from those fake URLs, creating infinite recursion. **Fix:** - Disable Quartz SPA mode (`enableSPA: false`) — all pages are now fully static HTML - Replace nginx SPA fallback with `=404` + Quartz's static `404.html` - Remove `robots.txt` exclusions (no longer needed) **Docs cleanup (Obsidian.nvim compat no longer needed):** - Delete hand-curated category index files (`tutorials.md`, `reference.md`, `how-to.md`, `explanation.md`) — Quartz auto-generates folder pages - Delete `postgresql-storage.md` (redirect stub) and `migrate-forgejo-from-brew.md` (stale history) - Drop `docs-check-index` and `docs-check-filenames` prek hooks - Rewrite `docs-check-links` to allow path-based wiki-links (`[[path/to/file]]`) and only error on true ambiguity - Add `ai-docs` doc tree listing to replace index files for AI context - Add natural cross-links from reference cards to fix orphan docs ## Deployment and Testing - [ ] Merge and let the build pipeline run - [ ] Verify docs.eblu.me serves pages correctly with full page loads - [ ] Verify non-existent URLs return 404 - [ ] Monitor crawler traffic — should drop to near zero for fabricated URLs Reviewed-on: #290
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| title | modified | tags | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Replicating BlumeOps | 2026-02-07 |
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Replicating BlumeOps
Audiences: Replicator
This tutorial provides a roadmap for building your own homelab GitOps environment inspired by BluemeOps. It links to detailed component tutorials for each major piece.
What You'll Build
By following this guide, you'll have:
- A secure mesh network connecting your devices
- A Kubernetes cluster for running containerized services
- GitOps-driven deployments via ArgoCD
- Observability with metrics, logs, and dashboards
- Backup and disaster recovery capabilities
Hardware Requirements
BluemeOps runs on modest hardware. At minimum:
| Component | BlumeOps Uses | Minimum Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Server | Mac Mini M1 | Any machine with sufficient RAM (16GB recommended) |
| NAS | Synology DS920+ | USB drive or second machine |
| Workstation | MacBook Air M4 | Whatever you use daily |
You can start with a single machine and add storage later.
The Journey
Phase 1: Networking Foundation
Before deploying services, establish secure connectivity.
- Create a tailnet and connect your devices
- Configure ACLs for service access
- Set up MagicDNS for convenient naming
This replaces: traditional VPNs, port forwarding, dynamic DNS
Phase 2: Core Services
Bootstrap the essential services that everything else depends on.
- Set up forgejo for git hosting and CI/CD
- Optionally set up zot container registry
- Configure SSH access and deploy keys
Forgejo is central to GitOps - it's where your infrastructure definitions live and where CI/CD workflows run.
Phase 3: Kubernetes Cluster
A cluster for running containerized workloads.
- Install minikube (or k3s, kind, etc.)
- Configure persistent storage
- Expose the API securely via Tailscale
BlumeOps uses minikube for simplicity, but the patterns apply to any distribution.
Phase 4: GitOps with ArgoCD
Declarative, git-driven deployments.
- Install ArgoCD in your cluster
- Connect to your git repository
- Deploy your first application
- Set up the app-of-apps pattern
This is the heart of GitOps - changes in git automatically sync to your cluster.
Phase 5: Observability Stack
Know what's happening in your infrastructure.
- Deploy Prometheus for metrics
- Deploy Loki for logs
- Deploy Grafana for dashboards
- Configure Alloy for collection
Without observability, you're flying blind.
Phase 6: Your First Services
With the foundation in place, deploy actual workloads. BluemeOps runs:
- miniflux - RSS reader
- jellyfin - Media server
- immich - Photo management
- navidrome - Music streaming
- docs - Documentation site (Quartz)
Pick what matters to you. Each service follows similar patterns:
- Create Kubernetes manifests
- Create ArgoCD Application
- Configure ingress routing
- Sync and verify
Phase 7: Backups and Resilience
Protect your data.
- Set up borgmatic for backup automation
- Configure NAS as backup target
- Test restore procedures
- Document disaster recovery
Alternative Approaches
BluemeOps makes specific choices that may not suit everyone:
| BlumeOps Choice | Alternative |
|---|---|
| macOS server | Linux server (more common) |
| Minikube | k3s, kind, or managed K8s |
| Tailscale | WireGuard, Nebula |
| ArgoCD | Flux, manual kubectl |
| Ansible | NixOS, Docker Compose |
The principles (GitOps, IaC, observability) matter more than specific tools.
Getting Started
Begin with tailscale-setup - networking is the foundation everything else builds on.
Related
- Reference - See BlumeOps' specific configurations
- contributing - Help improve BlumeOps instead