librelad bfda700794 fix(apps): stretch cards to fill the row width so the box stays full-width on any zoom level
Fixed-width tracks + cap formula kept the box pinned to "N cards at
328px" outer regardless of viewport size, so zooming out left a
massive empty band between the box's right edge and the layout edge.
The box was no longer "dynamic" in any real sense — it scaled with
the card count, not with the available content.

Switching grid-template-columns to repeat(auto-fit, minmax(--app-min,
1fr)) lets cards stretch to fill the row, and auto-fit collapses
trailing empty tracks so a 2-card row in a 3-track-wide viewport
doesn't leave a 328px hole at the end. Zoom in/out now just widens
or narrows the cards; the box always reaches the layout edge.

This drops the cross-category card-width uniformity that the earlier
fixed-width pass introduced — a 2-card category now lays out as two
wide cards while a 3-card category gets three narrower ones. That's
mutually exclusive with "box always full width" without leaving
holes, and the user has shifted priority to full-width-always.

JS cleanup: dropped updateAppsCount + its window-resize listener +
its callsites in renderApps/filterAppsByQuery — no more --app-count
or column-count measurement needed when the grid handles everything
natively.

Signed-off-by: librelad <librelad@digitalangels.vip>
2026-05-28 01:31:56 +01:00
2026-05-21 20:37:54 +01:00

LibrePortal

Your own private corner of the internet — free, open, and yours.

LibrePortal is a self-hosted platform for running the apps you rely on, on your own server: one-click installs, a reverse proxy with automatic SSL, rootless Docker, optional VPN routing, and a clean web dashboard to manage it all.

⚠️ v0.1.0 — early days. Expect rough edges while things settle.

Why LibrePortal

Too many services today treat your data as theirs to take — quietly overstepping boundaries that should never have been crossed. LibrePortal grew out of frustration with that: it's a way to run the apps you depend on on your own server, where your data stays yours. Privacy here isn't a feature to toggle — it's the whole point.

Free & open — forever

The entire platform is free software under the GNU AGPLv3. Self-host it and you get everything — every feature, no paywalls, no telemetry. See our Promise for exactly what that means.

What you get

  • 📦 One-click self-hosted apps (Nextcloud, Vaultwarden, Jellyfin, Gitea, …)
  • 🔀 Traefik reverse proxy + automatic Let's Encrypt SSL
  • 🔒 Rootless Docker, CrowdSec, sane security defaults
  • 🛡️ Optional VPN routing (gluetun) for any app
  • 🖥️ A web dashboard to install, configure, back up, and monitor everything

Quick start

curl -fsSL https://get.libreportal.org/install.sh | sudo bash

This installs a versioned, checksum-verified release (Debian/Ubuntu, root). Put data on separate disks with --system-dir= / --containers-dir= / --backups-dir=.

The get.libreportal.org host is still being set up — until it's live, build a release and install from it locally (see the docs below).

Documentation

  • docs/USER.md — install, place data on separate disks/drives, update, back up, uninstall.
  • docs/DEVELOPMENT.md — run a dev copy, cut stable/edge releases, and test them before publishing.

LibrePortal Connect (optional)

Self-hosting is free and complete. If you'd rather not fiddle with the tricky parts — like reaching your server from your phone, or keeping off-site backups — LibrePortal Connect will handle them for you. Here's the catch that makes us different: we work like a courier carrying a sealed box. We move your data between your devices and store backup copies, but it stays locked and you hold the only key — we can't open it, and we never run your apps for you. Everything we offer, you can also set up yourself for free. Our Promise spells out exactly where that line sits.

Contributing

PRs welcome — see CONTRIBUTING.md. We use a lightweight DCO sign-off (git commit -s), no CLA.

Acknowledgments

LibrePortal has been built from scratch since 2023. Its spark of inspiration was a small installer script from Brian McGonagill (OpenSourceIsAwesome): gitlab.com/bmcgonag/docker_installs. From that seed it grew start to finish — refined, extended, and refactored into the platform it is today.

License

GNU AGPLv3. What's open stays open.

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