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- Опубліковано 26 жов 2019
- If you ever dreamed of a Raspberry IOT server with backup to Dropbox and secure remote access from everywhere through your own VPN, all based on Docker containers, you have to watch this video about IOTstack.
We will:
- Install Docker with many containers like Mosquitto, Node-Red, Grafana, influxDB, Postgres, Portainer, and Adminer
- Increase the live expectancy of your SD card by disabling swapping and by installing log2ram
- Automatically backup all valuable data to the cloud, in our case, to Dropbox
- Setup PiVPN to remotely and securely access our home network from anywhere in the world
- Besides that, you will learn a lot of useful things about Docker containers
Links:
Raspberry Pi4 US: amzn.to/3pP32HZ
Raspberry Pi4 DE: amzn.to/3avMgaG
Raspberry Pi4 : ebay.to/3n1sPef
SD card reader for Raspberry: s.click.aliexpress.com/e/BOuB2Gxq
Used cooler for RPi 4: bit.ly/2V4DYyd
Software and instructions: www.iotStack.org
Installation of PiVPN: • PiVPN : How to Run a V...
Discord Channel for IOTstack: / discord
#CommissionsEarned: The links above usually are affiliate links which support the channel (no additional cost for you).
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Supporting Material and Blog Page: www.sensorsiot.org
Github: www.github.com/sensorsiot
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Other youtubers: Here are 4 concepts, let's explain them over 10 videos.
Andreas: Let's explain all of them in one awesomely understandable video.
Thank you! We all do not have a lot of time ;-)
@@AndreasSpiess Super good content! Thank you! Pls let me subscribe to this channel! :-))
Exposing local stuff to the Internet never feels quite right. 🤔
@@lnk77 then I must have misunderstood the video. I understood: install Raspian, get some download from a guy called Graham, start a script. Is there an image that has everything ready?
@@hneemann yes explaining under windows how to work with linux containers ... ))
please continue with the summaries, I find them very helpful when I'm trying to find information from your videos a long time after I first watched them.
You are not alone. They will stay.
I have never seen a Tutorial more on point than this and im a dev since childhood. :D
Thank you for the flowers!
I found your summaries/conclusions extremely useful! In particular while rewatching older video they are very practical to get quickly to the point. I hope you will keep them in future videos!
The verdict is clear. I will keep them!
Easily the most educational 18 minutes I have spent in a long while. I have had other people try and explain docker to me without measurable success, but you succeeded. This is exactly what I have been wanting to do ever since I (laboriously) set up an RPi with mosquitto & NR. I will get myself a fancy new RPi and re-do the whole thing. Thanks to you and Graham!
Sounds like a solid plan. Enjoy it!
Perfect Andreas, I've been thinking about docker for a long time, excellent explanation.... Off to the workshop ! 👍🍺
I think it will be a lot of fun. So many things in such a short time...
Hello Andreas. I think the summaries are one of the things that are very distinctive from other content producers. Also they act as an important reminder of everything discussed on the video (sometimes a lot of precious information!). Very educational. Please keep up the good work!
Thank you for your feedback. Most of the commenters share your opinion. So the summary will stay...
I too am trying to wrap my head around docker. Many thanks. I think the summary is very professional and I hope other YT creators will consider copying the practice. Cheers.🇦🇺👍
Cheers!
hello andreas. I enjoy the summary, it is the perfect way to remember everything about the video. Very educational.
Thank you.
Thank you!
Really the best - and most simple - explanation for Docker containers! .. Thank you Andreas!
Glad to read that. I enjoyed making this video because it was a longtime wish and afterwards I also understood a little more than before...
I appreciate that you always prominently feature the original creators of the tools you use. With open source / free software many forget that there has to be someone that creates the tools we use for free.
Thank you! I heavily depend on these people. And I do not need to be "bigger" than I am ;-) Too old for these games
Thanks for the mention of disabling swapping!
I feel the summary is very good, because you explain so much and the summary gives us a guide what we learned. Many people hangup videos after a few minutes, however often they come back to re-watch the video once they start such projects.
Of course you have many experienced followers where they may don’t need a summary, however the new once are most important for the channel and the summary helps big way.
Regards Helmut
Thank you for your feedback. Many viewers see it like you. So, the summaries will come back. I just wanted to be sure ;-)
Another great video by the engineer with the Swiss accent. I like the summaries. Great job, I will use some of this for the VPN portion.
Thank you!
I really like the summary, I would like to see it continued. It's a great reminder in a succinct fashion, easy to access.
You are not alone. The summaries will stay.
Probably one of the best videos I saw so far.
It's well detailed and you scripted all in a easy understandable manner.
Thank you, you really disserve more subscribers.
Now I'm gonna check your others videos !
Thank you! I hope you will find other interesting stuff...
Hello Andreas, many thanks for your time and the good video quality you provide. You inspire the maker inside us at every video :)
For me, it is easy because I am one of you...
I've only watched the first 7 minutes and already realize how many problems this solves, and how much work it must have been. Fantastic job, guys!
Thank you! Enjoy the rest!
Hi Andreas, I like the balance between "big picture" information and "lower details". Your accent is very understandable. So, after ~18 minutes of watching your video, I have the Inspiration and clear understanding of how to reproduce your setup in my hardware. THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
Andreas - This is one of your best videos so far! Congratulations - excellent from start to finish - Both content and explanation of the content! What else can I say!
Thank you for the nice words!
i loved your summaries and found them very useful especially after videos about complex topics !
Thank you for your feedback!
+1 Keep the summaries :-)
+1 Keep the summaries, please.
+1 for the summaries
I like the summaries. Reinforcement learning.
Thank you for this video. I've been looking to rebuild my "the script" pi for a while on to a pi4 with external ssd. This looks a much better technique than the script.
That is what we thought, too...
By far one of the best videos I have seen. Ton of well explained content, impressed! Thank you!
You are welcome!
About the summary: please keep it. In my opinion, it's one of the best parts of your videos, as it helps me remember the things you teach. They're especially helpful in longer videos. Thank you for being awesome, Andreas!
Most voters voted like you. So the summaries will stay.
I would add one more backup there. Image of SD card when everything is setup so you have single image to write on SD card and then simply add volume data from dropbox.
what do you use to take a flashable image of an sd card?
@@25566 dd?
This is such an incredible presentation. I have been doing many of these things for years. I am an avid Open Source advocate. I have been trying to share my knowledge with the community for many years but keep getting paralyzed by the feeling that my explanation is not good enough. Most of your viewers have no idea how hard it is to publish something like this because they have never tried. I have so much respect for your work. Thank you!
You are welcome. And thank you for your nice words! Maybe I am a little older and have seen a few things which help me condensing stuff ;-)
@@AndreasSpiess I've never seen your videos before, I just got a recommendation. I'm also someone similar to Bruno.
It's good you were able to streamline the process for less technical people with Docker-compose and based on other people's work (and mention them by name ! very good).
This shows you've figured out yourself or based on other peoples comment/suggestions, etc. What a good structure is in general (maintainable, etc.) and how to explain it. You are far above average.
Only thing missing from the title was IoT. :-)
“Most of your viewers have no idea” ... but some of us do. ;)
I watched to the end, the summaries brought everything together for me.
So will it be also in the future...
First time on the channel and I am blown away!! Liked and subscribed! Please keep them coming as I am a noob in the Pi world only having setup a DNS server with Pi-hole.
Welcome aboard the channel!
What? The summaries are important recaps that help us remember the important stuff.
Also, revisiting a video when searching for a specific solution is easier if you can watch the summary to see if your specific challenges were addressed, and to what degree of success.
Thank you for the feedback. The vote was clear: The summaries will stay
Please consider making summarys again, they help to understand and tighten the new learned knowledge.
As always, a very interesting topic and I think I will try this one.
Kind Regards from Austria
The summary will stay, because it is wanted by most of commenters
I like the summaries.
They are great for learning. An extra repetition is good. It makes the new knowledge stick.
Advanced viewers probably skip them if they kinda already know the concepts you're talking about. Beginners will certainly appreciate them.
The viewers voted for "summaries have to stay"!
May I repeat what many other observers of your channel are saying... Well done Andreas! But perhaps it is polite to say first, "Thank you, Mr Spiess! Your research, understanding and willingness to share with us all extremely useful skills and practical guides to new technology applications and solutions to infinite problems that will bring many smiles and expressions of courteous thanks throughout our international communities. You are a modern day hero! Well done Andreas!"
I showed your comment to my wife to convince her that my work in the basement is worth the effort ;-) Thank you!
Thanks for posting this wonderful idea. You just got one more patreon, Andreas!
Thank you for your support. It helps!
After testing, the Dropbox uploader needs some "polishing". Graham plans to publish it in the next days.
As an alternative to Dropbox (with less restrictions in the free version), you can try mega.nz and use mega.nz/sync on the Pi (or mega.nz/cmd for the command line/headless version). It works really well for me.
What about Google drive?
the summary would be great in the form of a time index in the description. Best regards and thank you for the great work.
@@jacob1001bin do one.
Very nice, also thanks to Graham. I would suggest a separate pi for pivpn with only running that, because a gateway that offers access from the outside should be hardened. Less services and programs running means less attack surface for hackers.
I am also curious if this works with SSD to boot from. I have one pi running from a EUR 11,00, 32GB SDD for over a year. This works with raspbian image but I could not get hass.io working. If Graham's image runs from SSD I could run hass.io as a container.
I make backups to my Synology on my local network. For this type of data cloud is not needed. If my house burns down, so will my iot devices and having the data still in the cloud won't be very useful.
Well, here it is a comprehensive tutorial! Well done mr. Spiess, as usual!
Thank you!
I always watch the summary to your videos so I remember the goals and what works and doesn’t.
The summaries are back. Most voted for "stay"
this is great. i always wanted this kind of installation on my rpi.
Me too ;-)
Off course: with summery!
Of course the summery is superfluous for those of use that were paying attention. ;-)
Reckless Roges Then again, what if you have to come back to the video after a few months? In that case, the summary is interesting.
I, for one, listen to the summary.
The summary will come back! The viewers voted.
Wow thanks Andreas This makes me want to re-roll everything on my Pi to docker containers. I like the summaries. It's always good to be reminded of everything we just learned.
The good thing is, you always can start a test with a new SD card and if you do not like it, just use the old one again ;-)
This is a superb video Andreas. Contains all the concepts for a modern home automation/gateway setup . Raspberry Pi, Docker, MQTT, Node Red, InfluxDB, Grafana. This will be my first project for 2021, combined with Lora sensors (as described in other videos of yours). Thank you very much.
Enjoy your journey!
Wow, you're done it again. Produced a brilliant and timely video. I have ordered a Pi4 and was going to look at building a new system based on a more up-to-date approach than my 3 year old LAMP configuration. I'm blown away by how much is in this presentation which fits my needs and desires so well.
I do like a summary to pull things together but I think people may be switching it off because it tends to be a restatement of what's been covered rather than an overview of what's been discovered.
I am glad the video helps. I tried to include the most important thinks. From there, people can add more things.
Wonderful video, just what I needed!
PS I much prefer this kind of stuff I can do for myself rather than the old 80’s stuff. I love having a project idea so I have an excuse to make an AliExpress order 😁
The 80's stuff is more fro learning and nostalgia. But you should get projects from time to time on the channel, too.
Andreas Spiess trouble is I was a child in the 80’s (sorry 😁). Still it’s good to see how things have changed 👍
The summary makes the difference! It’s like in a good lecture where the prof 👨🏫 provides a summary that helps to rebuild the mental map after having heard a lot of details.
Thanks for the DuckDNS tip!
Thank you for your feedback. The verdict is clear: The summaries will stay!
I love your introductions and summaries plus all the content in between.
Please keep the summaries.
Thank you :-)
I love Andreas' voice. I would dearly love to hear him say something like: "Mr. Bond, you persist in defying my efforts to provide an amusing death for you."
:-)
To access remotely, I use "Zerotier One" since I have IP behind NAT
Most of us are behind NAT. This is the reason for using duckDNS. Your solution seems to integrate both, openVNS and duckDNS. Thanks for the tip.
You are the best Andreas. You summarize and wrap up things at the correct level. Excellent!
Thank you!
I like the summary at the end. It really wrapped up the videos. Thanks for everything you do!
Thanks for your feedback!
Please keep making summaries :)
The vote was clear. They will stay!
I think a summary helps consolidating the video. Even if it is just a long phrase rather than a list (as it could have been the case in this one)
The vote was clear. The viewers want the summary...
Great video! Please keep the summaries, I like them! I always watch the videos to the end (as I also always watch the closing credits to the very end in the movies :-))
Thank you! I will keep the summaries because most commentators voted like you.
awesome video. Clear and straight and dense information. No silly effects and uber-pathetic explanations. No Ego-Trip. Just a super competent Maker who knows his stuff. Keep it kickin.
Thank you for your nice words!
The entry in cron like * 23 * * * does not only execute at 23:00 but executes every minute from 23:00 till 23:59
Oh. Good to know. What would then be the correct line?
@@AndreasSpiess Minute(0-59) Hour(0-24) Day_of_month(1-31) Month(1-12) Day_of_week(0-6) Command_to_execute
0 23 * * * command_to_execute
Another good idea is not to pipe cron output to /dev/null before checking /var/log/syslog entries that cron (and you) confirm it works as expected.
You can verify (and compose) Cron schedules on this web page:
crontab.guru
I would pin Remco's comment, (as * 23 * * * * will run the command many times during the 23rd hour of the day.) I test with something like: 0 23 * * * $my_command 2>&1 1>/tmp/$(date +%F_%T)_debug_to_check_my_command_is_working.log
please don't skip the summaries please, they are very helpfull
@Mai Mariarti it's a good way to check if i did understand the video, I do look to the video's to upgrade my knowledge and at the end is the summaries the only thing you have to keep in your mind.
I personally found your summaries very useful, for example to reinforce what I have learnt - or concluded - watching your VERY helpful videos.
The commenters voted for "stay"
Another reason to watch your channel, now I've got something to do with my pi4. I was trying to think of what to do next week now I have a project. Thanks
Please create issues on GitHub if you discover things that are unclear or do not work. You probably will be one of the "early adopters"
I like your summaries however it is not a deal breaker if the majority doesn’t like your summary.
The majority seems to like them :-)
Imagine doing security audit for every part of this thing and future updates.
I think it is similar to if you install the Apps directly on the OS
@@AndreasSpiess no, it is not, because you have to check pre-made Docker images, scripts, settings, etc, that were put together by some random people. Those things could contain all sorts of vulnerabilities, planted with malicious intent, or simply by mis-configuration. If you neglect this, there is a risk you will end up with exploitable device, that could become a part of bot-net, or lead to data loss, or worse, become involved in serious criminal activities.
@@RmFrZQ Presumably, the community is validating these scripts by "random people" If there was anything nefarious, it would be quickly found and resolved and the credibility of the service providing these packages would be harmed. If you're paranoid, you can of course, do it all from scratch. And you probably should the first time you use any software so that you are familiar with how things should work so if something goes sideways, you have a clue where to begin solving the issue.
This episode is too concentrated, but really helpful when I finished. I actually watched the video mulltiple times, and finally successfully installed the containers to my Pi4. Thank you so much!!!
You are welcome. I am glad you were successful in the end.
I lost it at the Timbuktu reference!
Spectacular work as always Andreas!!
Timbuktu was a nice town before all the wars. But in the middle of nowhere...
13:27 * 23 * * * means every minute! 11 o’clock is 0 23 * * *
You are right.
Docker is like shooting from a cannon to a fly. It's a good tool, but for complex setups with many services and dynamic changes in hardware, software and resource utilization. In home use it only adds not necessary, additional work, especially on something so light like raspberry pi.
From a learning point of view it's better to thoroughly study configuration of one service than use some poorly documented and not tested code form github combined with docker in form of a black box that no one understand how it works.
In the end i see many points of failure in this project. Even if it will work as described from the beginning, then it could fail after few months and users would not have a clue how to fix it.
You have a very valid point. I think it is very important that anyone that uses this project develops an understanding of what is happening under the hood. Specifically if was just working and all of a sudden stops. Thanks for the criticism and I will see where I can improve the project wherever I can. There has already been some community collaboration and I do hope it continues.
@ harvaldi - It is easy to criticize another's work that they have taken the time to put together and offer for free. Where is your solution? I would like like to see how you would accomplish the same.
I'm not criticizing anyone's work. I'm stating, that you don't use a hammer, where is need for a saw. Work may be solid, but yet not necessary.
Andreas, I am new to Linux and Pi and could not get more excited from how much still ahead to learn after watching your video. Excellent teaching skills and content. Keep your great work flowing! Keep summaries is not a bad idea. Cheers!
Enjoy your journey!
@@AndreasSpiess Hi Andrea, planning to follow your tutorial to build my docker Pi Server.
Couple of questions that I did not see at instructions (at least not directly mentioned).
Do you use Raspian Buster Lite or any of the desktop versions?
Wondering if it is better to use a 32Gb or 64Gb card?
by the way ANDREAS!!!
Thank you Andeas! Time to rebuild one of my Pi servers with containers. Yes, please the summaries are very good recaps of your great Videos.
The summaries will stay. Most voted for that option.
"Graham" = gray-um
This is an EXCELLENT project and a great video to get started. I've been fooling around with Docker for a while, but never really came up with anything to do with it. This video really turned on a light bulb over my head. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
I for one really appreciate the 'summary' , it's a reminder of all the important points -thank you.
The summary will stay!
@@AndreasSpiess Danke.
Andreas, Of the several IOT youtubers I am able to keep up with your research presentations sit on the top. Admire how much sifting through the garbage that you have not bothered to be discouraged from, a Swiss thing of the mind that is very appealing, now how can I upload that? In respect to summaries it helps me to grasp all that you have packed into a lesson. If we ever meet the beer will be on me. Your incredible generosity is very much appreciated.
Great information and just what I have been looking for for a while. Many thanks for posting. BTW your summaries are very useful so imho you should keep them in future videos.
You are welcome. And the summaries will stay (the verdict is clear)
This is amazing! This will be my project this weekend.....I just went through your content and there are many interesting videos...Need to go through them! Subscribed!! And Thank you
Welcome aboard the channel!
Hi,
I always enjoy watching your videos and I personally recommend to most of the students I teach.
I would like you to make a 2nd part of this video, where maybe you can show how can we have 2 (or more) raspberry pi , doing the docker swarm setup so the load is been shared. More like a cluster but all of the guys running the docker containers. I had it but faced a lot of difficulties to setup properly. As well, it acts as a good redundancy if our whole house is dependent on the Raspberry!
Thanks again for the video!
I always have to have the size of the channel in focus when I chose topics. So I am not sure if this topic is too special :-( But you never know
Awesome Video. You have already inspired me with previous videos to start an iot project and with this one you gave me the perfect preparation for it.
The IOTstack helps me a lot, I've allready used it and the only thing I'am missing is the option to install the Zigbee2mqtt container.
At the moment I'm still failing to run the zigbee2mqtt container (yeah, I never used Docker before and I have also little experience with Rasperry itself).
I'm confident I'll be able to handle this.
Thanks Andreas and keep up the good work (also the summary)
Maybe you join the discussions on Discord (link in the description)?
I often only look into the summary to find out if the video is interessting or not. Not all videos are interessting for me. So this saves a little bit online time. And as said before by many otheres. If it's time to look back, the summary is perfect to restore the content in my limited brain. BTW: One of the most usable video in the last year for me. Many thanks to Mr. Garner and you.
Thank you for your feedback. The summaries will stay, because most commenters share your opinion.
You are from other planet Andreas! Thank you very much friend! I'm using your sd image in an IOT greenhouse project in Argentina.
I hope it will serve you well!
As always, maximum explanation with only a few commands and pictures. Excellent explanation and really useful! Keep the summaries. I find it helpful and adds to the professional explanation.
Thank you. The summaries will stay because most viewers voted for "stay"
Thanks for the awesome video. I was able to use what you showed me here, as well as a few of your other videos, to build the RPI Docker Server that boots from an 500GB M.2 MVME. The first thing I chose to pull data from was the RPI itself. I used Python scripts to generate about 8 values from the RPI and publish them via MQTT to the Node Red. I use the same node red to monitor about 30 values of SNMP data from my NAS server and pull down real time weather data to Node Red via an API. I'm quite happy with what you've enabled me to do with this (you should see the Node Red Dashboard) and I'm much closer to realizing the home automation system of my dreams. Till now, I've been approaching home automation in pieces without a central platform for display and database. Now I have a central system that allows me to add sensors and controls in a much more modular fashion. Thanks for the excellent information and inspiration.
Glad to read that you were successful!
I think your video summaries are very useful, particularly in longer, complex videos like this one.
The verdict is clear: they will stay.
Love this video! Please do the summary at the end, I love it. You are a great teacher, people just don't know what's good for them!
Thank you for your feedback! Glad you like my videos.
thanks again for this very useful video with useful tips, Andreas! I think summaries are useful most of the time, if you have longer video and more complex topic. Keep going!
The summaries will stay. Most of the votes were for "stay"
I vote yes for the summaries. They review all the steps covered and offer the viewer the opportunity to better understand the topic covered by the video.
You voted with the rest! They come back.
Awesome introduction & explanation, I wouldn’t believe it’s so easy & convenient! Found your video mentioned & embedded in a website about docker & grafana. Beautiful - thank you, graham & the origin source where I was looking how to go on with grafana as a container on the Raspi. All the best & looking to see more vids from you (subscription incoming ✌️)
Welcome aboard the channel!
So much great info in one video! All of these are things I have wanted to try with my Raspberry Pi at one time or another, and this video brings it all together in one very neat package.
Glad it was helpful!
I was just in the middle of learning docker! Good timing!
So you have a playground...
@@AndreasSpiess indeed - this will be useful for me, I had no idea you could use docker on a pi! Thanks for the video
Hi Andreas! Greetings from Tasmania. Thank you for your excellent videos. I really appreciate your summary sections. +1 vote for summaries from me!
Tasmania! Never been there... Sounds very exotic. The summaries will stay. The comments were clear
Didn't get notification of this upload for some reason... fortunately I knew to come looking for it :)
That is the advantage of my regular uploads...
You learned amazing things. Every time I learn new things from you.
:-)
Thanks a lot as usual! I'm very interested by docker, so I'll try as soon as possible. Best regards.
I hope you like it!
Your summaries provide opportunity for self-evaluation and link nicely to the objectives and questions you present in your introductions. Your summaries also provide a good transition to the comments where further questioning can occur. I suspect a lot of us do appreciate your efforts to assure good instructional design.
Thank you for your feedback. Most viewers voted for "summaries stay"
Excellent video / tutorial. Bravo Andreas. Thank you for your hard work bringing really interesting information to the masses.
Here fortunately I had a lot of help. Together we are stong!
the summaries help me make sure I got all the information and what I may have to go over again. This was a very interesting and informative lesson on the world of IoT that I am learning. Thank You!! Peace
Most commenenters voted for "videos should stay"
You made my life simple with this video!!! Thank You.
You are welcome!
Very good. I will link you in my upcoming video where I discuss the optimal HW choices for an Raspberry PI automatization and solar unit. I will use above as the software part then I dont have to update my current image any more but can go forward with the docker :) Great work m8!
This was my idea. Save you guys time for a nice hike in Transylvania ;-)
@Andreas - this video is really tops! To-the-point and very practical! A real time-saver and some complex software issues, explained in a very simple and practical way! Keep up the good work - I am a fan!
Thank you for your nice words!
When I'm in the kitchen trying to cook my wife throws her arms up in despair and claims "I'm all thumbs." That's great because it allows me to give this video 10 thumbs up. As another viewer commented, this video is 100% on point. Many thanks Andreas (and Graham and others who contribute to the community).
Thank you for the nice words!
I'd be willing to bet that most of the people who stop your videos at the summary (like I just did) are only doing so in order to post their comments, before losing the page to the next video.
I save most of your videos for future reference. They provide exactly the information I need to pursue my projects. Thanks for the guidance.😎
You are welcome. I do not know why many people leave before the video. This is why I started the discussion...
After watching it i must say.. "This i like", Great work and Thank you for sharing.
You are welcome!
I already had a similar setup, since I hade to move Home Assistant to a separate device (a udoo x86 board), but Zigbee2MQTT was logging a lot since I have many sensors. This video helped me to tune it and save some SDs... Thanks a lot, Andreas!
You are welcome!
Summaries are an important part of your signature style and bring higher quality to your videos. You should definitely keep them.
You and the other commenters voted: They will stay!
Ouch, lots to learn and maybe over my head. Thanks for the info and the lesson.
You always can go back on UA-cam ;-)
Thanks Andreas for this very useful video. In the meantime I could install docker together with nodered, influxdb, grafana and mosquitto. I had many frustrating experiences because there are some traps. But in the meantime I solved the problem wirh all the different IP addresses I had to enter instead of "localhost" - thanks to portainer. But there remains some challenges with security and node-palettes.
And of course: keep up with summaries.
Actually you do not need the IP addresses. You just can use the name of the containrs eg influxdb:8086