Home Maintenance Reminder system
from Lem453@lemmy.ca to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 04:36
https://lemmy.ca/post/63013888

Any idea for a self hosted home maintenance reminder system? Essentially something that will have reminders for things that reoccur regularly either ie yearly, monthly etc. Ideally it would have some way of checking it off to show the task was completed and then it would reoccur at the preset time next month /year etc.

#selfhosted

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ohlaph@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 04:41 next collapse

I was thinking about making something like this actually.

I’m just getting into self hosting some things so I’ll see what I can come up with in the next few months.

Were you thinking like a web app that is basically a reoccurring to-do list, but it’s more maintenance focused?

I built a similar app for Android, but it’s limitedvright now, mostly a to-do list with a due date, no reoccurring, and no notifications.

Lem453@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 05:20 collapse

Web app is probably best. That makes it easy to share with other members in the family so anyone can check off a task once done. Also having tasks pile up when they are not done is also very useful so you can see the backlog. It’s close to a calendar app but not quite optimized for something like this.

Ideally tasks could have a description section that explains how to do it, like flushing the water heater could have be exact steps written for the heater tank that you have specifically avoiding the need to keep looking it up every year.

There are several good webapps like this already, but they all are paid and locked in to their platform.

sk@utsukta.org on 08 Apr 04:55 next collapse
I use grocy for this. It has task tracking and along with other home management stuff its a good solution.
Lem453@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 05:24 collapse

This looks great, I had no idea it had household management as well. Will give this a try.

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 04:56 next collapse

Like, a calendar app?

TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 05:30 next collapse

You could uh… Hang a calendar on your fridge?

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 14:15 collapse

I’ve got an old slate that school marms used to hand out to their students to do their schoolwork on.

mhzawadi@lemmy.horwood.cloud on 08 Apr 05:31 next collapse

Have you seen grocy, that I think has something similar?

Lem453@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 05:38 collapse

No but it seems perfect with the chores section. Thanks!

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 14:03 collapse

I’ve got Grocy set up with Barcode Buddy for my pantry. When I bring staples in from the store, I scan them into the pantry. I have a scanner set up at the pantry for convenience. Then when you consume a product, you scan it out of inventory via a scanner in the kitchen. That way, if I am grocery shopping, and there is a killer deal on a 100 lb sack of rice, sugar, flour, etc, I can check inventory and see if I need to restock. It’s very handy and there are other aspects of Grocy, but I only use it for the pantry.

BingBong@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 05:32 next collapse

This would actually be an awesome feature request for homebox.

kmoney@lemmy.kmoneyserver.com on 08 Apr 06:00 next collapse

If the tasks are associated with assets (e.g. change the smoke alarm battery) then DumbAssets sounds like what you’d want.

ambitiousslab@feddit.uk on 08 Apr 06:23 next collapse

I use taskwarrior for this. For example:

task add recur:monthly due:eom wait:due-3weeks clean mesh filter
task add recur:quarterly due:eoq wait:due-3weeks replace charcoal filter

There are quite a few web frontends to it too, although I haven’t tried these out so not sure which to recommend.

Lem453@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 07:12 collapse

Thanks!

Noggog@programming.dev on 08 Apr 07:03 next collapse

Donetick is what I use for this kind of stuff. Still needs a bit of work on the OIDC systems, though

Lem453@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 07:12 collapse

This looks fantastic! Thanks!

matsdis@piefed.social on 08 Apr 07:29 next collapse

I have a router with a few cronjobs like this:

# m h dom mon dow command
00 20 12 * * echo "check bank transactions (monthly reminder)"
00 19 15-21 * * test $(date +\%u) -eq 6 && echo "Anki learning reminder"

Cron will by default send an email with the script output. So you “just” need a non-broken email setup that forwards system emails to your main account. (Assuming you don’t self-host email too.)

This setup is useful because I have a few other cronjobs (backup scripts, and a health check for my own application) that should notify me in case of failure, and I would eventually notice that this is broken by noticing that those “calendar” emails no longer get through.

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 08:13 next collapse

I probably wouldn’t use something specialized to home maintenance. Just any todo/task management system that lets you have a recurring task to tick off. There are tons of those out there.

Personally, I use repeated tasks in org-agenda in emacs for most of this, but I wouldn’t recommend picking up emacs simply to use org-agenda. But if you are an emacs user, then it might be a good option.

I haven’t used Taskwarrior myself, but I’ve seen a few people recommend it for Linux use, and if I weren’t using an emacs-oriented system, I’d probably look into it. It supports recurring tasks.

hoppolito@mander.xyz on 08 Apr 12:32 collapse

I am one of those happy taskwarrior users. For more advanced recurrence syntax in taskwarrior there’s also the relatively new nautical extension. It essentially splits recurrence into things that recur based on calendar/clock events (e.g. every first workday of the month, every second Sunday, etc.) or based on previous completions (e.g. do something 3 days after last time, or every x hours after last doing it).

It’s pretty neat and functional but, fair warning, also early on in development and changing quite radically through its versions still.

RandomStranger@piefed.social on 08 Apr 08:18 next collapse

Many selfhosted project planning tools have those features. Personally I have set up Vikunja.

k4j8@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 12:27 collapse

I also recommend Vikunja. You can store instructions with the task.

  • Unlike Grocy, it supports due dates based off the last completion date for tasks such as "mow the lawn within 2 weeks of last mowing."
  • However, it doesn’t have task completion history like Grocy.
EarMaster@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 08:44 next collapse

I use chore-helper for Home Assistant for that. I chose it because I like the “after x days” vs. the classic “every x days” approach. If I forgot to clean the shower for over a week there is no point to have a reminder the next day after I finally did it, but I want it to happen x days later no matter how long I dragged the previous task.

It hasn’t received updates in ages though and can be quite slow and complicated to manage. I want to have a look in ChoreOps to replace it.

roofuskit@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 11:51 collapse

I was going to day there are multiple addons for home assistant for this problem. I think even more than you listed here, HACS is in desperate need of some kind of organization system.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 08 Apr 13:07 next collapse

CalDAV?

maso@lemmus.org on 08 Apr 14:32 next collapse

Vikunja will cover all the bases you’re looking for I think! I’ve really been enjoying it

uenticx@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 14:34 next collapse

Could use something as simple as a cronjob or gitea runners. Loki/Grafana can read logs and trigger webhooks, send emails, etc.

Godnroc@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 17:23 collapse

A ton of smart buttons. Every time you do the task you push the button and a time helper is updated to the next date. If today is beyond that date, update a second boolean helper to show the task must be again!

Bonus if you set a light or alarm to go off of you forget to do it or a reward dispenser to drop treats when you complete the task!