
Learn to self-host on Contabo VPN servers, manage domains from Namecheap, monitor with Netdata, deploy WordPress, MongoDB, Redis, and more, while securing with two-factor authentication and disabling root access.
Learn to set up WordPress, MongoDB, and Mautic on a cost-effective self-managed hosting solution, using a vpn and Qualify. Gain complete control and easily build API automations with step-by-step guidance.
Follow three steps - domain setup, VIPs setup, and final setup - to install WordPress on self-managed hosting. Download and extract the attached resources to guide your setup.
Set up your domain with Namecheap: sign up, verify email, search for a simple, short domain, choose an extension, complete checkout, and manage DNS settings for your site.
Compare contabo with other providers, choose a base VPS with 8 GB RAM, 3 CPUs, and ample SSD/NVMe storage, sign up, verify email, and set a secure password to launch.
Connect to your vpn server via ssh, install qualify with a one-line command, and access a public URL to manage projects and apps like WordPress and Mautic.
Connect your domain to your hosting system by configuring the instance domain and adding an a record with your ip address in advanced dns. Enable https for secure access.
Monitor your server in real time with Netdata, an open source tool. Sign up at Netdata cloud, install via the connector, and view RAM, CPU, dashboards, and alerts.
Install and configure n8n, a free, open-source automation tool, on your own server. Create a subdomain, deploy the app, and adjust DNS and domain settings to get started.
Learn to install and configure Mautic for self-managed web hosting, including DNS setup, project creation, and first login, with open-source email marketing insights.
Learn to set up a wild card domain by creating an asterisk DNS record and using server settings to auto generate subdomains like apps.your-domain.
Deploy a self-hosted MongoDB NoSQL database that stores JSON-like documents in a self-managed hosting environment, connect via a public URL, and use MongoDB compass.
Install and configure Redis as a lightweight in-memory caching layer to speed up apps, enable session storage and real-time features, and test connections with practical Python and console steps.
Discover MinIO, a high-performance open-source S3-compatible storage you self-host on your own server. Deploy, create buckets, upload and share images and videos with cost efficiency.
Explore Firefox as a free open source browser for self-hosting, highlighting its privacy tools, lightweight performance, dev tools, and how it complements VPN functionality for privacy and testing.
Learn to create a new user, assign it to a group with usermod, set a password, remove root access, and connect with the new credentials for better server security.
Delete the root user and disable root login to prevent 95% of automated attacks, then login with the new user and restart the server.
secure a self-managed server using SSH keys, generate public and private keys, and disable password authentication for key-based login.
Learn to enable two-factor authentication for your server using Google Authenticator, securing ssh login with time-based codes that change every 60 seconds.
install fail2ban on your self managed web hosting to block spammy ip addresses automatically via jail rules, an open source framework that protects your server.
Create scheduled, encrypted backups with the inbuilt duplicate backup system, configure storage from local folders to S3/minio or cloud services, and run automated or manual backups via the backup panel.
learn to restore your server by exposing WordPress and MariaDB data via persistent volumes and a mapped compose file. perform backups and restorations with duplicati to verify data access.
Are you tired of paying overpriced hosting bills for underwhelming performance? Do you feel locked into platforms with restrictions, recurring charges, or poor support? Imagine if you could host your websites, databases, email marketing tools, automation apps, and more — all under your full control — at a fraction of the cost.
This course empowers you with the skillset to take full control of your web hosting infrastructure using Coolify, a powerful open-source alternative to platforms like Heroku, Vercel, and cPanel.
Whether you're an entrepreneur, freelancer, agency owner, developer, or digital marketer, this course will show you step-by-step how to set up and self-manage your own VPS (Virtual Private Server) — without needing advanced DevOps skills.
Here’s the hard truth: relying on managed platforms or shared hosting limits your scalability, costs you hundreds of dollars annually, and exposes your assets to performance throttling and restrictive terms. By avoiding self-hosting, you're giving away control and paying for features you could own for free.
In this course, you'll learn how to build a fully self-managed infrastructure using Coolify on Contabo (or any VPS provider). You’ll master how to:
Deploy and monitor your WordPress sites effortlessly
Install automation tools like n8n without any monthly cost
Host your own email marketing system (Mautic) and SMTP server
Manage databases like MongoDB and Redis with ease
Fortify your setup with rock-solid security practices
Host cloud apps like Minio and Firefox (VPN) with confidence
By the end of this course, you won’t just learn theory — you’ll have your own hosting stack live and running, ready to power multiple client websites, SaaS products, marketing systems, or personal apps.
This is more than hosting knowledge — it's digital independence.
Most people avoid this route thinking it’s too technical. But we break every step into beginner-friendly, no-fluff lessons that you can follow even if you’ve never logged into a server before.
You’ll also understand why most people pay more than they need to, how agencies silently use this exact setup for huge profits, and how you can reclaim your tech freedom starting today.
This course doesn’t just save you money — it gives you skills that open up new revenue streams, speed up deployments, and eliminate dependence on over-complicated services.