Pi4 with 2TB SSD running:
HDMI cable straight to the living room Smart TV (which is not connected to the internet).
Other devices access media (TV shows, movies, books, comics, audiobooks) using VLC DLNA. Except for e-readers which just use the Calibre web UI.
Main router is flashed with OpenWrt and running DNS adblocker. Ethernet running to 2nd router upstairs and to main PC. Small WiFi repeater with ethernet in the basement. It's not a huge house, but it does have old thick walls which are terrible for WiFi propogation.
Bad. I have a Raspberry Pi 4 hanging from a HDMI cable going up to a projector, then have a 2TB SSD hanging from the Raspberry Pi. I host Nextcloud and Transmission on my RPi. Use Kodi for viewing media through my projector.
I only use the highest of grade when it comes to hardware
Case: found in the trash
Motherboard: some random Asus AM3 board I got as a hand-me down.
CPU: AMD FX-8320E (8 core)
RAM: 16GB
Storage: 5x2tb hdds + 128gb SSD and a 32GB flash drive as a boot device
That's it... My entire "homelab"
1) DIY PC (running everything)
2) Raspberry pi 4 4GB (running 2nd pihole instance)
Internet:
Router:
Lab:
Network:
Software:
All under 120w power usage
How are you finding the AooStar R7? I have had my eye on it for a while but not much talk about it outside of YouTube reviews
They've been rock solid so far. Even through the initial sync from my old file server (pretty intensive network and disk usage for about 5 days straight). I've only been running them for about 3 months so far though, so time will tell. They are like most mini pc manufacturers with funny names though. I doubt I'll ever get any sort of bios/uefi update
I have 5 servers in total. All except the iMac are running Alpine Linux.
Ziply fiber 100mb small business internet. 2 Asus AX82U Routers running in AiMesh.
Raising electronics 27U rack
One is running mailcow, dnsmasq, unbound and the other is mostly idle.
The iMac is setup by my 3d printers. I use it to do slicing and I run BlueBubbles on it for texting from Linux systems.
Mostly doing nothing, currently using it to mine Monero.
Hardware is total overkill. Software wise everything is running in containers, deployed into kubernetes using helmfile, Jenkins and gitea
All in a small PC Case
sever is running YunoHost
https://pixelfed.social/p/thejevans/664709222708438068
EDIT:
Server:
Proxmox hypervisor:
Router: N6005 fanless mini PC, 2.5Gbit NICs, pfsense
Switch Mikrotik CRS 8-port 2.5Gbit, 2-port SFP+
I have a Kasm setup with blender and CAD tools, I use the GPU for transcoding video in Immich and Jellyfin, and for facial recognition in Immich. I also have a CUDA dev environment on there as a playground.
I upgraded my gaming PC to an AMD 7900 XTX, so I can finally be rid of Nvidia and their gaming and wayland driver issues on Linux.
At home - Networking
Home server:
For things that need 100% reliability like emails, web hosting, DNS hosting, etc, I have a few VPSes "in the cloud". The one for my emails is an AMD EPYC, 16GB RAM, 100GB NVMe space, 10Gbps connection for $60/year at GreenCloudVPS in San Jose, and I have similar ones at HostHatch (but with 40Gbps instead of 10Gbps) in Los Angeles.
I've got a bunch of other VPSes, mostly for https://dnstools.ws/ which is an open-source project I run. It lets you perform DNS lookup, pings, traceroutes, etc from nearly 30 locations around the world. Many of those are sponsored which means the company provides them for cheap/free in exchange for a backlink.
This Lemmy server is on another GreenCloudVPS system - their ninth birthday special which has 9GB RAM and 99GB NVMe disk space for $99 every three years ($33/year).
A 13-year-old former gaming computer, with 30TB storage in raid6 that runs *arrs, sabnzbd, and plex. Everything managed by k3s except plex.
Also, 3-node digital ocean k8s cluster which runs services that don't need direct access to the 30TB of storage, such as: grocy, jackett, nextcloud, a SOLID server, and soon a lemmy instance :)
My instance's image cache is like 230GB. Plus a bunch more for the db. Can confirm storage is needed.
(unrelated question 😶 - anyone running pictrs 0.5 on local storage happily?)
Thanks for the heads up.
I plan on using digital ocean's Spaces (s3-alike) where possible and also it's intended to be a personal instance, at least to start - just for me to federate with others and subscribe to my communities. Given that, do you think it'll still use much disk (block device) storage?
Might be time to familiarize myself with DO's disk pricing...
It's a work in progress, but https://wiki.gardiol.org (which is OFC self-hosted)
Anyway, beefy HP laptop with 32gb ram and Xeon CPU to run all services. 3 RAID-1 (Linux sw raid) usb3 volumes to host all services and data.
Two isp's: Vodafone FVA 5G (data capped) for general navigation and Fastweb FTTC (low speed but uncapped) for backup access and torrent/Usenet downloads.
Gentoo Linux all the way and podman, but as much limited as possible: only immich (that's impossible to host on bare metal due to devs questionable choices).
Services: WebDAV/webcal/etc wiki, more stuff, arrs, immich, podfetch, and a few more.
All behind nginx reverse proxy.
99% bare metal.
Self developed simple dashboard
External access via ssh tunnels to vps
The service runs as an unpriviledged user, even if, at worst, an intruder would delete or replace the wiki itself. Even the php-fpm behind it runs as that unpriviledged user and is not shared with any other service.
I doubt an attacker could do anything worse than DoS on the wiki itself.
Not saying it's not secure, just that I'd have constant doubts whether I've covered all the bases if I were doing it. Especially ensuring an intruder can't compromise anything else if they take it over via some security exploit in PHP or DocuWiki itself.
i got the random Dell SFF optiplex with 16gb of upgraded ram and a i5-4690 sitting at the girlfriend's house because she's the only one with an ISP that still allows public ip's.
It runs Minecraft.
at home i have my old 9yo retired gaming desktop doing seedbox work and mostly just running BOINC to donate compute power to science... and also keep my feet warm lol
yeah. that's it. i really don't do shit even though i totally could.
Edit: Formatting
Jesus, you can run more than one piece of software on each bit of hardware....
Why spread out across 12-13 machines? Seems like a huge waste of power, and a whole bunch of extra to maintain.
You're probably right. I mean. I need most of the network devices, and I didn't list everything I am running on each, just big things. I do need to consolidate some if them though. Its been a trip and has made me a better IT though.
Also move most services to containers. That's a huge resource saver while maintaining ease of management and separation from the host.
Server - Desktop Tower
Raspberry pi
Thoughts - I'm considering downsizing. I don't really need all that much space, and it can be a headache at times. With drive replacement costs on top of power (~$320 a year) I consider either going to a vps or downsizing to what could run on a small compute like the n100 or a raspberry pi5, etc.
Look for 5W idle consumption boards + CPU combos which go down to package C6+ state. HardwareLuxx has a spreadsheet with various builds focusing on low power. Sell half your disks, go mirror or Raidz1. Invest the difference in off-site vps and or backup. Storage on any SBC is a big pain and you will hit the sata connector / IO limits very soon.
The small NUC form factors are also fine, but if your problem is power you can go very low with a good approach and the right parts. And you'll make up for any new investments within the first year.
Thanks! I need to look more into what the power implications of 8 drives is - they never spin down, so I assume they are a non-trivial portion of my power consumption.
That said, I've been considering upgrading to something recent and low power anyways. It would be a good opportunity to sneak in some useful features too,
Which the old hardware wouldn't support without adapters, cards, etc.
Responding to myself...
Datasheet reports 7.05 idle watts (~11w at active random read) so depending on what it considers idle, it'd be 8*7.05|11= 56.4:88W
Server clocks in at ~102W. Halving the drives would reduce the power by 27 : 43%
And in theory other components (motherboard, CPU...) must be using anywhere from (102-88) :(102-56.4)= 14 : 45.6 W.
Oh okay that's a lot of power. For reference, I just set up an old Haswell PC as a NAS, idling at 25W (can't get to low Package C states) and usually at 28-30 running light workloads on an SSD pool. My plan was to add a 5 disk cage and at least 3 HDDs, with Raidz2 and 5 disks being the mid term goal. Absolutely unnecessary and a huge waste. I settled on less but larger disks, and in mirror I can get 12-18 TB usable space for under 500€. Less noise and power draw too.