• @WaltzingKea@lemmy.nz
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    131 year ago

    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.

  • @d00ery@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Pi4 with 2TB SSD running:

    • Portainer
    • Calibre
    • qBittorrent
    • Kodi

    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.

  • @rambos@lemm.ee
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    91 year ago

    1) DIY PC (running everything)

    • MSI Z270-A PRO
    • Intel G3930
    • 16GB DDR4
    • ATX PSU 550W
    • 250GB SSD for OS
    • 500GB SSD for data
    • 12TB HDD for backup + media

    2) Raspberry pi 4 4GB (running 2nd pihole instance)

  • Presi300
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    121 year ago

    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”

  • jevans ⁂
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    1 year ago

    https://pixelfed.social/p/thejevans/664709222708438068

    EDIT:

    Server:

    • AMD 5900x
    • 64GB RAM
    • 2x10TB HDD
    • RTX 3080
    • LSI-9208i HBA
    • 2x SFP+ NIC
    • 2TB NVMe boot drive

    Proxmox hypervisor:

    • TrueNAS VM (HBA PCIe passthrough)
    • HomeAssistant VM
    • Debian 12 LXC as SSH entrypoint and Ansible controller
    • Debian 12 VM with Ansible controlled docker containers
    • Debian 12 VM (GPU PCIe passthrough) with Jellyfin and other services that use GPU
    • Debian 12 VM for other docker stuff not yet controlled by Ansible and not needing GPU

    Router: N6005 fanless mini PC, 2.5Gbit NICs, pfsense

    Switch Mikrotik CRS 8-port 2.5Gbit, 2-port SFP+

      • jevans ⁂
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        41 year ago

        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.

  • synae[he/him]
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    41 year ago

    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 :)

      • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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        31 year ago

        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?)

      • synae[he/him]
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        21 year ago

        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…

  • @sabreW4K3@lemmy.tf
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    21 year ago

    Western Digital My Cloud EX2 (Original) for storage

    Raspberry Pi 5 for Home Assistant, Navidrome, Jellyfin, Kavita, Immich, Paperless and eventually NextCloud. Though it’s being a bastard and won’t run right now.

    I need to get a Nano Pi to run OPNSense and Pi-Hole and I’ll be happy.

    • LemmyOP
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      1 year ago

      NanoPi R2C has 1 gigabit speeds and you can run LibreCMC with little to no blobs :)

      It is a Ethernet only router though, no WiFi.

      • @sabreW4K3@lemmy.tf
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        11 year ago

        My plan was to get one of those flying saucer looking WAPs to handle the WiFi. Would that work?

        Runs off to look up LibreCMC 😂

    • @afk_strats@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Your link is not on https and asking me to download a .bin file. Extremely sus

      Edit: link looks good now

      • Krafting
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        11 year ago

        OKey, so that’s a bit concerning… I’d love to get my hand on this “bin” file, I cannot reproduce the issue on my side… Also the site should be HTTPS only. I had a bug with caching recently that showed the ActivityPub data instead of the blog post, could it be that ? Are you on mobile, and the browser cannot show JSON data properly so it tries to download it with a weird name ?

        • @afk_strats@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          I’m not really a networking expert so I can’t make too good of a guess as to what happened. I’m on the latest Firefox mobile release on Android and was accessing from a Colorado IP. When I originally tried the site, nothing was rendered. It was a blank page or just a redirect for download. I didn’t download the .bin. I clicked your link twice before sending my message.

          • Krafting
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            11 year ago

            Well, thanks for the follow-up anyway, I did some tweaks, and I hope it won’t happen again… I’ll see.

        • jevans ⁂
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          21 year ago

          The same thing happened to me when I first tried to go there, but it’s fine now.

            • Krafting
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              11 year ago

              OKey, so that’s a bit concerning… I’d love to get my hand on this “bin” file, I cannot reproduce the issue on my side… Also the site should be HTTPS only. I had a bug with caching recently that showed the ActivityPub data instead of the blog post, could it be that ? Are you on mobile, and the browser cannot show JSON data properly so it tries to download it with a weird name ?

              • @stratosfear@lemmy.sdf.org
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                1 year ago

                I am on Android mobile. Firefox only prompts to download downloadfile.bin. Duckduckgo browser actually opens the file contents. I’ll post it here, since I’m getting it from public I’m hoping that’s okay. This is the content…

                {“@context”:[“https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams”,{“Hashtag”:“as:Hashtag”}],“id”:“https://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/”,“type”:“Note”,“attachment”:[{“type”:“Image”,“url”:“https://blog.krafting.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/603fb502-9977-461f-92c6-7375055fdec6-min-scaled.jpg”,“mediaType”:“image/jpeg”},{“type”:“Image”,“url”:“https://blog.krafting.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/20240129_184909-min-scaled.jpg”,“mediaType”:“image/jpeg”},{“type”:“Image”,“url”:“https://blog.krafting.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/20240129_185338-min-scaled.jpg”,“mediaType”:“image/jpeg”},{“type”:“Image”,“url”:“https://blog.krafting.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/20240129_193432-min-scaled.jpg”,“mediaType”:“image/jpeg”}],“attributedTo”:“https://blog.krafting.net/author/admin/”,“content”:“\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cstrong\u003EMy First Server Rack!\u003C/strong\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Ca href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/\u0022\u003Ehttps://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/homelab/\u0022\u003E#homelab\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/management/\u0022\u003E#management\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/networking/\u0022\u003E#networking\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/rack/\u0022\u003E#rack\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/server/\u0022\u003E#server\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/startech/\u0022\u003E#startech\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E”,“contentMap”:{“en”:“\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cstrong\u003EMy First Server Rack!\u003C/strong\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Ca href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/\u0022\u003Ehttps://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/homelab/\u0022\u003E#homelab\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/management/\u0022\u003E#management\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/networking/\u0022\u003E#networking\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/rack/\u0022\u003E#rack\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/server/\u0022\u003E#server\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca rel=\u0022tag\u0022 class=\u0022hashtag u-tag u-category\u0022 href=\u0022https://blog.krafting.net/tag/startech/\u0022\u003E#startech\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E”},“published”:“2024-02-05T19:10:19Z”,“tag”:[{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/homelab/”,“name”:“#homelab”},{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/management/”,“name”:“#management”},{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/networking/”,“name”:“#networking”},{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/rack/”,“name”:“#rack”},{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/server/”,“name”:“#server”},{“type”:“Hashtag”,“href”:“https://blog.krafting.net/tag/startech/”,“name”:“#startech”}],“updated”:“2024-02-05T19:22:17Z”,“url”:“https://blog.krafting.net/my-first-server-rack/”,“to”:[“https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public”,“https://blog.krafting.net/wp-json/activitypub/1.0/users/1/followers”],“cc”:[]}

                I can erase the direct post link and then the site loads, but then if I click the post title it loads the text again…

                • Krafting
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                  11 year ago

                  Okey so the “bin” is actually the activitypub data… I don’t know why this is still happening… there might be something wrong somewhere, but where…

  • @Hemi03@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago
    • Pico psu
    • Asrock n100m
    • Eaton3S mini UPS
    • 250gb OS Sata SSD
    • 4x sata 4t SSD’s
    • Pcie sata splitter

    All in a small PC Case

    sever is running YunoHost

  • Avid Amoeba
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    1 year ago

    Main site:

    • 5950X on a GA-AB350-Gaming 3
    • 64GB
    • 1TB NVMe mirrored
    • 24TB RAIDz1, using external USB 3 disks
    • Ubuntu LTS
    • 700Mbps uplink
    • OpenWrt on Pi 4 router
    • Home Assistant Yellow

    Off site:

    • ThinkCentre 715q
    • 2400GE
    • 8GB
    • 256GB NVMe
    • 24TB RAIDz1, using external USB 3 disks
    • Ubuntu LTS
    • 30Mbps uplink
    • OpenWrt on Pi 4 router

    Syncthing replicates data between the two. ZFS auto snapshots prevent accidental or malicious data loss at each site. Various services are running on both machines. Plex, Wiki.js, OpenProject, etc. Most are run in docker, managed via systemd. The main machine is also used as a workstation as well as games. The storage arrays are ghetto special - USB 3 external disks, some WD Elements, some Seagate in enclosures. I even used to have a 1T, a 3T and a 4T disk in an LVM volume pretending to be an 8T disk in one of the ZFS pools. The next time I have to expand the storage I’ll use second hand disks. The 5950X isn’t boosting as high as it should be able to on a chipset with PB2, but I got all those cores on a B350 board. 😆 Config management is done with SaltStack.

    • jevans ⁂
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      21 year ago

      I have a similar setup. I just recently switched to the ASRock Phantom X570 for $100. It’s a fantastic board at that price.

        • jevans ⁂
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          21 year ago

          I’ll have to double check, but I came from a B450 board. It definitely allowed me to run my RAM at a higher XMP profile (4x 3200MHz), and it has way better IOMMU groups. Each PCIe device gets its own group, so they can all be passed to different VMs.

  • @dlundh@lemmy.world
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    11 year ago

    PA-220 fw for internet access. An old workhorse, Synology DS1812+, for filesharing. A mac mini with Ubuntu running Plex and Roon also hosting Dashy in docker. A Hwg-ste to measure temp in my cabinet. I host a RIPE probe. An RPI4 running Zabbix. My next project is moving from PA-220 to something in the 400 series (probably 415) so I can upgrade to newer PANOS.

  • @darganon@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    I have a Lenovo TS140 in the laundry room, i3-4330, 16GB, 2TB of SSD running arch.

    In docker I am running:

    Plex, Wire guard, Qbittorrent, Pihole, my discord bot, nginx, and Teslamate.

    Works great, I’m probably going to swap my gaming rig in (5800x + 3080 12GB) with more RAM to host some AI stuff and the same services.

  • @iggy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Internet:

    • 1G fiber

    Router:

    • N100 with dual 2.5G nics

    Lab:

    • 3x N100 mini PCs as k8s control plane+ceph mon/mds/mgr
    • 4x Aoostar R7 “NAS” systems (5700u/32G ram/20T rust/2T sata SSD/4T nvme) as ceph OSDs/k8s workers

    Network:

    • Hodge podge of switches I shouldn’t trust nearly as much as I do
    • 3x 8 port 2.5G switches (1 with poe for APs)
    • 1x 24 port 1G switch
    • 2x omada APs

    Software:

    • All the standard stuff for media archival purposes
    • Ceph for storage (using some manual tiering in cephfs)
    • K8s for container orchestration (deployed via k0sctl)
    • A handful of cloud-hypervisor VMs
    • Most of the lab managed by some tooling I’ve written in go
    • Alpine Linux for everything

    All under 120w power usage

    • slazer2au
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      11 year ago

      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

      • @iggy@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        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