For reasons unexplained, you have no homelab hardware, but $1,000 in cash earmarked for the purpose.

What are you buying, what are you installing on it, and how is it different from what you’ve done previously (i.e. lessons learned)?

  • Raithmir@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    2-3 second hand small form factor PC’s running Proxmox, cheap 2 bay Synology NAS for backups.

  • jasont80@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Buy a new N100 microPC with 32GB RAM and m.2 drive, Sabrent 5-bay USB_3 DAS, a couple 10TB drives. Easy low-power single box home server with room to expand. You also could add a good switch and box of Cat8 (cable always > WiFi)

    Spend the rest on another hobby!

  • kY2iB3yH0mN8wI2h@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    , but $1,000 in cash

    not sure how this would help me, I’ve spend 10k or more, but I could get a t-shirt I guess?

  • spicyhotbean@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    https://www.servethehome.com/introducing-project-tinyminimicro-home-lab-revolution/ Small foot print, low wattage, modern CPU can run anything I can try and throw at it just get a lot of ram. Id run Ubuntu or Debian all apps go in docker containers, maybe install cockpit if I wanted web gui. And run vms if I want via KVM https://ubuntu.com/blog/kvm-hyphervisor If you want to go nas Plex rute you can add a hd via 10g usb Great level1techs video about mini PC home server https://youtu.be/GmQdlLCw-5k?si=VrdfDRfmpNHCZz-H

    • JackalopeJumpRope@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Everyone here recommending tinylabs, but what if you need lots of TB’s? Is there a solution then? I have a Microserver Gen 8 (which is plenty powerful enough) but need way more space, and was going to buy something that can fit 10+ Hard drives…

      • vasveritas@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        There’s lots of solutions.

        Cheap:

        But a full tower PC case with room for 10+ HDDs. Lot of options like those from Fractal, CoolerMaster, etc.

        Enterprise (expensive):

        Buy a JBOD with a backplane that you plug all your discs into then plug that into a server.

    • sir_dancealot@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      can you make ZFS pools across devices with Proxmox? Otherwise idk what you do for storage redundancy or RAID unless you run like longhorn or ceph or something across the cluster - all those machines have a single drive

  • belly_hole_fire@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    At least 2 mini desktops with as much RAM and ssd that I can get I’m it. Running proxmox and truenas and then setting up my jellyfin, homeassistant, and the rest will be a playground. I am a simple man

  • Geoffman05@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    UDM-PRO, USW-Aggregation, USW-Enterprise-24-POE, U6-LR… build a server with i5/32GB NVMe boot drive, then some RAID drives… I took out a loan in this scenario as $1,000 wouldn’t cover my entire rack getting blown up.

    • poldertrash@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      This is what I did with 3060s. Eventually added a 4th, because… well… 3 is less than 4 and I had an empty slot in my rack.

    • j0hnp0s@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I would only add a single SFF so that I can fit a couple of big 3.5 disks for my backup and data hoarding needs.

      Other than that, yeah… Micro/tiny/micro is the way

    • sqomoa@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I already have one 7040 Micro and I really wish I had two more for this exactly. Just cluster those puppies.

    • Ornias1993@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      An am4 mobo+4500 = <150 euros. Cheap atx case + psu = 75 Leaves you 75 for ram to price-match those 7040 with lots more expandability and ecc support.

  • sublight001@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Depends on the requirements. Is the purpose to learn virtualization management? Linux sysadmin stuff? Virtual networking + firewalls? For my purposes it’s all of the above and more.

    Having said that, I have not had an ounce of trouble out of Intel NUC 12 Pro NUC12WSHv5. So for $1000 I’d start with that and add NVMe storage and max ram in my budget. Running ESXi 8.

  • thequux@alien.topB
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    1 year ago
    • Supermicro H11SSL-N6 with an Epyc 7551P with 128G memory - €600
    • PSU - €60ish
    • Pile of refurb 4TiB disks - €100
    • Mikrotik hAP ax² - €80
    • HP Procurve 2848 - €40
    • Misc gubbins - €180

    There’s a server, networking gear, and storage. I can sort the rest out later.

  • TheyCalledMeThor@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    All used: 2019ish Intel NUC i7, 32-64GB RAM, run ESXi 7, 4 Bay QNAP or Synology with a Celeron, 8TB spinners, TP-Link ER605, an Omada POE switch, and an Omada AP.

    You end up with a great setup for VMs, a reliable Plex server using the NAS CPU, multi-WAN, rock solid VPN, and a UniFi/Meraki like experience, and you don’t notice it on the electric bill, your ears, the shelf, or the room temperature.

    This doesn’t differ at all from my existing setup. My only regret was not starting with 64GB of RAM on the NUC instead of the 32GB I started with.

  • RayneYoruka@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I will just get a nice amd board with ipmi and dump a good Ryzen cpu, Any linux, be debian or any Rhel based distro or even Proxmox and tons of drives plus a few nvme raids. Pretty much about that

  • StraightMethod@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Wish I had skipped the Frankenstein and mini PC steps.

    Here’s two reasons enterprise servers are the way to go:

    • Remote management is awesome. Remote KVM, remote serial terminal, mounting ISOs remotely. If your homelab is in a not-so-accessible place (e.g. cupboard or garage), this saves so much frustration.
    • High quality rack rails. You’re more likely to be tinkering around the back of your server than a company that throws it in a data centre. It’s almost like rack rails were built for homelabs.

    I wouldn’t worry too much about noise. $1000 will easily get you an R730 or T630.