I’m going to go against the grain a bit and suggest studying for a certificate. Find one that looks interesting, and just prepare for it. You don’t necessarily have to get the certificate, but training for it will give you a good foundation for running your systems.
- 5 Posts
- 55 Comments
machinin@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Docker on VM vs bare install on VMEnglish
1·11 months agoI know rebuilding containers is trivial, but updating a service in the UI is more trivial than that. I’m just trying to make my life as trivial as possible 😁. It seems like containers may be worth the little bit of extra effort.
machinin@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Docker on VM vs bare install on VMEnglish
2·11 months agoCopying a response I wrote on another comment -
Thanks for this - the one advantage I’m noticing is that to update the services I’m running, I have to rebuild the container. I can’t really just update from the UI if an update is available. I can do it, it is just somewhat of a nuisance.
How often are there issues with dependencies? Is that a problem with a lot of software these days?
machinin@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Docker on VM vs bare install on VMEnglish
1·11 months agoThanks for this - the one advantage I’m noticing is that to update the services I’m running, I have to rebuild the container. I can’t really just update from the UI if an update is available. I can do it, it is just somewhat of a nuisance.
How often are there issues with dependencies? Is that a problem with a lot of software these days?
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What kind of hosting service will allow this?English
2·1 year agoThis was the first hit on proxmox vps.
https://hostkey.com/vps/proxmox/
I have no idea if they are good or not, but this kind of service might be what you’re looking for?
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Trying to get advice for photo/files storing/syncingEnglish
5·1 year agoSo use syncthing on all your devices. It will let you selectively sync folders.
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for HW recommendations for DIY NAS/HomelabEnglish
2·1 year agoI ran upon this video today. It might be helpful.
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for HW recommendations for DIY NAS/HomelabEnglish
1·1 year agoThanks, those are good links. I don’t know anything about power supplies/demands, sorry I can’t be a better conversation partner.
There might be similar boards on AliExpress, but I haven’t seen ones with as many SATA ports.
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for HW recommendations for DIY NAS/HomelabEnglish
2·1 year agoThe are similar (the same?) boards all over Amazon and AliExpress. I would be interested in knowing what you find out. Good luck!
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for HW recommendations for DIY NAS/HomelabEnglish
3·1 year agoI’ve been looking at this for a bit: https://a.co/d/2FMhmIY
I haven’t checked any reviews, but it might be something to look into.
Not OP, but I use this download manager. It has been good.
I’ve got a Frankenstein setup that wasn’t really thought out that well when I started. I’ll probably end up changing it later. If you go the Proxmox route, check out the partitioning suggestions carefully before you begin.
I’ve got an old minitower that replaced a mini PC setup. I wanted to bring my hdd into the box and connect via SATA instead of an external HDD on USB. I’ll probably get a bigger case to make installing HDDs more convenient.
I don’t really understand the partitioning to be honest. I have a 512gb nvme that is split up into a couple of partitions for VMs, ISO’s, backups and things for Proxmox. Then I have some other HDDs and SSDs that I use for files. Nothing in raid yet, but I’m hoping to add a couple of more HDDs. Then I’ll connect them to OMV and put them in raid.
I’m currently hosting radarr, sonarr, prowlarr and overseerr. It’s really convenient.
When I was in your shoes about 8 months ago, I opted for Proxmox and don’t regret it. Since then, I’ve been able to try different NAS OSs, experiment with different hosted services, etc. it gives you a lot of freedom to set up a VM, try a bunch of stuff, and then delete it and implement a fresh solution when you’re satisfied with something.
If you do that, you might consider having the operating system and VMs on one disk. If you decide on NAS software, many pass through the storage drives to the NAS directly.
I’m probably going to end up with the following:
- Base Proxmox
- NAS VM - OMV with NFS shares available to other services, SMB for the network
- VM for -arr services
- Plex on an LXC - a script helped me set the up
- (Maybe) VM for home assistant
- VM for other home services I need, like Immich
- Maybe a VM for hosting things publicly
- Testing VM
I hope this is helpful!
machinin@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Pros and cons of Proxmox in a home lab?English
25·1 year agoFor me, pros are:
- Fun to learn something new
- Easy to test different systems. For example, I can play with different router or NAS software without having a separate computer around.
- I’ve been able to create different “computers” that serve different needs and require different levels of security.
- Currently, a cluster is probably overkill, it was a fun experiment.
Cons
- Updating all the different systems can be a pain. I could probably automate it, but I haven’t made the time to learn it yet.
- As a beginner, I’m throwing a bunch of parts together and hoping it will work. I should probably be more strategic in my implementation, but I don’t know what to prioritize. I’m sure I’ll have to start over in the future.
- With the previous point, the storage setup doesn’t seem very intuitive. I probably need to set up that better.
- I haven’t quite figured out backups yet. My VM backups all seem too big. I need to figure that out and automate it.
Hope this is helpful.
I was looking into Tailscale, but it got me a little worried. I’m not very knowledgeable, so I hope someone can correct me
They don’t allow ssh, so you have to give your keys over them and they manage your ssh connection? That seems idiotic. Surely that can’t be correct?
I’m my use case, I was wanting to rsync to an off-site Synology from a Linux box. Synology also doesn’t allow ssh over their VPN service - frustrating.
I’m trying to imagine if my brain was…
Thanks, bought one!
Any way to power the drives if you don’t have any more free power cables? Just have to buy a new PSU?
Slackware was my first distro coming from Windows. I would get so frustrated when I wanted to install some software and I had to download it, open the cli, run some commands, check for dependencies, etc. I thought it was completely idiotic. Why couldn’t you just click on the file and install it. I thought, “no wonder no one uses Linux.”
Then a friend showed me slapt install, slapt update, and slapt upgrade. It was absolutely amazing. I wondered why Windows was so far behind.



Piggybacking on this, is there an app that will easily download your emails from Gmail and MS for backup purposes? Something like a pop3 frontend that will archive with folders and tags.