If the seller doesn’t have a WiFi bundle, then yes. If they do, you’ll just need to pay extra.
I also recommend looking for a mini PC with Intel N100, N200, etc.
If the seller doesn’t have a WiFi bundle, then yes. If they do, you’ll just need to pay extra.
I also recommend looking for a mini PC with Intel N100, N200, etc.
Just looking for “minipc pfsense”
if you have an uplink of 1 Gbit/s or less, you can easily solve the problem of ports by purchasing a switch for $3. By the way, there is a mini PC with 4/6/8 ports and even with optical fiber.
and in general, if topic starter build own server, he can just build a router out of it too. the set of programs is not very large: kea-dhcp, radvd, iptables. that’s all. for WiFi, you will need a compatible card in the server or a separate access point like ubiquity.


Without display? Ok. But wolf can stream xfce inside podman.


You need virtual dislay so that meat that you don’t connect video card to TV. Maybe best choice - use wolf? No DE, no display. Just GPU and podman.


Yes, it is. But I have llama-swap, openweb-ui. If you spend some time on the llama-swap configuration, then the you have a good chance to run the model on 2 cards is through llama.cpp. The winnings, however, will not be x2 of course and will fall non-linearly from the number of cards. And you need motherboard with good PCI-E lines (2 pci-e x16 or more). But it’s still cheaper than one large card. Example:
HIP_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0,1 \
/opt/llama.cpp/build/bin/llama-server \
--host 127.0.0.1 \
--port 8082 \
--model /storage/models/model.gguf \
--n-gpu-layers all \
--split-mode layer \
--tensor-split 1,1 \
--ctx-size 32768 \
--batch-size 512 \
--ubatch-size 512 \
--flash-attn on \
--parallel 1
There is a less stable but more productive one: --split-mode row
P.S. By the way, one RX9070XT on my instance translates posts and comments. You can test it if you want. =)


not a very popular opinion, иге if you want an inexpensive, really inexpensive variant, take the AMD MX9070XT. AMD is not the most popular AI cards, but they are not bad with ROCm and for the price of 5090 you can put 5 cards (80 GB vram)
My provider doesn’t provide IPv6, but I rented a server in a data center, bought a subnet, and tunneled it home via WireGuard. So the scheme is roughly: VPS (fd00:1::/64) <-> (fd00:1::/64) Home router (realv6/64) <-> Home network
Router configuration:
/etc/sysctl.d/10-ipv6-privacy.conf
net.ipv6.conf.all.use_tempaddr = 0 net.ipv6.conf.default.use_tempaddr = 0 net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding = 1 net.ipv6.conf.default.forwarding = 1/etc/radvd.conf
interface br0 { AdvSendAdvert on; MinRtrAdvInterval 3; MaxRtrAdvInterval 30; AdvManagedFlag on; # M=1 → Address via DHCPv6 AdvOtherConfigFlag on; # O=1 → Additional options via DHCPv6 # SLAAC is still possible for Android prefix realv6::/64 { AdvOnLink on; AdvAutonomous on; # Allow SLAAC }; RDNSS realv6::1 { AdvRDNSSLifetime 1800; }; DNSSL home.lan { AdvDNSSLLifetime 1800; }; };/etc/kea/kea-dhcp6.conf
{ "Dhcp6": { "interfaces-config": { "interfaces": [ "br0" ] }, "lease-database": { "type": "memfile", "persist": true, "lfc-interval": 86400, "name": "/var/lib/kea/dhcp6.leases" }, "renew-timer": 21600, "rebind-timer": 43200, "preferred-lifetime": 43200, "valid-lifetime": 86400, "subnet6": [ { "id": 1, "subnet": "realv6::/64", "interface": "br0", "pools": [ { "pool": "realv6::1000 - realv6::ffff" } ], "option-data": [ { "name": "dns-servers", "data": "realv6::1" }, { "name": "domain-search", "data": "home.lan" } ] } ], "loggers": [ { "name": "kea-dhcp6", "output-options": [ { "output": "stdout" } ], "severity": "WARN" } ] } }And of course, iptables is necessary. Something like: /etc/iptables/ip6tables.rules
# Generated by ip6tables-save v1.6.0 on Thu Sep 8 13:29:11 2016 *nat :PREROUTING ACCEPT [0:0] :INPUT ACCEPT [0:0] :OUTPUT ACCEPT [0:0] :POSTROUTING ACCEPT [0:0] COMMIT *filter :INPUT DROP [0:0] :FORWARD DROP [0:0] :OUTPUT ACCEPT [0:0] #BASE INPUT -A INPUT -i eno1 -j DROP -A OUTPUT -o eno1 -j DROP -A INPUT -i lo -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -i br0 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p ipv6-icmp -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT -A FORWARD -i eno1 -j DROP -A FORWARD -i br0 -j ACCEPT -A FORWARD -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT -A FORWARD -p ipv6-icmp -j ACCEPT COMMIT