vasveritas

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 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.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

You would be better off being paid by Google, Nielsen, or other ad tracking companies.

It was paid $45 a month for years by Google to track my internet. They gave me a custom router to do it. It was all my own traffic, so I didn’t worry about shady outside traffic. Figured Google already tracked me anyways so I might as well be paid for it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I would not use NTFS.

Do the reverse. Use ZFS, Ext4, or Btrfs. Those are native Linux file systems.

Then you share the Linux folder with Windows over SMB, which is a Windows file sharing protocol that both Linux and Windows understand well. Voila, copy and paste between both machines without worrying about corruption.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

It’s for editorial integrity.

A lot of redditors only read the title and it’s what a lot of discussion is around. Allowing titles to be edited after the fact would really change what information is presented and how the conversation is contextualized.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

No, you want Ethernet not fiber.

Your downstairs router, computers, and your new upstairs switch / Wi-Fi access point are all guaranteed going to be RJ45 Ethernet.

The only part that is fiber is the part running to the outside.

You can put both a fiber and CAT5E/6 Ethernet in, but just a fiber connection will not accomplish what you want. You need the Ethernet connection in order for each floor to have its own wired connection and/or wifi access. That’s what the consumer equipment will use. Otherwise, you will need more enterprise-level equipment and that will add unnecessary complication.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Serve The Home forums and YouTube is dedicated to these devices.

Protectli, CWWK, Topton are the manufacturers. Protectli is actually a rebrander of the Chinese products for western audiences. CWWK designs the actual motherboards. You can order from whichever vender you like, although Topton seems the least reliable as far as English support and firmware.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

If you have a Managed Switch with VLAN capabilities, then your new proposed idea and layout make sense.

Your current setup kind of looks like it's double NAT. Which is not great. You want the Protectli router to be the first device after the Arris Surfboard modem. Have the modem be in only modem/bridge mode. We do not want to use the Arris as a router.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

The TrueNAS gods say to leave HDDs plugged in and spinning.

The current way to store digital data is as “living data” with backups. Data only exists if it’s constantly verified to exist. You can’t verify an unplugged HDD. Of course, you need a 3-2-1 backup system, and have to continually verify those backups as part of the living system.

The magnetic platters in a HDD are actually decently reliable. Sure a cosmic ray or error may flip a bit, but that’s why we have backups and redundancy elsewhere in the system. That flipped bit won’t actually damage the hardware.

The real concern with HDDs is that they mechanically wear out and break. They stop spinning. The motors malfunction, the lubricants dry up, the metal bearings wear down, etc.

TrueNAS says the most dangerous time in a HDDs life is when it is spinning up or slowing down from a stop. This gives the most mechanical stress on the HDD. They says it’s better to leave them powered and spinning 24/7 than to unplug them or despin them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

H.264 and x264 are the same thing. H.264 is the name of the math standard. x264 is the name of an open source software that implemented that math.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Mikrotik CSS610-8P-2S+IN - $200
8x Gigabit PoE-out ports and 2x 10 Gigabit SFP+ ports.

Miktrotik CRS328-24P-4S+RM - $500
24 port Gigabit PoE with 4x 10Gbps SFP+ ports.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

The most important part of a Frigate NVR is the Coral Edge TPU. As long as you can secure one, you'll be set. The USB version is easiest to use, since it doesn't require installing drivers and most PCs will have a USB 3 port.

All the processors are good enough for a small NAS and NVR.

I wouldn't buy a PC without SATA ports or an expansion slot. If you go the mini-pc route, where would your store your HDDs? An expansion slot would let you one day add an HBA card for more SATA connections. By default, it looks like all those motherboards have limited SATA connections. The 7080 Tower says it has 4 SATA connections, but only 1 of them looks like its the full speed SATA3.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

You probably want to run all of that on bare metal in containers with Docker or Kubernetes.

Containers let you easily share resources between them, because they all share the same kernel. VMs are harder to share hardware resources with, as you're finding out.

I was not sure if I should run a LXC container for each docker, or have a single LXC with everything (exception xrdp / XFCE). I don't know what would be good practices..

LXC is a container. I don't think you would want to run Docker inside LXC. That's running a container inside a container. I'm a noob though.

Normally, you run one app per container, or one set of apps per container if they are closely related. You could run all the Plex suite apps inside a single LXC container and Windows alongside it in Proxmox. Or you could run each app inside their own LXC container.

Alternatively, you could run them all in individual Docker containers on bare metal Ubuntu, but not have the ability to install Windows or other OSes.

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