@subven1 - eviltoast
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 11th, 2023

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  • subven1@alien.topBtoSelf-Hosted Main@selfhosted.forumNas build
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    1 year ago

    Would also recommend to get a basic prebuild 2-bay NAS in your case. Synology, Qnap and Asustor all have app stores and Docker support within their NAS so you can install additional software later.

    - Asustor AS5402T Nimbustor 2 Gen2

    - QNAP Turbo Station TS-262-4G

    - TerraMaster F2-223

    - Synology DiskStation DS224+




  • Two Pi and a 1,6Ghz single core ARM NAS…

    This is around 20 watts idle and ~30 watts under load…nowhere near “high consumption”. The N100 is just around 15 watts idle and more capable systems like a Ryzen 5 7600x idle at 25 watts. So lets say you swap everything to a N100 single system. This will maybe save you around 5 watts while idle which means ~40kw/h savings per year.

    You do not have the computing power to run VM’s/applications that could utilize 32GB RAM. Everything you mentioned could be run on a machine just at 4GB RAM. The only reason could be the use of ZFS and a lot of disks and TB’s of space. You should be fine aiming at 16GB RAM.

    In terms of OS. I use Unraid because its very easy to use and does not require you to have HDDs spun up like with traditional RAID. Saves me a lot of energy and wear on my drives. It is also capable of running Docker containers and various VMs.




  • How about some software for server management and app hosting like cloudron.io ? It is a complete and easy solution to host your own (docker based) apps or you can just install free apps from the build in app store. You can use Cloudrons base image to make use of addons (services) that are already build into Cloudron like: graphite, mailserver, mongodb, mysql, nginx, postgresql, sftp, turn, redis, ldap, oidc, recvmail, scheduler (cron), sendmail and tls or build an app on top of the LAMP app.

    Everything is automated from OS updates, plattform + app based backups (with persistence if needed) to proxy setup and certificates. Besides the webUI, Cloudron also provides a RESTful API to manage apps, users, groups, domains and other resources. It also has its own Build Service and Image Registry or you could host your own Gitlab/Gitea with just one click.

    Instead of real orchestration you maybe could use automation tools like n8n or Ctfreak to archive what you need.

    Cloudron is free for up to 2 apps so keep that in mind but it runs well on a VPS with as low as 2GB RAM and 25GB of disk space.