Curious what you’ve got installed on it. What do you use a lot but took awhile to find? What do you recommend?

  • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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    1 year ago

    I just have a Synology with 4 drives. Super basic and was very easy to set up and takes up very little space in a closet. I mount it to my Ubuntu server using samba, and then any data processing that needs to be done on that data (e.g. plex, music server, etc.) is done on the server, which is much more powerful than the little Celeron CPU that the Synology has.

  • stown@sedd.it
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    1 year ago

    TrueNAS virtualized under Proxmox with HBA card passed through. I don’t run apps on my NAS, it’s just for storage.

  • blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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    1 year ago

    I have an Ubuntu VM running on my Proxmox server. It just exports some folders over NFS that I mount from my laptops and PC. Then I have Nextcloud running in a separate VM so my phone can upload photos. The NC storage is all the NFS mounted folders from the NAS. Simple and works.

  • Muscular_Michael@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Synology RS1221+ and RX418 for main personal storage, media and device backups. Synology DS918 as a backup to personal data on RS1221+ Synology DS423 + Synology TC500/BC500 cameras for NVR surveillance Synology DS220+ offsite as a backup of personal data.

    I like Synology for their ease of use in setting up. I just replaced an older SYnology and IP cameras with the DS423.

  • Error Lab@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I got a DS920+ been using it for file storage, backups, plex, and running docker for all my arr’s. Really like synology as an entry level, it got me to dig deeper and learn more. I’m behind a CGNAT, so setting up a VPN solution that would work was a pain on DSM. In the process of setting up my own homelab and building a truenas as I learn more about ZFS.

  • donio@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    No dedicated NAS. I have a main Linux system that’s always-on for other purposes so that also serves as main storage. Remote access is entirely via ssh-based methods: sshfs, TRAMP in Emacs, git, occasional copying stuff around.

  • darvit@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Using an old Netgear Readynas R102 with 4.5 TB of usable storage in RAID 0.

    I used to run all kinds of services on the nas itself via the ssh access, but I’ve since moved those to separate raspberry pis. The pis use the nas as a networked storage.

    I run a webserver, music server, matrix server and torrent client seeding ubuntu images.

    I want to make a storage cluster using Ceph in the future, but I’ve not found any suitable small computers that I could use with that.

  • Kata1yst@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I run everything on a lean Ubuntu server install. My Ansible playbooks then take over and set up ZFS and docker. All of my hosted services are in docker, and their data and configs are contained, regularly snapshotted, and backed up in ZFS.

    I run basically all of the Arr stack, Plex (more friendly to my less tech savvy family then my preferred solution Jellyfin), HAss, Frigate NVR, Obsidian LiveSync, a few Minecraft worlds, Docspell, Tandoor recipes, gitea, Nextcloud, FoundryVTT, an internet radio station, syncthing, Wireguard, ntfy, calibre, Wallabag, Navidrome, and a few pet projects.

    I also store or backup all of the important family documents and photos, though I haven’t implemented Immich just yet, waiting for a few features and a little more development maturity.

    About 30TB usable right now.

      • Kata1yst@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Certainly. Mostly it started as a way to keep tax documents and receipts safe and easily findable.

        It’s grown into a “huh, maybe this letter from <bank, school, insurance, charity, etc> is important, but it clutters the house less when ones and zeros”, so we scan it in.

        Then when we need info, we can just search for the name of the sender, the date, account numbers, literally anything remotely legible in the document and get lightning fast results.

  • YuzuDrink@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I just set up my first NAS – a Synology 1522+, with 4x6TB drives in whatever Synology’s custom raid is called where I lose one drive to redundancy.

    So far, I mostly use if for my in-home Plex server (which finally lets me shut down my gaming rig at night while still letting me watch TV shows and listen to music to sleep, so big energy win there, I imagine). I’m considering running my own Matrix chat, PixelFed(?), maybe Mastodon and/or Lemmy on it for my local friends and family; but I’m still looking into solutions.

    Would like to get off “Discord for everything”, and I kind of miss what Facebook used to be in terms of just posting updates about my life and reading updates about other people’s lives.

    Not sure I trust Synology’s built-in Chat and other replacement options to be as good as what I’d like, though, in terms of both quality and privacy/security. Happy to hear from folks with more experience!

  • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I have a proxmox host with a privileged lxc container offering samba and nfs shares. Drives are pooled as a btrfs RAID 1 (lets me use different sized drives easily).

    I tried OMV etc. but found all of those options to be not really convenient once you start directly modifying config files. I love the convenience those offer but for something like NAS , less moving parts mean less breakage in my experience.

    I use raid 1 for actual data but no raid for movies and media that is disposable (not photos etc.). Didn’t find raid worthwhile in that scenario after having tried it. Might be because I didn’t have enough $$ to truly spend on it.

  • Swintoodles@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I built a massive overkill NAS with the intention of turning it into a full blown home server. That fizzled out after a while (partially because the setup I went with didn’t have GPU power options on the server PSUs, and fenangling an ATX PSU in there was too sketchy for me), so now it’s a power hog that just holds files. I just turn it on to use the files, then flip it back off to save on its ridiculous idle power costs.

    In hindsight I’d have gone with a lighter motherboard/CPU combo and kept the server grade stuff for a separate unit. The NAS doesn’t need more than a beefy NIC and a SAS drive controller, and those are only x8 PCIE slots at most.

    Also I use TrueNAS scale, more work to set up than UNRAID but the ZFS architecture seemed too good to ignore.

    • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      A GPU isn’t really necessary for home server unless you want to do lots of client side transcoding. I have a powerhungry server that runs a VM offering samba and nfs shares as well as a bunch of other vms, lxc containers and docker containers, with a full *arr stack, Plex, jellyfin, a jupyterlab instance, pihole and a bunch of other stuff.

      • Swintoodles@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I was trying to do some fancy stuff like GPU passthrough to make the ultimate all in one unit that I could have 2 or 3 GPUS in and have several VMs running games independently, or at least the option to spin it up for a friend if they came over. I’m probably not quite sophisticated enough to pull that off anyways, and the use case was too uncommon to bother with after unga bungaing a power distribution board after a hard day of work.

        • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Ah now I get it. You’ll probably need an expensive PSU to make that work. I’m sure there would be some option though in the server segment for people building GPU clusters.

          • Swintoodles@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, I was trying to go all the way when I should have compartmentalized it a bit and just had two computers instead of one superbeast. The server PSUs aren’t super expensive relatively speaking, 1U hotswap 1200W PSUs with 94% efficiency are like $100. Problem was that the power distribution board I had didn’t have GPU power connectors, only CPU power connectors, and tired me wasn’t going to accept no for an answer and thus let out the magic smoke in it. I got lucky and the distribution board seems to be the intended failure point in these things, so the expensive motherboard and components got by unscathed (I think, I never used the GPU, and it was just some cheap Ebay thing). Still a fairly costly mistake that I should have avoided, but I was tired that night and wanted something to just work out.

            • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              That’s quite interesting. I would have thought that they were more expensive than that. I’ve been there too. You’re doing a bunch of stuff, tired and just want it to somehow work. What have you been doing with the build after that, if you don’t mind me asking?

              • Swintoodles@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                Was going to make it a sort of central computer that could centralize all the computing for several members of the family. Was hoping to get a basic laptop that could hook into the unit and play games/program on a virtual machine with graphics far above what the laptop could have handled, plus the aforementioned spin up of more machines for friends. Craft Computing had a lot of fun computing setups I wanted to learn and emulate. I would have also had the standard suite of video services and general tomfoolery. Maybe dip into crypto mining with idle time later on. Lots of ideas that somewhat fizzled out.

                • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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                  1 year ago

                  That sounds really interesting. I have some VMs set up in a similar way for family memeber though they’re very low power. They’re mostly used to ease the transition from windows to Linux. I hope you get to do it again sometime :)

  • dollop_of_cream@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’m using a Synology setup. I thought I’d grab an off the self option as I have a habit of going down rabbit holes with DIY projects. It’s working well, doing a one-way mirror off my local storage with nightly backups from the NAS to a cloud server.

    • UselesslyBrisk@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      I use synology. I’ve done freenas, openfiler, even just straight zfs/Linux/smb/iscsi on Ubuntu and others. Synology works well and is quite easy to setup. I let the nas do file storage. And tie other computers to it (namely sff dell machines) to do the other stuff, like Pi-hole or plex. Storage is shared from the nas via cifs/smb or iscsi.

      Synology also has one of the best backups for home use imho with Active Backup for Business. It can do vmware, windows, max, Linux etc. I actually have an older second nas for that alone. But you can do it all in one easily.

  • DM_Gold@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’d like to build a NAS. Does anyone have a simple guide I could follow? I do have experience building my personal computers. I could search online for a guide, but a lot of the time small communities like this will have the end-all be-all guide that isn’t well known.

    • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I don’t have one off hand but a NAS at homelab level is not that different from a server.

      I have had success with getting a second hand server with a moderately powerful processor (old i5 maybe?), a good 1/10Gb network card (which can be set up with bonding if you have multiple ports), and lots of SATA ports or a raid card (need PCI slots for the cards as well).

      I would go with even a lower power processor for power savings if that’s a thing. ECC ram would be great, especially for ZFS/btrfs/xfs.