Alright let's see pictures of your super nice rack-mounted, professionally installed labs. I'll start šŸ™ƒ
from northernlights@lemmy.today to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 19:24
https://lemmy.today/post/50827717

Here’s my beautiful unemployed-for-too-long-have-no-money-dont-care-about-looks lab :)

picture of a raspberrypi, switch, HP elite desk, KVM and mess of cables on a desk

Hey it’s more than good enough to run all this ĀÆ_(惄)_/ĀÆ

screenshot showing list of hosted apps and resources usage of servers

#selfhosted

threaded - newest

Unusable3151@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 19:34 next collapse

people put too much ā€œlabā€ and not enough ā€œhomeā€ in homelab. we need more dust, more cables, more jank. love this.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 19:51 next collapse

more dust

Believe it or not I cleaned before taking the pic lol

dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 20:49 collapse

I had a dusty laptop running a homelab for you, and figured I should show something nice on the screen. Then, I typed in my password like an idiot. Not gonna put that online. :(

greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo on 09 Apr 13:09 collapse

How dejected could you be when you can bring someone such joy?

dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 16:39 collapse

That man is a menace.

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:07 next collapse

That desk is about a million times cleaner than mine.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:13 next collapse

This is the best thread so far. Really enjoying seeing peoples setups! Thanks @northernlights@lemmy.today !

BakedCatboy@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 21:19 next collapse

Dust and jank you say? Behold, my old basement homelab when I rented just outside Boston with a very permissive landlord who agreed to let me have Comcast gig pro fiber pulled into the basement, running off an outlet I installed without asking on a free slot in our breaker box. The dust was terrible, the rack was a hodge podge, I had to put up that sign because maintenance guys kept plugging their power tools into the UPS when I wasn’t around and tripping it. But Comcast fucked up the billing and the 2gig + 1gig symmetric internet is still active to this day for free, which I left behind minimally working for the next tenants after parting out the rack. The tower by the side was a friend who wanted to colocate on my fiber, and I had some fun stuff like a slide out vga console. I also pulled Ethernet into every room, most of them installed with nice wall plates all bundled down to the rack, so with a house full of gamers, you could have multiple people pulling a gig on a game download without anyone stepping on anyone else’s toes.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FRSHdCAE.jpeg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:26 next collapse

Dang that’s the dream. Never move out :D

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:59 collapse

Very nice. You guys with all the toys. I bet she’s fun tho.

blackbrook@mander.xyz on 09 Apr 00:33 next collapse

When did people start using the term ā€˜lab’ for this sort of thing, and why?

freebee@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 17:55 collapse

I think because it lets them see themselves as scientists or so

[deleted] on 09 Apr 01:03 next collapse
.
OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 09 Apr 14:16 collapse

This guy home labs šŸ˜‚

TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 19:53 next collapse

the hardrive just out in the wild, living life like it was meant to be lived.

cheese_greater@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 20:21 collapse

What are its natural predators?

Leafimo@feddit.org on 08 Apr 20:22 next collapse

gravity

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:30 collapse

beverages

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:31 collapse

drunk sysadmins

frongt@lemmy.zip on 08 Apr 21:10 collapse

Spill your beer on it and get all three in one go!

Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 21:37 next collapse

Cats and very young humans

Cyber@feddit.uk on 08 Apr 22:39 collapse

Keys, paperclips and coins… they kinda work their way towards the PCB and short out crtitical things

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 19:53 next collapse

Hey you know what, screw it, see for yourself how it performs: apps.lorteau.fr

BTW I’m really liking asciinema, I think it’s a great idea.

Example: <img alt="asciicast" src="https://lemmy.today/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fasciinema.southernlights.fr%2Fa%2F11.svg">

Edit: OMG it’s so annoying how lemmy just rewrites img links - …southernlights.fr/…/2026-04-08_19-04-1775678390.…

twinnie@feddit.uk on 08 Apr 19:55 next collapse

What’s that web interface thing? Is it home made? I keep thinking about doing something like that to save me having to remember port numbers for the different services on my home server.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:02 next collapse

It’s just heimdall, behind haproxy (on the raspberrypi) so everything is on the same domain (and behind cloudflare because i’m a madman who exposes stuff publically)

scott@lem.free.as on 09 Apr 06:39 collapse

Port numbers??

Have you tried assigning names to services and routing them through a reverse proxy that maps the name to ports?

e.g. sonarr.local.lan > nginx > server.local.lan:8080

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:01 next collapse

Those HP Elitedesks are all over Amazon as refurbished machines. I was actually considering getting one earlier today for a server.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:05 collapse

Love 'em. Medical offices around me are selling them like hotcakes, fed up of Win11’s promises of being capable of delivering a light terminal.

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 23:58 collapse

Heh. Someone else in this thread posted an image that has three disconnected Elitedesks just stacked on each other on the bookshelf housing their homelab, another powered-on one, and what I think might be two or three more Elitedesks that are partially-obscured.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:01 next collapse

Hard-drives deserve to be free to their cases! Free the drives!

tychosmoose@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:02 next collapse

Classic blue 5-port gigabit switch. Chef’s kiss!

These things will be with us until the heat death of the universe. Still chugging along.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:04 collapse

Right? Took it from a job I left 10 years ago.

tychosmoose@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:13 collapse

Ha! Mine’s the same! My job was dumping them and said take it if you want it. A v1 TP-Link TL-SG105. I don’t think I’ve used mine in at least 10 years but I can’t bear to throw it away.

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:04 next collapse

ĀÆ_(惄)_/ĀÆ

You want a double-backslash in Markdown.

ĀÆ\_(惄)_/ĀÆ

yields

ĀÆ_(惄)_/ĀÆ

Whereas:

ĀÆ\\_(惄)_/ĀÆ

yields

ĀÆ\(惄)/ĀÆ

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:06 next collapse

Indeed, I really should have caught that.

scott@lem.free.as on 08 Apr 21:00 collapse

You need to add backslashes to your underscores since Markdown is turning them into italics.

ĀÆ\\\_(惄)\_/ĀÆ

yields

ĀÆ\_(惄)_/ĀÆ

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 23:53 collapse

Thanks!

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:07 next collapse

Projects that im running:

General Web server out of junk

Old system 76 machine from a while back. Its what is running a majority of my services for self hosting. Only one screw keeps the case together, since I get into the insides quite often. <img alt="image" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/zr/w5/zrw5ZSiBiGoijRQ.png">

Solar powered web server on a phone

Solar powered web server. Its going to be repurposed into a meshtastic node soon.
<img alt="Qm4kpb3x0dQ7Qib.jpg" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/Qm/4k/Qm4kpb3x0dQ7Qib.jpg">

<img alt="hRMBBvZMfVgbgIs.jpg" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/hR/MB/hRMBBvZMfVgbgIs.jpg">

Ebook reader on a heltek v3

Somewhat jank setup of a heltek which is also an ebook reader. It runs a webserver to upload the book in txt format, then I can take it on the go. I still have to do some work on the text. <img alt="J6SwY2qZLUHcGkY.jpg" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/J6/Sw/J6SwY2qZLUHcGkY.jpg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:11 next collapse

Now that’s a crafty homelab, love it

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:14 collapse

The best homelab is the one you already have.

The second best is the one you want to buy :D

Is that a PI in your setup?

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:20 collapse

Yeah it’s just haproxy + uptime kuma

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 20:21 collapse

nice!

litchralee@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 20:52 next collapse

That ebook reader is wild! Does the text stay in place while you read, or does it scroll past like a stock ticker?

If the latter doesn’t exist, I guess I should go push a PR to make that happen on meshcore firmware haha

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:02 collapse

Stays in place. It was a weekend project so I still need to do some work on the text in particular. Im not sure if ill go any farther, but the code is here if you want to take a look.

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:00 next collapse

Old system 76 machine from a while back. Its what is running a majority of my services for self hosting. Only one screw keeps the case together, since I get into the insides quite often.

If you get bored and adventurous:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_case_screws

Computer case screws are the hardware used to secure parts of a PC to the case. Although there are numerous manufacturers of computer cases, they have generally used three thread sizes.

The #6-32 UNC screws are often found on 3.5" hard disk drives and the case’s body to secure the covers. The M3 threaded holes are often found on 5.25" optical disc drives, 3.5" floppy drives, and 2.5" drives. Motherboards and other circuit boards often use a #6-32 UNC standoff. #4-40 UNC thumb screws are often found on the ends of DVI, VGA, serial and parallel connectors.

You might be able to get a box of thumbscrews in the appropriate diameter and go toolless. I’ve had a number of computer cases that ship with those (my current desktop case just uses magnets, doesn’t even have the thumbscrews). I have had a lot of less-than-ideal toolless things in the past, including poorly-designed toolless hard drive mounting stuff that wound up being a lot more work than the traditional tool-requiring stuff, but for the screws that keep the case closed, going toolless has always been a big win for me.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:05 collapse

Thats good to know! Although if I am honest, ill probably just repurpose my current desktop that I am using for this conversation and get a new one if I end up re-doing my homeservers again.

Last thing I want to do is more work at home. So these are just ā€œfor funā€ projects. If im not having fun, I start removing things from the setup.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 02:51 collapse

You need to make a ā€˜I’ve been busy’ post.

dosse91@lemmy.trippy.pizza on 08 Apr 20:11 next collapse

The home server under my desk. Very professional, as you can see.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.trippy.pizza/pictrs/image/b7a53d87-e5be-4df0-9b17-0d0836e39c7d.jpeg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:22 next collapse

Oooh that’s neat.

owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca on 09 Apr 03:02 collapse

Buco seems to be having a good time. 9/10, unsure how Eaton feels.

dosse91@lemmy.trippy.pizza on 09 Apr 06:56 collapse

The Eaton unit is a UPS that’s connected to the whole setup. It works really well, I can recommend it.

iknewitwhenisawit@fedinsfw.app on 08 Apr 20:14 next collapse

Okay I’ll bite.

<img alt="" src="https://media.fedinsfw.app/file/fedinsfw/posts/Rp/ft/RpftU6HbzopjrGv.jpg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:21 next collapse

Dang so very jealous. When I finally get a job i’m so building a little datacenter in my walk-in closet :D

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:36 next collapse

Re: the cabling up top there, there’s some Reddit subreddit devoted solely to people showing off their spiffy cable-routing.

searches

Might be:

old.reddit.com/r/CableManagement/top/?sort=top&t=…

Though that looks like in-PC-case cabling. I thought that it dealt more with network cables.

searches more

Ah. I think this:

old.reddit.com/r/cableporn/top/?sort=top&t=all

It looks like we do have a !cableporn@lemmy.world, but basically nobody is posting.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:07 next collapse

hell yeah.

Greenbeard@lemmy.zip on 09 Apr 01:18 collapse

Oh man, your server has its own closet!

linuxguy@piefed.ca on 08 Apr 20:19 next collapse

<img alt="PbZGpWD7AVUk3ya.png" src="https://media.piefed.ca/posts/Pb/ZG/PbZGpWD7AVUk3ya.png">

More specs / details available upon request.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:40 next collapse

This looks solid!

talkingpumpkin@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 21:32 collapse

(OT) what did you use to annotate the picture?

CrackedLinuxISO@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 20:19 next collapse

Did someone ask for jank, dust, and cables?

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/10cbd072-65bc-4e2b-a1f4-3370703c3eb4.webp">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:23 next collapse

Hey, shock-absorbing floor, stable structure to put the servers on, and a UPS. I bet that’s much better than the vast majority of us (1st thing I buy when I get a job is a UPS).

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:08 next collapse

This looks like an after-work special. Nice setup. That APC is awesome. I need to get a new one.

AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 03:31 collapse

I have that ups! apc br1500g?

Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Apr 20:30 next collapse

I’m too lazy to take pictures, but I have a synology sitting in an Ikea Kalix and an older laptop mounted to the other side of the wall (that the kalix is against), which is a bathroom in my garage.

We had contractors working last summer and let them use the garage bathroom. After the 3rd day I overheard a few of them developing conspiracy theories for why we have a closed laptop mounted to the wall and with fans that would occasionally cycle up.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:39 collapse

Haha i have a raspberrypizero screwed to a wall in the garage that turns my regular doorbell into a smart doorbell through a relay I plugged into the GPIO, plugged into a numpad to arm/disarm cameras, and into a little camera that takes a picture when a wrong code is entered, ran by a little python script I wrote. I’ve heard very similar comments lol.

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 20:40 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/461a367e-eb00-44bb-80cd-114c4dc3fb29.jpeg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:42 next collapse

So clean, I’m jealous

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:08 next collapse

I remember looking at Sysracks racks a while back when I was trying to find sound-absorbent enclosed racks (which they do make, though I didn’t get one; wasn’t willing to pay for it, as they come at a very large premium). They were one of the very few companies making them. I don’t think that those particular ones are the sound-absorbent models, but their name stuck in my head.

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:20 collapse

I got this because it’s almost fully enclosed. Most of the noise comes from an open rear door which this doesn’t have, and an open front door which this sort of has. It’s not very loud when the hvac is set to a reasonable level, even though it’s pulling air through 4 fans on the top.

I have additional sound deadening material if I need to apply it but I’m not there yet.

I’m eyeing 3-5 more 1U servers though so maybe I’ll need to do it.

tal@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 00:29 collapse

I have additional sound deadening material if I need to apply it but I’m not there yet.

That’s probably a pretty good idea in terms of cost. I checked earlier when I made the comment to see what the price difference these days was, and IIRC a non-isolated 18U is ~$800 and an isolated 18U is ~$1800. They aren’t putting anything like $1k of sound-absorbing material into the rack.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:10 next collapse

Oi thats too clean for this thread. Get out of here! /s Nice setup.

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:17 collapse

Business in front…

thumdinger@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 21:46 next collapse

Is this the ā€œbeforeā€ shot? There’s 190 spare ports. I’m all for leaving room to expand, but that’s a lot

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:17 collapse

Unpowered free 48 port switches are cheaper than block off plates.

thumdinger@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 01:34 collapse

Can’t argue with that!

a1studmuffin@aussie.zone on 08 Apr 23:19 next collapse

How can you hear the DJ tunes over the server fans?

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:16 collapse

Can’t hear either over my tinnitus

osanna@lemmy.vg on 09 Apr 00:38 collapse

Same. Thirty years later and I still have it D:

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:58 collapse

Man, GTFO with that hot mess… I’m jealous really. I’m getting a chub just thinking about it.

linkinkampf19@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 20:44 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/7cfb6504-6bfc-4c9b-a6b3-d052868c0d65.jpeg">

Nothing fancy myself as well. Not unemployed but I don’t necessarily wanna spend a lot on something I’m really just cutting my teeth with so far.

The central hub is up top, a Bosgame P4 Mini with 16GB DDR4, 512GB NVMe and a decent last-last gen Ryzen 7. It’s enough to run Jellyfin, HA, and PiHole all through Proxmox. Been rock solid outside of a planned power outage Peco was doing (and actually did it this time!)

I also have Jellyfin connected to an 8TB RAID1 NAS that resides upstairs in our shared space, and HA connected to the basement tech, mostly lighting and the TV and PC.

Bonus battlestation pic (not really lol)

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/aa8f0217-8415-4c8e-ad90-6a6caa85f4fd.jpeg">

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:07 next collapse

nice

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:37 next collapse

Hey this looks how my setup would look like if I had the energy to clean :) lemmy.today/post/39171225

linkinkampf19@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 11:45 collapse

I spent too much time trying to get a configuration in which I could fit both the MiniPC and Router/Modem in the cabinet. This fixture came with the house, so I’m not complaining. I think I should swap out the surge protector (not even sure if it is one lol) for something more streamlined. And as for the mounted switch? That’s $2 velcro strips at Walmart :P

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:56 collapse

booooo! /s looks awesome bro. It’s too clean tho.

linkinkampf19@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 11:43 collapse

Yeah I think I have a before picture on here somewhere. It was less messy, but I’m not quite ready for a rackmount or other system. I’m not even sure I need to jump to that level lol. Unless you’re talking about the 2nd pic, oh it can get messy. I cleaned up a bit so it wasn’t too gnarly. Shoulda changed my background too, I usually go for greenery or abstracts.

meldrik@lemmy.wtf on 08 Apr 20:46 next collapse

I was too lazy to put on clothes and go out to my shack. This picture is a bit old. It’s missing a lot of mess and my PeerTube server. <img alt="" src="https://lemmy.wtf/pictrs/image/99763e45-2ed6-4896-9caa-2e4ae9d573f4.png">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 20:51 next collapse

Is the UPS between quotes just a fancy power hub? I mean that would work, that’s smart.

meldrik@lemmy.wtf on 08 Apr 21:01 collapse

Yea, it’s a power station with built-in UPS. iallpowers.eu/…/allpowers-r600-portable-power-sta…

The white box at the wall is also a battery from my solar setup, with an ATS. So kinda double UPS 🤭

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:10 next collapse

I want one! Ive been thinking of setting up one with solar since my area gets next to no rain and hot as hell. Might as well use that to my advantage!

tal@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:45 collapse

I’m still not using one. The problem is that you’ve got two classes of devices that haven’t quite converged to what I want.

UPS

Traditionally, the purpose of UPSes isn’t to keep systems running (other than through very short outages). It’s to do one of the following:

  • Provide a small amount of buffer until a backup power system, like a generator, has time to come online.

  • Give the systems time to shut down cleanly. If the user is right there, they have time to save their work. This was particularly an issue before journaled filesystems became the norm, since an unclean shutdown in the era when Windows was using FAT, Linux was using ext2, and MacOS was using HFS had at least the possibility to corrupt your filesystem. They have the ability to report their charge level to an attached computer so that it knows when the battery level is critical and then software on it can start it shutting down. On Linux, the most-common software package to do this is Network UPS Tools, or NUT.

These things don’t need a lot of capacity. They rarely get drained, so they usually use lead-acid batteries, which are heavy and don’t have many full charge-discharge cycles in them (but are pretty happy staying fully charged all the time). You can still get these. The lead-acid batteries are replaceable, though, so an old UPS can keep going for a very long time.

Powerstation

These are designed to keep attached devices running for a longer period of time. Unfortunately, they have a couple of important limitations for powering computer systems.

  • They do not normally have the ability to report their charge level. Irritatingly, they do nearly always have a voltmeter rigged up to some software to map voltage to charge remaining to drive a ā€˜charge remaining’ display on the device, and there are USB HID device classes for reporting charge levels to a host OS, but for some reason, powerstation manufacturers don’t seem to have an interest in making a powerstation that has the latter functionality. NUT does have a USB HID backend, which means that it can monitor and shut down a system if they’d expose it. I’d really prefer the ability to treat one of these as a laptop-style battery, as Linux (as well as other OSes) have the ability to hibernate on low battery. On Linux, these show up as /sys/class/power_supply/BAT*, and there’s lots of software to display charge information and act based on low levels…but AFAICT from looking around the kernel, there is no way to get the kernel to deal with a USB HID device reporting remaining charge like this as a BAT device.

  • Computer power supplies can only smooth out so much of an interruption in their power. Computers rely on something on the order of a 10 millisecond transfer time after AC goes out until the UPS needs to be running full-tilt. searches ATX PSUs apparently are only required to operate for 16 milliseconds without power. Other hardware attached may or may not actually deal well with interruptions, but obviously the shorter the transfer time, the better. It looks like line-interactive UPSes tend to do something like 3-6 milliseconds. The problem is that a lot of powerstations have a transfer time in excess of this.

There are some LFP UPSes now, but these have their own disadvantages. They tend to be fairly pricey, and the batteries are often not replaceable, which means that unlike the old lead-acid UPSes, when the battery dies (which will take longer than with a lead-acid battery), the whole device is also going to the landfill.

And lastly, you have the problem that while lead-acid batteries are pretty mature and prices are pretty stable, LFP battery prices are coming down (and sodium-ion might start competing with them for fixed batteries). If batteries are cheaper in the future, waiting means a better deal.

I don’t currently run a UPS on my systems (though I have in the past). I kind of decided that if I’m going to run a UPS, I’m probably going to just bite the bullet and use the combination of a traditional lead-acid UPS and an LFP powerstation, with the UPS plugged into the powerstation. In that configuration, the powerstation provides provides the longer-running power, and the UPS deals with short transfer time and warning computer systems that power is about to go out. This isn’t perfect, because (a) your computing devices can’t see the remaining charge on the powerstation in an outage (b) at some point, one still has to toss the LFP powerstation, and (c) there’s a little extra hardware involved. However, it also has a number of benefits:

  • Lead-aci

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:34 collapse

Lol puts ā€œUPSā€ in brackets to suggest something janky, reveals it’s a battery power + solar power backup. Kudos :)

merde@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 21:06 next collapse

so, that’s where lemmy.wtf lives

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 09 Apr 00:25 collapse

Wtf?

tal@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 00:34 collapse
mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:08 next collapse

Oh neat! is that where peertube.wtf is also hosted?

meldrik@lemmy.wtf on 08 Apr 22:11 collapse

That’s the server currently missing from the picture. Right now it’s a mess, because I’m doing a re-setup of everything. But getting my hands on hard drives have been difficult and I actually still need a CPU and motherboard.

mesamunefire@piefed.social on 08 Apr 22:35 collapse

I feel you. HD space (and everything else) is sooo expensive. I have an old spinning drive for my peertube instance just cause is easy to source.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:31 next collapse

Solid cable management šŸ¤ŒšŸ»

greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo on 09 Apr 13:14 collapse

It is strange seeing the physical manifestation of a web endpoint, to me, in 2026, after decades of cloudslop.

Its just a computer! on a shelf! you can go hold it!

Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyz on 08 Apr 20:50 next collapse

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
AP WiFi Access Point
DNS Domain Name Service/System
HA Home Assistant automation software
~ High Availability
IoT Internet of Things for device controllers
NAS Network-Attached Storage
NUC Next Unit of Computing brand of Intel small computers
NVMe Non-Volatile Memory Express interface for mass storage
PSU Power Supply Unit
PiHole Network-wide ad-blocker (DNS sinkhole)
PoE Power over Ethernet
RPi Raspberry Pi brand of SBC
SBC Single-Board Computer
SSD Solid State Drive mass storage
VPN Virtual Private Network
VPS Virtual Private Server (opposed to shared hosting)

[Thread #223 for this comm, first seen 8th Apr 2026, 20:50] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

NotEasyBeingGreen@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 17:12 collapse

DNS is never the Domain Name Service.

The very first sentence of RFC 1034, the document that is the basis of DNS, identifies it as the Domain Name System.

crunchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 21:07 next collapse

Dust and jank, you say?

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/1530cfe9-930d-4665-ba0b-1682bfb19c38.webp">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 22:10 collapse

Takes no space anybody cares about so it works in my book

crunchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 23:22 collapse

My wife did say she didn’t like seeing all the stuff just out like that. I reminded her it was a small compromise compared to spending over $100/mo on streaming services.

NotEasyBeingGreen@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 17:08 collapse

Also, buying or building something to cover the less is cheap, and possibly fun, mini-project. As long as you allow a bit of airflow…

comrademiao@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:17 next collapse

Is that usb mounted??

confusedpuppy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 21:18 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/42ec1446-754a-480e-acdb-086d9a66ad5b.webp">

My little Raspberry Pi 5 with an old 1tb Hard drive connected to a WiFi extender. It ain’t much but I like it.

I used to work in automation as an electrician so I’m all about those coils and curves.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 21:36 next collapse

Hey it works doesn’t it :)

Cyber@feddit.uk on 08 Apr 22:25 next collapse

Coils & curves?

From my viewpoint it looks like balance and counter balance šŸ™‚

Are those all balanced, pivoting around a power outlet?

confusedpuppy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 23:40 collapse

It’s actually a plug in power outlet that plugs into a dual outlet box. It’s a snug fit so it’s able to hold all the extra weight surprisingly well.

It’s hard to see but I made a hook with the cable wrap holding the Pi5 and it hooks onto the cable wrap that goes the top of the quad outlet. That top cable wrap won’t slide down because I have two USB cables holding it in position. I designed it so I can easily detach it in case I need to do anything with the Pi5 or it’s hard drive.

I tried really hard to balance the Pi5 but the grey ethernet cable has too much weight so that’s the best I could do. I think I did a pretty good job all things considered :)

LemmyFeed@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 00:37 collapse

Gorgeous šŸ˜

eodur@piefed.social on 08 Apr 21:56 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/ZA/Ya/ZAYacYs6BHnNCQh.jpg"> Not as clean as I would like, but way better than it started!

5 node Kubernetes cluster and a NAS. Runs about 250 pods.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 22:09 next collapse

It’s cleaner than 50% of what I’ve seen at work.

iamthetot@piefed.ca on 09 Apr 04:02 next collapse

Question… I often see rack mounted servers with those small Ethernet patch cables running between two adjacent devices, like you have there. I’ve always assumed one of the devices is a switch, but it’s never made sense to me why there’s so many connections between those two.

What are those devices, and why so many connections between them? Like, as far as I can tell, in one instance you have a cable running from the top device to a small switch resting on top, which then runs from the switch to the lower device… Despite all of the other Ethernet running directly from the top to the bottom. What is going on here??

[deleted] on 09 Apr 05:30 next collapse
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eodur@piefed.social on 09 Apr 10:48 next collapse

Yeah, one is a switch. The patch panel basically is just for organization. All the equipment in the rack and all the house runs all plug into the back of the patch panel and then the short cables allow you to more easily plug them into the switch. Its definitely not necessary, but it helps maintain the space.

And that one random device on top is the router. Maybe one day I’ll upgrade to a better one, but this one handles everything great. Its just too small to be worth mounting. Kinda like the Pi sitting on the UPS.

assa123@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 13:54 collapse

I also didn’t know, thanks to eodur’s answer I could find this video m.youtube.com/watch?v=lg2oGE02DJE

NotEasyBeingGreen@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 17:05 collapse

What do you use for your Kubernetes build?

Also, do you have an S3 compatible storage? If not, what do you use for persistence?

shadshack@feddit.online on 08 Apr 22:07 next collapse

The server is the black box on top of the rack. In the rack it’s networking and UPSs for both the server and my computer on the desk.

<img alt="" src="https://piefed-media.feddit.online/posts/A6/RL/A6RLNiEVX9x2qV3.jpg"> <img alt="" src="https://piefed-media.feddit.online/posts/Eg/d1/Egd1mC8S1JvIxr5.jpg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 22:09 next collapse

This is neat, doesn’t take too much place so fits in a classic house situation.

early_riser@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 22:17 collapse

I think we have the same UPS

Die4Ever@retrolemmy.com on 08 Apr 22:16 next collapse

it’s a mini pc, standing sideways, with a USB to ethernet adapter and USB HDD

<img alt="" src="https://retrolemmy.com/pictrs/image/c3172837-6c5a-481a-b63a-416d5571829d.png">

pech@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 22:50 next collapse

My janky homelab lol. Mostly ebay secondhand Enterprise stuff and a Chinese SXM2 mezzanine board to run dual NVLinked 16gb V100s. I also have a TrueNAS Scale mini itx server running upstairs with my ā€œarrā€ stack and some other useful tools.

<img alt="2076" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/97e5a204-3f63-4c54-bfba-49511f965984.jpeg">

<img alt="2392" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ad228874-43a9-4918-8dc5-af4eaee14706.jpeg">

Grass@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 23:26 next collapse

I’ve wanted to make frames like that but those aluminum extrusions are so expensive here. I’m tempted to just get stainless square tube and weld it. The welder would appreciate getting dusted off and receiving the attention.

pech@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:33 collapse

I thankfully snagged this one pretty cheap off eBay. It’s actually an 8-gpu mining rig frame that conveniently fit my CEB motherboard lol

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 23:59 next collapse

Now that looks like a lab :)

pech@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 00:33 collapse

Thank you 🄹 It’s been quite the experience lol

LemmyFeed@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 00:42 next collapse

I think your servers are missing some walls.

I jest.

Grass@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 01:23 next collapse

You can bolt whatever you want on those. My friend made his gaming rig like that and the sides are cardboard from his grandparent’s adult diaper boxes.

pech@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 14:34 collapse

ā€œthe front fell off?!ā€

They’ve been temporarily removed for about a year now lol

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 02:49 collapse

OK you’ll be able to tell I haven’t bought a graphics card in a while, so…wtf kind of graphics card is that? It’s manly for sure…almost phallic in nature. What do you do with it besides ā€˜Any ting you wan’.

AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 03:28 next collapse

looks like an older nvidia workstation card. potentially a tesla k80 of the top of my head? the annoying thing with those cards is that they’re meant to be passively cooled in a temperature controlled environment, so looks like they added a fan to help keep it cool. those cards get mad hot otherwise.

pech@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 14:15 collapse

I’m actually quite happy with it. It’s a 24gb p40 which runs some of the older LLMs quite well. Repasting with liquid metal helped thermals a ton too

pech@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 14:14 collapse

It’s a Tesla P40 24gb I got off eBay a while ago. Just like AllHailTheSheep suggested, it’s a server GPU meant for compute workflows so it relies on forced air from a server rack. I repasted the die with liquid metal and added a 3d printed duct to attach the radial blower to. The thing never cracks 60c under inference which is nice. Idles around 24c

(Edit: I’m mostly using it for LLMs, but it supposedly makes a good CAD card, so I might give that a shot too)

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 14:48 collapse

Nice!! I love seeing ā€˜field expedient modifications.’ I have an old CoolerMaster Cosmos case. The thing is a monster. I didn’t like the way the fan cooling was operating so I took two 4"/300 cfm fans and mounted them to blow over the two processors of my mobo. Then I printed a scoop for the case and used that as the intake. Works well, better than the OEM configuration and keeps my processors running at a cool 98 deg +/-.

Grass@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 23:02 next collapse

<img alt="1000028194" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/1c3e9fb2-f05f-4749-9401-b63061c62e01.jpeg">
Including sbcs there are 8 computers in there. There are 5 more laptops and another retired desktop joining. There are plans to get solar and batteries so I’m checking how much power I can actually draw.

edit: just found the weird netbook with usb3 ethernet that I used to run homeassistant bare metal back in the day. one more for the computer pile.

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 08 Apr 23:13 next collapse

Is that an EliteDesk 800 G3, G4, or G5?

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 00:11 collapse

800G3 it is. Not that it matters much, it’s more than a few users on a semi busy homelab need.

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 09 Apr 00:38 collapse

I only ask because I work in a HP environment and run off a G3 sff myself.

westingham@sh.itjust.works on 08 Apr 23:21 next collapse

What are the two circular grey devices on top of the five port switch?

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 00:09 collapse

It’s one device that’s a Google WIFI mesh AP

retiredIdentity@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Apr 23:30 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/c255fba3-4964-4278-b150-a540f7d482ac.webp">

Only two of the minis are in use. The other two i am just messing with different things. Still have three more not in use and unsure what I am going to do with them. Two extreme AP not being used and probably never will.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:23 next collapse

The outdated books are a nice touch 🤌 :)

Oh also since you literally have more hp elite desks than you can use, please send me one :)

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 16:33 next collapse

What kinda monitor arm is that? I have one for a lil monitor I have but it uses a clamp on the top and bottom of the screen instead of screwing in. I’m looking for one that doesn’t stress the screen with so much pressure!

retiredIdentity@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 18:05 collapse

I honestly don’t remember but I got it at Walmart for like $20 for a double monitor. The monitor is have is 27" and never had any issues with it.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 18:29 collapse

Thank you! I’ll do some digging. The dang thing has mounting holes but they’re NOT VESA. But 40USD for an IPS 1080p panel that can be powered AND video’d through one USB-C cable I can’t complain about!

Dzheyk@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 18:42 collapse

3 more not in use you say? Willing to part with any of your unused tech?

[deleted] on 08 Apr 23:39 next collapse
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plateee@piefed.social on 08 Apr 23:40 next collapse

A little late to the party, but here’s mine.<img alt="" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/L7/9h/L79hMuGayatrM0g.jpeg">

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 23:54 next collapse

What are the specs on that pepsi box? How’s it handle the load???

plateee@piefed.social on 09 Apr 00:01 collapse

It’s only the mini Pepsi cans iirc, so they aren’t as load bearing as I’d like. God willing, I’ll upgrade to fanta boxes one day.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 08 Apr 23:58 next collapse

Love it.

LemmyFeed@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 00:27 collapse

Oh yeah, now that’s a HOMElab

[deleted] on 09 Apr 00:23 next collapse
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harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 09 Apr 00:40 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/d31f3f54-8ab5-4fea-b890-08bd444f3d8e.jpeg">

Also late, but here is mine.

From the bottom up:

  • An old pc I built forever ago for live streaming when I used to run my youtube channel. It an i7 something or other with 32gb ram and a 32 tb raid (4x8).
  • m1 Mac mini
  • HP elitedesk 800 G3 mini
  • two HP elitedesk 800 G3 sff
  • Deku
  • dumb network switch
  • rpi 4 8gb

And here’s what’s running:

  • Bottom pc is the nas
  • Mac running jellyfin
  • the hps running:
    • navidrome
    • aonsuku (pretty navidrome frontend)
    • audiobookshelf
    • qbittorrent
    • gluetun
    • vikunja
    • radicale
    • Joplin
    • matrix
    • local backup for critical data
    • some other things I’m forgetting
  • The rpi is my wireguard tunnel to ssh in on the rare occasion I need remote ssh access.
northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:21 next collapse

That’s actually pretty neat!

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 16:35 collapse

Neat, very nice! I just got some new machines, I need to learn how to get one of my VPNs set up with gluetun and qbittorrent so I can stop doing on my windows machine and leave it going all the time…

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 09 Apr 18:37 collapse

Thanks!!

I found it to be pretty easy to get gluetun & qbittorrent set up. I’m running it all in docker, be happy to share my compose files if you’d like.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 18:40 collapse

That would be very helpful for me, thank you so much! I am VERY new to docker, but managed to get something difficult up and running with it (a modded game server) with a lotttt of trial and error. I imagine it’ll be a lot easier to get something much less specific going!

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 09 Apr 18:43 collapse

You’re welcome! I’m out rn, I’ll share the files when I get home.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 18:56 collapse

No worries, no rush! It’s gonna be a weekend project, I think. I’ve got a cluster of separate RPis all doing different stuff, an unused Pi 5 8GB, and some new Lenovos… I think I can condense everything to one machine hahaha.

Right now I’m running Pi-Hole on a headless Pi and OMV on a second headless Pi, the OMV is just sharing a couple HDDs. If I wanted everything on one lil Lenovo through Docker, would you have any advice for a distro? Should I just pop Mint on it and set it all up that way?

(Very new and learning, currently have a Pop! desktop that’s been a champion for game stuff while I try to find a new SSD to switch my main game desktops to Linux)

LemmyFeed@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 01:06 next collapse

This is a great thread. I had to join too!

I have my ā€œnetwork closetā€ which is like a hole in the wall where my ISP comes in: <img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/14a56db8-329c-4868-a84e-5c2effb9dc99.webp">

And then my ā€œserver roomā€ which is literally a closet. There’s a big ass old enterprise server and a 3 node laptop cluster: <img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/1433a12e-6159-41b3-997a-8e9651955c3a.webp">

Whitebrow@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 03:05 next collapse

Using the closet rod for that extra cable management

Perfection.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:21 collapse

Eh, you know at work there’s one closet like that per floor :)

Greenbeard@lemmy.zip on 09 Apr 01:15 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.zip/pictrs/image/a81b8406-cccc-48ac-807f-e591dc273035.avif">

[deleted] on 09 Apr 05:06 next collapse
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northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:07 collapse

HAHA that works :)

AndyMFK@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 01:58 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/d6840bbb-b39c-492c-a988-4a4864abaa91.webp">

Kinda in a lull with homelabbing ATM, but here I’ve got my router in a custom 3d printed mini rack with 3d printed patch panel, and a couple of old NUCs. Only thing I really use day-to-day is a NUC connected to an amp so I can use the amp as a Spotify connect client

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:17 collapse

Oh now that is clean. Works really well with the overall display of vinyls.

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 09 Apr 02:03 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://ani.social/pictrs/image/c3f0e177-9fb7-4ab9-883c-54bc34711cf8.webp">

Here is my combination lab and workbench. I have been busy trying to buy/sell/trade computers that I have become significantly behind on cleaning as I go. I also just got the network rack:

<img alt="" src="https://ani.social/pictrs/image/f87a3d01-0da7-48a7-a9db-0e6d92047b14.webp">

I haven’t had time between work, hustling, and home maintenance to finish getting the cabling managed or the NAS:

<img alt="" src="https://ani.social/pictrs/image/aa4c4388-a096-4d53-9275-2b212aeb0fb5.webp">

The goal is to get the NAS in the rack, UPS to the items in the rack, the 3D printer under the bench, and the monitors on the wall and off the bench. Then I’ll start in on plastic organizers for the bits and parts that clutter my bench.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:08 collapse

Oooh I like :D Kernel panic?!! BAM! BAM! BAM! in the punching bag!

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 09 Apr 16:03 collapse

Stupid BAM Broadcom BAM Legacy BAM Wireless BAM Drivers BAM

owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca on 09 Apr 02:53 next collapse

Just cleaned mine up a bit recently!

<img alt="simple home lab setup" src="https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/2ed0c4df-68ad-4934-bed1-3a656916c21c.jpeg">

PC on the left, RPi for simple stuff and an Odroid HC4 as my media and backup server.

Not pictured: another RPi dedicated to HomeAssistant, a magic mirror, and networking stuff.

Also not pictured: my workbench tools on the upper shelves, which have not been tidied recently.

wltr@discuss.tchncs.de on 09 Apr 04:29 next collapse

It looks much better than I have. My current infrastructure is built upon a set of mostly obsolete devices: Intel Atom 230 and 330 used processors. Also, SBCs: a few Raspberry Pi 2Bs, and a few Orange Pi Zeros (the very first gen, 32-bit). They are spread among different locations (office, relatives, home), and if I’d get a side gig job with the next company, I may deploy a couple of used computers for them too. So there’s not much to picture, but it looks much worse than this.

Also, is it a Surface on the left? I almost sure it is! I’ve bought 3RT (obsolete slow model) two weeks ago. It’s piece of shit hardware, but the concept of a Linux tablet / laptop for cheap (I buy used) is beautiful, so I’m considering getting one more modern model at some later point. I guess when my battery would be in a poor condition. It’s a great device for sshing, at the very least.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:16 collapse

That’s the spirit, re-using ā€œobsoleteā€ stuff that is so not obsolete. And yes, good eye, it’s a Surface Pro 7 on Ubuntu on the left ;)

elettrona@poliversity.it on 09 Apr 05:43 next collapse

@northernlights @selfhosted "re-using obsolete hardware that's not obsolete" - I'm wondering how I could use my old (still working) macbook air, and my old Time Capsule. Instead of experimenting home lab with a new mini-pc, I was wondering if those 2 machines can be used somehow.
To be precise: I'm totally blind so I'd need at least something with audio or Braille working at boot, or right after. Such as BRLTTY running to set everything up and having then the machine being usable via ssh.

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:56 next collapse

As for Linux on Apple computers of that time, if i’m not mistaken, they’re i386? So probably someone hacked that together. As to needing a system that works for blind people, I have no experience in that area, but if the tools you need are available on Linux, then they are.

wltr@discuss.tchncs.de on 09 Apr 10:14 collapse

Hey, I have no experience with the accessibility side of this, so I cannot tell. At least now. If I’d explore the topic, I might recommend something at some later point.

I have a MacBook Air 11ā€ from 2010, with a broken screen. I plan to utilise it as a server, but it’s not really good in that department. I do that purely because of the experiment, plus I have it lying around anyway, so why not. If you want, I can link a blog post about the laptop, when I’d write it. (May not be very soon, say, weeks. If no months. No ETA. I played with it for a while and put it off for later.)

The time capsule, is it a router? I have an AirPort Extreme router at home, I still use it. It’s a decent router, if you don’t need anything too special. I have no idea how good that is accessibility wise. I believe Apple products are the best at it, so I’d rather recommend macOS, I have no idea how bad that is with Linux. I remember the relatively recent series of posts about it, I bet you know them better.

wltr@discuss.tchncs.de on 09 Apr 10:17 collapse

Hey, how’s your Surface with Linux? I wonder whether there is any model that can sleep properly without issues. So that you can have it lying around and pick it up when needed. Mine cannot sleep properly. So I turn it off and on when needed. Not super useful, but tolerable for a secondary device you can have in your backpack, not worrying much about it. (Coz it’s cheap on a second hand market, specifically my very model.)

SqueakySpider@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 04:36 next collapse

I like your screenshot, what distro and DE is that?

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:12 collapse

Arch, not a DE, just hyprland.

TheOldRepublic@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 04:46 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/53cd580f-c8ae-4c58-84c2-b1aad52bd23c.jpeg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:04 collapse

The white leds are a nice touch :p (i’m totally not jelly)

tophneal@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 04:59 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/4fa46048-dba0-4172-9dc9-a42e07870eea.jpeg">

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 05:04 collapse

Not too noisy? I’m curious.

tophneal@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 05:09 collapse

Not at all! I upgraded the heavy lifters case fans to all noctuas, there’s still fan noise but it’s very easily drowned out. Actually the most noise came from my HAL model. Partly sunny days would trigger its sensor and it’d randomly start spewing lines.

Cocodapuf@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 06:04 next collapse

I read ā€œAlright let’s see pictures of your super nice rackā€

And then I clicked before bothering to read the rest of the sentence.

Was not disappointed though.

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 09 Apr 07:10 next collapse

Built a year ago, didn’t change anything but drives since. PCengine APU OpnSense, two Proxmox cluster hosts, one mini PC NAS with JBOD. All DIY.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.nocturnal.garden/pictrs/image/3bff4bbc-e904-448d-84b0-8c2b027bcbbc.jpeg">

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.nocturnal.garden/pictrs/image/4c9d0f6d-531b-4143-950d-b41c9ff805b6.jpeg">

poVoq@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 11:22 next collapse

Way too professional looking for this thread.

Also, you got a link to that sticker? Maybe I’ll add that as an ironic reminder to my ā€œKabelsalatā€ šŸ˜…

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 09 Apr 11:53 collapse

I think I missed the irony šŸ™ˆ

It’s from Kaoskvlt

Alfredolin@sopuli.xyz on 09 Apr 16:39 collapse

I’ve seen that one before!

tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden on 09 Apr 18:30 collapse

Yeah I posted it when I built it :)

jimmy90@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 07:38 next collapse

mine is 3 old laptops and a switch in a pile

honestly the cable management is ok … ish

HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 10:26 next collapse

Such professional. Much clean.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2174219a-75a4-44b3-b881-38511f3bea5f.jpeg">

Not pictured: my raspberry running adguard. It’s tucked behind a TV, because it also runs Kodi.

Also not pictured, my Sophos SG-135 rev 2 running OPNsense. It’s in the box where my Starlink equipment is, on the other side of this room.

poVoq@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 11:19 collapse

That 95% unused switch 😱

Such electricity waste. Much unclean.

HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 11:51 collapse

The used 48 port was cheaper than the used 24 port.

You call it waste, I call it reuse.

poVoq@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 12:01 collapse

But you seem to only need a 8 port at most 🤯

HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 12:20 collapse

It is a MANAGED switch, my guy. A simple 8 port switch would not work here.

I have multiple VLANs running.

Also, one of those connections is a 10gbe DAC to the big machine which is my NAS and main server.

Not too many 8 port managed switches out there with an sfp+ 10gbe port for 50 bucks, which is what I paid for that Brocade switch in my picture.

But hey, if you feel like buying one for me, I’ll happily take it, and start using it instead.

poVoq@slrpnk.net on 09 Apr 12:32 collapse

Not too many 8 port managed switches out there with an sfp+ 10gbe port for 50 bucks

Easy to get these days actually, with 10gbit sfp+ and 8x 2.5gbit, managed switches. About $60.

But my actual argument was that your 48 port switch eats electricity like crazy. That aint a cheap switch at all.

HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 12:43 collapse

The only brand new, 10gbe managed switches that I can find for less than 60 bucks are off-brand chinese junk. No thank you.

As far as electricity cost goes? After doing that math, it might cost me a dollar fifty a year to use. That machine sitting on the bottom is a much bigger chunk than the switch itself, as it has 6 7200rpm SAS drives in it. Plus it’s a Xeon E3 CPU.

Those drives, each, use as much electricity as that switch does, even before considering the CPU itself.

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 10:26 next collapse

What is the browser window showing?

northernlights@lemmy.today on 09 Apr 15:26 collapse

heimdall

[deleted] on 09 Apr 11:05 next collapse
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zebidiah@lemmy.ca on 09 Apr 11:13 next collapse

BEHOLD! THE MOTHERBOARD!

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/a4d26e10-353c-4242-9ed3-b4dc1fd78a92.jpeg">

linuxguy@piefed.ca on 09 Apr 15:32 next collapse

This has got grit! I love it.

Alfredolin@sopuli.xyz on 09 Apr 16:35 next collapse

Wow!

When I’m rich I will also get a NAS/multiple drive enclosure (and fill it, hence the ā€œrichā€ condition).

crank0271@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 17:41 collapse

ā€œBeware of the leopard.ā€

anon_8675309@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 11:35 next collapse

I’m still rocking my ts430. Can’t take a pic right now but trust me bro.

brewery@feddit.uk on 09 Apr 12:05 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://feddit.uk/pictrs/image/5578074b-a1c4-4c05-b41c-e3f1ede71744.webp">

<img alt="" src="https://feddit.uk/pictrs/image/01917ddc-d1f5-483e-8bae-446458ceea13.webp">

Did some one ask for dust cos I got plenty! Also have one desktop with 30TB of memory, separate small form for HA and Pihole, networking equipment, cooling fans and a UPS all packed into one (un)tidy cupboard. The door doesn’t quite close but enough to hide it from my partner!

Senal@programming.dev on 09 Apr 12:40 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/c6ae43e4-21c8-411c-a13f-9aa0cafcd40c.png">

a bunch of ebay specials with more ebay parts scavenged over time + some 3d printing.

The centre tower has a miniitx mb and PSU behind those panels to run the NAS, and the drive bays are in the bottom.

The right is a failover cluster that isn’t finished yet.

linuxguy@piefed.ca on 09 Apr 15:40 next collapse

That’s a very tiny, dense lab!

Senal@programming.dev on 09 Apr 18:03 collapse

i’m not utilising it nearly as much as i should which is why i haven’t gotten around to the failover cluster yet.

linuxguy@piefed.ca on 09 Apr 18:15 collapse

Same here wrt utilization. I’ve excess capacity and can’t seem to find anything I want to use it on.

Ajen@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 18:40 collapse

Wow, that looks really good! I like the labels on each server! Are the 3d printed parts custom or did you find them online?

Senal@programming.dev on 09 Apr 19:40 collapse

Custom printed.

The front rack grills, keystone panels and thinkcentre mounts are from a website but all the other printed parts are custom.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 09 Apr 14:25 next collapse

Let’s be real here.

Pictures like these could make the news and people would have no idea what this stuff is used for but it looks menacing, news could be label it as wild rogue this or that and the common person would know no different and totally believe it. Feels like swatter bait for the posters. Definitely on a list atleast. Nice setups. Keep it jank. Keep it secure!

rmuk@feddit.uk on 09 Apr 14:33 next collapse

Makes mine look boring.

<img alt="" src="https://feddit.uk/pictrs/image/d7894daa-a450-47e3-9789-077166f25d6f.webp">

eutampieri@feddit.it on 09 Apr 15:20 collapse

Yours looks power hungry though…

rmuk@feddit.uk on 09 Apr 16:47 collapse

I’m on a variable rate electricity tariff and I use Home Assistant and iLO to power things on and off automatically, so most of the time it pulls 30-50W. At peak it pulls north of 1.5KW but that’s really rare.

Adderbox76@lemmy.ca on 09 Apr 14:52 next collapse

Not going to lie, I got excited for the first half of that sentance.

eutampieri@feddit.it on 09 Apr 15:20 next collapse

I would post mine but it’s too messy for now

b_n@sh.itjust.works on 09 Apr 16:23 next collapse

Just a smol bramble.

  • 2x RPI 5
  • 1x RPI 4
  • all is PoE. One head node which has a USB ssd. No SD cards.
  • DH2300, with 2x2TB drives in Raid 1.

All is network booted from the head node. Had to mess around with iscsi mounted root because i’m running k3s, and it needs block devices.

Offsite backup with a Hetzner storage box.

<img alt="" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/3d696cfd-96fd-472f-9466-561ccabdeee7.jpeg">

Scrath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Apr 17:11 next collapse

Two rack rails bolted together with a power strip and a tray holding my server mini PC. My router is bolted on as well to act as a switch for everything while also providing Wifi to my phone and laptop

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/76fa7057-985c-48a2-98a5-67f228ec8425.webp">

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 17:29 next collapse

After seeing some of you guy’s set ups, I don’t feel so bad. LOL

craigers@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 17:45 next collapse

āœ… Rackmounted

āŒ Professional

What front end are using for your apps? Looks nice.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a5a00c02-38c7-4956-98d9-d11b6d69c5e8.jpeg">

binom@lemmy.world on 09 Apr 18:55 collapse

heimdall

they posted further down that it’s heimdall

Alfredolin@sopuli.xyz on 09 Apr 18:03 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://sopuli.xyz/pictrs/image/d2192fa3-7c1f-4c41-8972-071c932e5980.webp"> Here my homelab. I moved not too long ago and I am still lacking some furniture, so it’s on the floor with cables lying wild. Does not look like much but it actually covers almost all my needs. I still need a VPS because of email ports and resident ISP not being compatible…