That’s what I was thinking too. Ijust feel better having another layer between the open web an my server
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That’s what I was thinking too. Ijust feel better having another layer between the open web an my server
True but I’m wanting to run VMs for specific tasks as well (mostly game servers) and I like to virtualize Linux distros I wanna play with as well as keep a running windows VM for the off chance I need windows ever.
Apartment is too small and my partner is too noise sensitive to get away with a rack. So my localLLM and Jellyfin encoder plus my NAS exists like this this summer. Temps have been very good once the panels came off.
Ansible is next on my list of things to learn.
I don’t think I’ll need to dedicate all of my compute space to K8s probably just half for now.
The rats nest is behind it
I need to re do some of the wiring.
I have all 4 power cables braided and zip tied together with the single data cable so its nice to pull out and put back into the entertainment center.
Only problem is I only had four 1 foot Ethernet cables and three 7 foot cables. So I used the 1 footers for the Pis and the 7 footers are bundled up as best I could and neatly hidden.
I’m waiting on some color coordinated .5 foot cables from Cables and Kits and I will swap the switch and patch panel. I want the Pis to have that one cable and that’s it, but I also want all the patch panel ports to work.
This is a 52pi 10 inch rack 8U
I have 4 raspberry Pi4’s 4gb running with POE
Some TP-link gigabit switch with 4/poe ports
3 Thinkcentre Tiny with a ryzen 5 2400GE 32 gigs ddr4 RAM, 512 Sabrent PCIE Gem 4 NVME boot/VM drive, 512 PNY Sata SSDs for databases
I have a bigger server for AI stuff and storage. This is just Tue “production” server for my websites and Git repos
I stole the set up idea from my man Jan Wildeboer
Done. Check parent comment!
Yeah!
So i am running these three computers in a set up that let’s me manage virtual machines on them from a website with Proxmox.
I want to play with a tool that let’s me run Docker Containers. Containers being a way to host services like websites and web apps without having to make a Virtual machine for each app.
This has a lot of advantages but I’m trying to use the High Availability feature when you run these on a cluster of computers.
My problem is that I know I can use the Built In container software in the already clustered Proxmox computers called LXC Linux Containers. However, I want to use a container software called Kubernetes but I would have to build Virtual machines on my servers and then cluster those virtual machines.
Its a little confusing because I have three physical computers clustered together and I’m trying to then build three virtual computers on them and cluster those. Its an odd thing to do and that’s the problem.
Quality answer. Glad my hunch was backed up by your experience. That’s very appreciated.
I hadn’t tried anything with Cloudflared and Kubernetes yet so it would be sick to see it just work.
Yes! They sell a NVME hat that I assume is for the Pi5 (these are 4’s I had laying around). It also moves the HDMI and USBC to the front.
Its the RS-P11 Expansion board. I can only find it bundled with the normal rack mount kit. I got mine off newegg from a reseller I guess so no expansion boards.
Fair point. I was also thinking it would be fun to use CoreOS so I can get one step closer to ArchBTW
I’ve been thinking about swapping my work laptop to Linux too.
The difference is I’m in IT and I know what all things I need to put on my computer to make it compliant with all our policies and all the software I need to do my job.
I’ve been experimenting by running some Linux VMs with all the EDR, patching, and logging software we need. But by the time I’m doing all that, there’s really no point in using Linux except for the CLI which WSL has been great for that.
I have been putting off scheduling my next therapy appointment.
I figured it was just a skill issue on my end that Spotify wasn’t working, but I really should be just buying CDs/digital albums as opposed to paying the Spotify subscription
I’m a week into using GrapheneOS and its been great. It is a little restrictive in that I seem to have to explicitly allow apps to run and apps like my Bank app or Spotify don’t work.
However, most apps are just Web Apps at this point and I’ve noticed very little difference in the use of the app versus the pinned browser version.
I’m also trying to curb a phone addiction so Graphene + Lemmy + Mastodon + Jellyfin is all I’m using on this thing.
I assume google headphones would cease to work if I degoogle the device
I’m using my Pixel Buds. They work just as well. Remember, its just a Bluetooth device just without all the QOL stuff like voice control.
I recommend trying it. Graphene OS install also has instruction ions to revert if you change your mind. And it’s pretty easy. Maybe a touch harder than installing Linux generally, but if your dailying Debian, you’re fine.
General Kenobi
(I can’t help)
Whack. I just set up a Forgejo too.
I am a fan of LLMs and what they can do, and as such have a server specifically for running AI models. However, I’ve been reading “Atlas of AI” by Kate Crawford and you’re right. So much of the data that they’re trained on is inherently harmful or was taken without consent. Even in the more ethical data sets it’s probably not great considering the sheer quantity of data needed to make even a simple LLM.
I still like using it for simple code generation (this is just a hobby to me so Vibe coding isn’t a problem in my scenario) and corporate tone policing. And I tell people non stop that it’s worthless outside of these use cases and maybe as a search engine, but I recommend Wikipedia as a better start almost Everytime.
Putting Coreboot and NordVPN on the same tier is crazy