

But it has to be a magic packet, not just any ole request.
But it has to be a magic packet, not just any ole request.
My self hosted instance works great
The chipset link is 4x4.0 and daisy chained so 8GB per second. My use case is way more casual than you’re looking for.
I think what’s your up against is Intel locking features behind a paywall, like they have with desktop ECC and hyper threading thru the years.
Have you considered AMD? The 70 class boards basically have an extra I/O die as the chipset on the board. I have this board with a 7700x which is way overkill. I put an A380 in the bottom slot for frigate and Plex, but honestly the amd igpu handles Plex just fine. I never tried frigate with the igpu.
https://pg.asrock.com/mb/AMD/X670E%20PG%20Lightning/index.asp#Specification
x16@5.0
x16@4.0
x1@4.0
x1@4.0, full 16 slot
E-key for coral
M-key gen5x4
M-key gen3x4
M-key gen4x2
M-key gen4x4
4 x SATA3
It’s not 5x capable, is my point.
About 10 of those VMs are running a single docker image. It runs great but I know better now.
opnsense
home assistant
neolink
NextCloud
Pihole
Frigate
Omada controller
Photoprism
Wireguard server node
Jellyfin
Transmission-daemon
Audiobookshelf
Plex
Arr stack
Caddy
Librespeed
Invidious
Openspeedtest
OpenMediaVault
VaultWarden
Paperless-ngx
Rustdesk
Proxmox Backup Server
3 or 4 desktop images to mess around with
My 7700x is 5 times that wattage. Granted, it gas 128gb, a380, 4 hdd, 2 SSD, 40gb nic, tpu, and 25 VMs running on it.
The lesson here is that I’ve way over-spec’d my machine.
https://pcpartpicker.com/list/yqX3C8
$650 for the box leaves you $350 for drives and a 10Gb NIC. I’ve been using serverpartdeals refub drives with good results. They’re ~$10/tb.
I think the N100 type CPUs are limited on PCIe lanes. You end up with less nvme, less sata, and usually no slots.
You can find x570 am4 boards for less than $100 now. Two nvme, 8 sata, 2 big slots and 2 small.
But all of that flexibility and expandability is going to cost you in power. My 7700x w/A380, 3 hdd is 125 watts 24/7. $10 a month on my power bill. I think those n100 mini PCs only have a 35w brick and idle at less than 15w.
I’ve got 4 Omada APs and a virtual controller. There was a bug I experienced where a Google home mini could initiate a broadcast storm. TP-Link got me in touch with engineers very quickly and they fixed the bug in less than a week.
Gotta let companies know you’re watching
Do the devices have dual 10g ports each? You can build a triangle out of them.
It might be time to virtualize.
I have an HDHomerun tuner, it’s 2 channels for $120. I paid for plexpass and use that DVR, but the HDHR is platform agnostic.
I didn’t skip it, I installed ddclient.
Cloudflare is the devil!
It really was easy. And it works so well I didn’t have to lean the names of stuff haha
For anyone following along, I meant portainer to manage dockers. Podman is a different container technology it seems.
Proxmox was the answer for me. OpenMediaVault in a VM for NAS, LXC containers for things that need GPU access (Plex and frigate). Hell, I even virtualized my router. One thing I probably should have done was a single docker host and learn podman or something similar. I ended up with 8 or 9 VMs that run 8 or 9 dockers. It works great, but it’s more to manage.
You’ll want 2 network cards/interfaces- one for the VMs and another for the host. Power usage is not great using old gaming parts. Discrete graphics seem to add 40 watts no matter what. A 5600G or Intel with quicksync will get the job done and save you a few bucks a month. I recently moved to a 7700x and transcode performance is great. Expect 100-150 watts 24/7 which costs me $10-15 month. But I can compile ESPHome binaries in a few seconds 🤣
I use Ubiquity at work, and decided on TP-Link Omada at home. I virtualized opnsense and the controller, but if you’re just getting started I think this is the device you’re looking for. Street price is $250.
https://www.tp-link.com/us/business-networking/omada-router-integrated-router/er7212pc/
You’ll then need a modem and access points. I use an S33, and I’m happy with it. As for APs- they are $100 and up depending on features you need. The mesh and roaming work very well. I over-spec’d to the 670s, 610s would have worked. WiFi 7 APs are <$200 if you’re into that.
sftp
All my machines have my keys, nothing to set up, nothing to tear down.