

Borg for files. Proxmox snapshots for the VMs.
Borg for files. Proxmox snapshots for the VMs.
This guy has never been close to flush drowning.
Loved this game way back when. Would love to see it on modern hardware, and of course Linux native.
Open Arena
Plex, channels, mail, calendar, contacts, wiki
I still just use :X with vim on a server I can ssh to.
Rack mount server class machines at home generally aren’t great options. Definitely stick with tower/mini designs.
That said, for a home server a general workstation may be best. I personally have a System 76 Thelio. I added a second drive and installed proxmox with a ZFS mirrored pool.
Self documenting systems ftw.
You can ship to Graylog with netcat or filebeat. Then you can do all of your graphing, searching, and analysis there.
I use it. No complaints here. They’ve recently reduced their rates. The alternatives are more involved and more expensive. I put my remote Borg repos on rsync.net
Because I use Borg I don’t really need their zfs snapshots but those are pretty cool too.
I have multiple Borg repos, so rather than add a remote for each I just rclone everything at once to rsync.
For home, use your firewall. Either physical ports on the firewall with dumb switches or vlans with managed layer 2 switches.
There are many ways to do this. Proxmox can do it with ovs if all your devices are virtualized. Pfsense is probably the most straightforward.
The best way to run pfsense is on dedicated hardware. This would work for you https://protectli.com/vault-4-port/
You’ll also then need switches or a managed switch with vlans for each network segment.
There are devices like the Netgear lm1200 that can do it inline by themselves.
I have that device, but configured as a second gateway. My firewall manages the failover based on primary packet loss and latency.
I run nut on a pi.
In addition to ups, an LTE failover. I’ve had my Comcast crap be offline for hours.
Borg. With rsync.net if you want to keep an off-site.
Stop telling me what to do. Your post is exactly what you are complaining of. Those with the curiosity and aptitude will gravitate to the tech that serves their needs. Usually on their own, regardless of what anybody else tells them. How do you think Linux came to dominate Internet infrastructure in the first place.
Go preach elsewhere.
You can read things from all servers on the server you choose to connect with though. Bad analogy.
Yet streaming music has basically the same artists no matter which service you use. And Tidal integrates with Plex seamlessly with my own local collection. Worth the subscription for that.
Do that. (But they won’t)
Looks like the subject of a future defcon presentation.