Your First HOME SERVER - What to look for?

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 102

  • @DavidEsotica
    @DavidEsotica 2 года назад +74

    I've learnt that the best starting home server is actually an old laptop. Low power consumption, built in UPS, easily access terminal console.

    • @eug1
      @eug1 2 года назад +5

      This is a good idea and also what I tried first.
      One thing often overlooked is that if you use a laptop for something which displays stuff on the screen (like proxmox, esxi etc) which always displays things like the IP address on the screen of the server and some other info and from my experience when you close the laptop lid using these programs, they don't turn off the screen so you can end up with LCD burn in. Hence you will either have to find a way to turn off your screen fully or possibly run some commands to make sure that your screen turns off after boot.

    • @Jazz3006
      @Jazz3006 2 года назад +2

      I have an old laptop that I would love to do this with, but the screen doesn't work, nor does the HDMI output, even thought I know the hardware is running because the screen will flicker an image at times. I just can't figure out how to push something to it to start fresh.

    • @tfkoincognito
      @tfkoincognito Год назад +1

      ​@Jazz often there is a need to use a shortcut key to enable the other display to be enabled or switched to.

    • @dominick253
      @dominick253 Год назад +2

      ​@@Jazz3006maybe a pice WiFi port adapter? To a GPU if you have one? At least to setup ssh then take off the GPU.

    • @hotrodhunk7389
      @hotrodhunk7389 Год назад +1

      ​@@eug1that's usually a config file for that. Just uncomment two options and change from suspend to ignore. Handlelidswitch and handlelidswitchdocked. I forgot the location but a Google search or AI question will get you sorted. quickly.

  • @ASUSfreak
    @ASUSfreak 2 года назад +6

    As a noob myself, I build this setup last year...
    An intel nuc i7 6 core /12 threads with 64GB RAM. An SSD for ESXi (don't want to put OS on USB... SSD costs nothing anymore) and an nvme for storing my VMs. Then I bought a NAS for storing all larger files. I link my VMs on my NUC to my NAS if needed for storage (eg: plex from VM in NUC uses NAS storage for movies etc...)
    But the true fun is this: Once you have this setup you can start playing around in a VM! If you mess up, you just wipe that VM and ALLLL the other thing (personal PC, home network setup, NAS files, etc) will remain the same... Just wipe the VM, install new one, mess up again, wipe again, new one until it works!

  • @nddulac
    @nddulac 2 года назад +31

    "Don't be afraid to try new things and mess up . . "
    So true! no one learns anything from stuff that works right the first time! you learn stuff from all the crap you break and need to fix.

  • @colourlessbird
    @colourlessbird 3 месяца назад +4

    I know this is two years old but I really needed someone to speak to me like I was a dummy on this one, and I really feel like you helped me out understanding my options. Thank you so much.

  • @scotsparaman
    @scotsparaman 2 года назад +8

    I started off with an old Pentium 4 pc running windows as an introduction to home servers. Used it to store and stream movies and music long before Netflix and Spotify was a popular thing or available in my country. I moved from there to a HP micro server with windows home server until they stopped supporting the home version. I remember sweating at the thought of buying 4 x 2tb drives for it as they were so expensive. Since then, I have gone to Synology. Have the DS3622xs+ with the 2 expansion bays storing 500tb our family data (photos and negatives from the last 40 years scanned and categorised and 10’s of thousand of phone photos and videos each from 5 house hold members with phones, documents (the last 5 years utility bills, payslips from the last 10 years, receipts and warranties, car documents, letters from the last few years, the kids school work etc), our DVD, CD and record collection, etc). The Synology office comes free with it, it’s not brilliant, but it works for the kids without having to shell out for office. It can run docker. The younger ones have their own mine craft server running on it. It can do VMs but I don’t use it for that. It can also run Plex but we use an intel nuc for Plex, the NUC runs a i7-1165 with 64gb ram. Small, quiet, with enough transcoding for more than just our wee family if required. I still use my small HP micro server to run and play with TrueNAS. It’s not powerful, it’s not fast, but it’s fun to tinker…

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +2

      I’m going to get my hands on a Synology system one of these days haha

    • @scotsparaman
      @scotsparaman 2 года назад +1

      @@RaidOwl Love mine… and I would certainly recommend them from an ease of use and reliability point of view, but not necessarily the cost of some of their more powerful servers though… or the fact they want to lock you into their branded hard drives / memory etc. but Im hooked on mine…

  • @someguy2056
    @someguy2056 2 года назад +8

    Perfect timing, getting ready to make my first home server!

  • @theunclemez
    @theunclemez 2 года назад +7

    Thank you so much
    everyone should own a homelab with small servers etc. and we would worry less about our privacy being abused.
    it is not everything to own and maintain a home server but at least it is a beginning.

    • @Wither_Strike
      @Wither_Strike Год назад +1

      I can foresee but one issue with that, not everyone knows how little privacy they have nowadays, those people wont want or use a homelab, and now there's nobody to keep companies in check because all the people who know about it either dont care or are in the bubble of us computer people with all our self hosted stuff that can be daunting for the average user.

  • @rafaelpereiradias2567
    @rafaelpereiradias2567 2 года назад +2

    please, full film featuring almost everything!

  • @VinnydaNetEngineer
    @VinnydaNetEngineer 2 года назад +3

    I am so sad this doesn’t have much views! Thanks for the video man keep it up! You’re really inspiring me to run up my own web server and get into this world. Appreciate it dude!

  • @Acacia_RGM
    @Acacia_RGM 4 месяца назад

    this is the second video of yours I've watched, i dont think ive clicked subscribe faster, love the sense of humour mixed in with learning

  • @try-that
    @try-that 2 года назад +6

    Great video, I could of done with something like this when I decided to start messing about seriously with servers rather than desktops.
    I was looking forward to Scale, but I think I may stick with OMV and my docker setup, I don't really mess with VMs, but OMV has a really nice KVM plugin now. I'm still on v5, so looking forward to 6.
    For me OMV works better I think, because I just use a JBOD no raid or anything, and Syncthing. But am thinking of getting a newer server either used or self built as I think the newer cpu's will pay for themselves over my I5 6th and I5 4th gen chips, I'll combine the 2 servers into one.
    Keep up the basic video's, as there are not enough of them out there, and I still learn or think something different after watching them.

  • @smileynetsmileynet7922
    @smileynetsmileynet7922 2 года назад +3

    I found a printer table at fingerhut. For home servers, id recommend that and a good table. You know how businesses usually use racks? Well, with those, you can make a rack for mostly laptops. Just stack one on top of the other until you have your desired setup. Watch the vents though, and theres still room for different shaped machines, like buffalo nass.

  • @ArcangelZero7
    @ArcangelZero7 2 года назад +3

    I really liked this video! You're right, that's where I found myself, looking back and forth on forums, stuck in analysis paralysis.
    The ONE thing I think would be good to cover with Proxmox is still my sticking point: File systems.
    Yeah, no probs, pick Proxmox, load it up annnnd....
    first question: What filesystem?
    Ok now you got all these drives: What filesystem for those?
    That's where I'm getting hung up. Everybody says ZFS is good if you got decent hardware, but I'm worried about burning out my boot SSD because I forgot a setting or something. XD
    Thanks again for the awesome videos, I'm finding myself a lot less confused the more I watch. :)

  • @CoopMoe
    @CoopMoe 10 месяцев назад

    Love this video. I just came across it after the "duel" with Hardware Haven and decided it would be a really fun challenge to learn about all of this as a computer enthusiast, but technical neophyte. Since I don't need a whole crazy rack or anything, this is a great starting point, especially seeing as how I'm going to go a pretty budget route.

  • @noxcattus5756
    @noxcattus5756 День назад

    I just have some pc parts available after some upgrades and a friend recommended i could do that. Not necessarily that i need it, but just to try something new. So here i am

  • @liamsamuels6908
    @liamsamuels6908 2 года назад +7

    I think the main reason I am going with unraid is the ability to add drives whenever :)
    *edit*
    I think I am gonna go with my old i5-4690k and Z97 PC Mate with 4 used 4TB red drives for $50 each, I may upgrade to a xeon at some point, but with unraid I think it'll have enough resources to run PLEX and other dockers.

    • @glen3103
      @glen3103 2 года назад +2

      that's pretty much the main reason why i went with unraid. I can upgrade as i need space

  • @esrevinu.
    @esrevinu. Год назад

    well done video, lots of info, love the humor. Ive been bouncing back and forth between TrueNAS Scale and UnRaid for about a month as I collect some parts,... I think this video has me leaning toward TrueNAS Scale for my first home "server" setup. In any case, its just the start,... haha. Thanks for the info and videos!

  • @TinyMaths
    @TinyMaths Год назад

    That 'pouring the milk before the cereal' comment had me belly laughing for a full minute.... especially after I saw the image... 🤣
    Anyway, I'm just getting started with this, so, thanks for the 'accessible' introduction.

  • @shaunwhiteley3544
    @shaunwhiteley3544 2 года назад +2

    I get wanting to use old kit, I was running a Dell R710 for a few years, I pay my own electricity bills, and when it's running 24\7, that bill can get big! Get a watt meter and check what you are using, it gets expensive! I took out ram from it I was not using, took out pc I cards I was not using, set disks to spin down when not used etc. Don't oversize if you do not need to. Do the math, over a few years buying new may save you money. Hope that helps someone.

  • @kevinsmith2933
    @kevinsmith2933 2 года назад +4

    I have multiple servers... one is a dell r320 with proxmox that runs my main stuff, nginx proxy manager, heimdall, guacamole... then i have a couple of NUCs, one has a kvm over ethernet that acts as a home theater pc on every TV in my house. An old gaming computer that has proxmox as a backup... pfsense on another machine... i kinda fell down the rabbit hole

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +3

      Nice setup! Yeah the rabbit hole gets us all eventually lol

  • @LearningTech96
    @LearningTech96 Год назад

    Currently running a Jellyfin server and a seed box for all my “Linux ISO’s” on an old 2012 MacBook Pro. It’s great since it’s battery powered, low power draw, and it’s an all in one container. Definitely will be expanding it soon, but happy to break into homelabing and not having that intimidation anymore

  • @martiekr
    @martiekr 2 года назад +2

    My approche to home server is pretty simple, i always use old hardware that is somewhere around.
    Like; my doughter(s) bought a new laptop? I confiscate there old laptop and i slam ubuntu server on it (pure server, no graphical desktop).
    I Configure it so it will boot and run with the lid closed (will not alway work) and put it in the small room, like the meter cupboard.
    Then i decide what it has to do: has it to be a Minecraft Sever, File Server, Web Server etc.
    I manage all my servers from Windows PC using SSH (like the free SSH client MobaXTerm), so they can be put away and do not occupy (table) space.

  • @asishreddy7729
    @asishreddy7729 2 года назад +1

    Hey, I love your server how to’s, and i have a request. Could you make a guide on turning your old MacBook Pro into a server? What are the possible applications it can be used for etc. Because a lot of us have old MacBooks laying around which will not get much for reselling, so I was wondering if it could be put to use as a server instead. Thanks in advance.

  • @spartacustravels
    @spartacustravels Год назад +1

    Hi bro, so im building a Home server with Machinist X99 and Dual Xeon e5-2680 v4 x ... with roughly 48GB ram, main purpose is to run 20/22 emulators ( virtualization ) ... any advise on PSU and casing ?

  • @JohnRPeck
    @JohnRPeck Год назад +1

    Looks like RUclips recommended the right video this time.
    I did some more research about my old Dell 8700... It has a Gen 4 I7-4790 and DDR3... NON ECC :(
    Will it still cut the mustard?

  • @jeremyhenderson163
    @jeremyhenderson163 2 месяца назад

    I can't get enough of your videos, nor how comfortable you try to make beginners feel. 2 years later, do you still recommend Truenas for beginner-friendly NAS setup? I ask because seen (like you said) a lot of controversy online. Specifically I've been trying to decide between Trunas and Ubuntu server for Nextcloud, and the one things that most threads mention is how Ubuntu server is better because the community support is more active. From watching your videos, I know that Truenas has more NAS supporting features (raid, ZFS, etc.), but wouldn't accessing most of those features be superseded by the Nextcloud overlay? I don't know, I'm asking.

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 месяца назад +1

      Unraid is definitely going to be more user friendly for a beginner. I recommend trying it out with their free trial.

    • @jeremyhenderson163
      @jeremyhenderson163 2 месяца назад

      I'm not a complete beginner, but am looking for simple. I was looking at Unraid at one point, but didn't like how it uses a 2.0 flash drive (which do tend to get hot sometimes.). I was planning on spending a little bit of time getting familiar with the system before I deployed Nextcloud, just didn't want to have to familiarize myself with too many OSes as Windows is my primary use case. I don't plan on doing much more than setting up a Nextcloud server for family members (outside my LAN) to dump their family photos/vids/etc onto, and back it up with (possibly) Backblaze. I was originally planning on using Syncthinc, but it's not working like it was when I initially tested it.

  • @tofailtowin9046
    @tofailtowin9046 Год назад

    one thing i would say. buy a computer you can backup stuff to. you break it you have a backup. trust me, going through and having to reset everything up is time consuming, better to do something else while you wait for the restore to take affect.

  • @Yeshadobariya006
    @Yeshadobariya006 2 года назад

    TNice tutorials guy's tutorial is more understanding than the others

  • @Vardash
    @Vardash Год назад

    The easiest, in my opinion, is to start with an "old" laptop/PC that you still have lying around somewhere at home. That's enough to try something new out.
    I myself have 18 containers running on my old Acer laptop with an i5-3230m and 8 gig ram

  • @MrPerezOP
    @MrPerezOP Год назад

    Goated video. Underated.

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  Год назад

      Thanks, Mr Perez

  • @Scranny
    @Scranny Год назад

    Hey Brett, I really appreciate your humble message in the Intro to those of us like myself who use an old laptop as a home server. I run only Nextcloud on it at the moment and thinking about purchasing a mini PC like the Intel NUC with an external SSD to replace it. Every night, my script encrypts and uploads the Nextcloud directory to a cloud service. Any thoughts on such a mini PC setup? Thanks again!

  • @Loophole1999
    @Loophole1999 11 месяцев назад +1

    This scared me even more...

  • @iNowHateAtSigns
    @iNowHateAtSigns Год назад +1

    Dude, this was so helpful. I can't wait to get all the chicks, thanks!

  • @mainstaymist
    @mainstaymist 2 года назад +5

    my local best buy is 2 hours away with no microcenter in my state :(

  • @truth884
    @truth884 2 года назад +1

    I have lots of drives with video and audio for creative work. What would you recommend for getting the files organized and centralized?

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +2

      Probably to go with a dedicated NAS system. Taking a PC and throwing TrueNAS on it would be a good option, Unraid is a bit more friendly as you can mix different sized drives. Or you can go the super easy route and buy a Synology system.

  • @dylantrisciuzzi9479
    @dylantrisciuzzi9479 Год назад

    I have a Cisco c220 m4, got it used for pretty cheap. I have home assistant running as well as Philips hue, switchbot, and a synology nas (currently only have a 4tb nas drive in there) the c220 is sitting in the closet because I'm not sure where to start with that...waiting on a vga cable from Mr Bezos. Any suggestions? (Note: personal media server is running on the nas as well as general picture backup for my wife and I)

  • @shaunwhiteley3544
    @shaunwhiteley3544 2 года назад

    I really miss Windows Home Server! WHS you could just add any size disks, deduplication technology, client backups and loads more. It was so good 😪. I run unraid but would switch back to WHS in a second!

  • @jasonpulliam310
    @jasonpulliam310 2 года назад +1

    Any recommendations on my dell t310 poweredge, I just got it for $50 and i was wanting to have something that all my 3dprinters, cnc, and laser cutter could just pull files from the office to the shop without all them sd cards everywhere

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +2

      A simple NAS-based OS like TrueNAS or OpenMediaVault will probably do just fine for you. Honestly, you could be fine with any OS as for your idea all you'll need to do is set up a simple Samba shared directory.

  • @oragviga
    @oragviga 2 года назад

    What do you think about using CMR western digital purple drives for a NAS ? I ask this because purple drives are cheaper than red drives

  • @carldenner4230
    @carldenner4230 Год назад

    Do you have a "tel-a-prompt" for your script. I made one live RUclips video and I fumbled through it like it was my first date...

  • @enjibkk6850
    @enjibkk6850 Год назад

    About cpu age, I would add that the instruction set is going to come and byte you at some point... For instance, I have found out that my geriatric q9650 and much newer celeron N5105 (in a qnap nas) will not run mongodb above 4.4 :-/

  • @JasonsLabVideos
    @JasonsLabVideos 2 года назад +3

    ME first, now to watch ! HELL YEA bro !! Good video !!

  • @justaramdomkid7404
    @justaramdomkid7404 2 года назад

    Great video! I still have a stupid question to ask: What is the point of having a hypervisor for a home server. Does it do anything except dividing your server into multiple different virtual servers?

    • @justaramdomkid7404
      @justaramdomkid7404 2 года назад

      And if I’m the only user that is supposed to access the data. Would I still need a hypervisor? Btw. If there are any grammar mistakes, just ignore them. English is not my national language😔

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +3

      Your English is very good! As for your question: You can surely say “The main goal of a hypervisor is to divide your system into different parts.” At a high level that’s correct, but it goes much deeper than that. A hypervisor OS will be much much efficient with your hardware as it doesn’t have to run a desktop environment. Also, a hypervisor OS will have GUI/CLI features built in to make running virtual machines, services, sharing storage, and other ‘home server’ stuff much easier. Like I said in the video, you don’t NEED a hypervisor OS but it makes certain things much easier.

    • @justaramdomkid7404
      @justaramdomkid7404 2 года назад +1

      @@RaidOwl Thx dude

  • @RobotMowerTricks
    @RobotMowerTricks 2 года назад +1

    Would you recoomend doing two servers - I want to run blueiris or similar for a bunch of security cameras that are analogue and IP (the anologue requires some CPU power to encode) PLUS I want a file server locally for big files, with an eye towards one day setting up a google photos replacment for smaller pictures and videos.

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +2

      I'm a fan of fitting as much as you can on a single machine. I think you can get by with 1 machine with a high core count CPU, but if you're more comfortable with 2 machines then go for it.

    • @RobotMowerTricks
      @RobotMowerTricks 2 года назад

      @@RaidOwl I'd prefer to do one, but was worried I'd regret it. I'm petty much locked in to windows to run blue iris. I wanted to start with windows, but one day I might want to branch out

    • @RobotMowerTricks
      @RobotMowerTricks 2 года назад

      Thank you!

  • @potthegreen
    @potthegreen 2 года назад

    DietPi is great for beginners! Also for x86

  • @jayvlogz6868
    @jayvlogz6868 2 года назад

    Legend has it he never ca back later.

  • @Lvl_5_Magikarps
    @Lvl_5_Magikarps 2 года назад +1

    What about open media vault as a nas?

  • @pan-rv3wv
    @pan-rv3wv 2 года назад

    Sa. TNice tutorials quarantine is making question my whole existence.

  • @K1LLA_KING_KONG
    @K1LLA_KING_KONG Год назад

    Best mobo & cpu combo for content creator media storage with budget $500 USD?

  • @JadedAmber
    @JadedAmber 7 месяцев назад

    I got lucky, my work was throwing out equipment and i managed to pick up a proliant DL360 gen 9 for free

  • @retrogamer6209
    @retrogamer6209 4 месяца назад

    I want to do a home server for plex and sort family photo and video and cctv to protect my 2 family member mum a d little brother i do have a pc home made it a i51400 16gb ram and rtx 3060 dont know if i can used this to help to make a server and nas

  • @zakariasofi4539
    @zakariasofi4539 2 года назад

    who has been blind their whole life and can finally see. I can't express my gratitude in words but tNice tutorials is the best I can do. THANK YOU SO

  • @TheGrowOp
    @TheGrowOp 2 года назад

    I was given an R710 for free. What's my best course of action? I have no server knowledge but installed WS2016 to play around and everytime I boot it up to try to figure something out my brain starts to hurt.

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  2 года назад +1

      Get you a trial Unraid key and install it. It’s very user friendly.

    • @TheGrowOp
      @TheGrowOp 2 года назад +1

      @@RaidOwl good looking out. I had no clue where to start and after a quick Google search this appears to be perfectly fit for what I'd like to play around with!

  • @7abochka774
    @7abochka774 2 года назад

    Thanks u so much God

  • @connorp8408
    @connorp8408 2 года назад

    A current misconception I have: a home server is just another computer with network sharing on some folders activated

  • @gregoryrunningelk865
    @gregoryrunningelk865 Год назад

    How would I go about hooking up me computer to my server?

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  Год назад

      You would access your sever using SSH via the command line or the GUI via a web browser.

  • @alighorbani9442
    @alighorbani9442 2 года назад

    Can you make one for the soft stuido trail

  • @VinnyHaw
    @VinnyHaw 2 месяца назад

    Do you have to pay to join your discord?

  • @iam.jasonhoward
    @iam.jasonhoward 2 года назад

    1:47 💯

  • @Tahs1nwhat
    @Tahs1nwhat 2 года назад

    I just successfully cracked my soft soft and its ti to make so sNice tutorialt cus i am broke

  • @patrickprafke4894
    @patrickprafke4894 Год назад

    In my home server. I just wanted ecc mem. And lots of drives. That's it.

  • @stephenrex83
    @stephenrex83 Год назад

    I heard something about using docker has anyone heard of that

  • @huntingfighteroramara
    @huntingfighteroramara 11 месяцев назад

    One most important thing IMO is what you say about "big dick" systems, the homelab community, especially in places like Reddit, sadly tends to be super toxic about this making you feel bad whenever you don't have a hundred Terabytes and 2 Xeon or EPYC based systems ... Seriously this is absolute BS, first of all it's super expensive and most people have literally no use for it, second especially in Europe electricity is super expensive so one can't just afford to drop a 1-2kw Idle System ... ngl this is one of the points that drives me away from homelabbing again and again even though I'm well aware of it, whenever there's a problem everyone's like "why do you have such a bad system" whilst my system is literally just targeted at specific usecases (and low idle energy use cos electricity in my area is like .34€ per kWh)

  • @msi1891
    @msi1891 2 года назад

    I have pro tools 12.5 wNice tutorialch I bought back in 15 and It is really nightmare DAW for my soft creation. I have powerful computer but

  • @elnatan90
    @elnatan90 2 года назад

    But that comnt is 4 months old

  • @shariarrahman7562
    @shariarrahman7562 Год назад

    This isn't as beginner friendly as implied

    • @RaidOwl
      @RaidOwl  Год назад

      You’re free to join the discord and ask questions