Well I'll be a son of a ditch digger, I got it to work and I couldn't have done it without you Rich. I won't talk about how long or how much money I spent getting here because that's the special sort of conversation one share's when they're sure the folks listening will be kind and not tease you too much.
Wow! I've been thinking about setting up a NAS in my home for a while now, and when I saw part 1, I remembered the Precision T5820 I got from work when they moved us to laptops and retired the machines we had on our desks! IT let me take the machine I had been using after they wiped it. After the 1st part of this series, I opened it up and was pleasantly surprised to find that all 4 SATA bays are in there (1 of them still has a 2.5" 1TB drive), as is an original Dell PCIe NVME adapter board that can hold up to 4 NVMe drives (with one slot populated by the 512GB boot drive), and video card. This build is going to be super cheap for me if all I have to worry about is adding more memory (I have to check if the two sticks add up to 16 or 32GB), more storage, and possibly some 2.5Gb Ethernet gear! 😁
4:59 In the first video I see that they install two WD Blue SN570 500GB and in this video it is shown that there are three that they installed....... where did they install the third? I can't "create pool" (mirror) because one of my NVMe is the "boot-pool" Help!
I know this is an older video now, but I am contemplating replicating this build and I was curious what the power draw looked like at idle and when the drives were in use.
This is just my opinion, and I am sure everyone has their own, but I recommend always installing the OS on GPT partitions, and set the BIOS to be UEFI and on Secure Boot if you can, just to have that extra layer of security while your server is booting the OS.
I have a Dell R720 with 12 cores and 128 gigs of ram, running windows server 2019. Right now the only service I have running on it is blue iris. On a side note, with only one camera (PTZ) running, its desk top quiet.
Great video - nice and clear steps. I was able to get a truenas seever tunning with some old hardware. I am lost when it comes to remote access. I dont have enough IT experience to get running. Experimented with Open VPN but underststand the server function does not exist anymore. Would love some assistance and maybe a video giving possible solution to safely get remote access. Would be a good example of how to take Truenas to the next level and a good video on getting applications running. I know there are some new services that may work, but again I do not have enough ability to implement.
Raid Owl did a good video on how to get your install DISK to be usable - but I hope scale figures out how to utilize the boot disk in the future, especially if it's NVME.
Honestly, it’s going to come down to what you’re more comfortable with. Effectively both platforms offer the same functionality. I’m more pro TrueNAS personally, but you’ll get the same results either way.
We will be creating more videos using the build to help people with their first home servers. This one is showcasing TrueNAS SCALE, others will show case other systems. Is there one in particular you're interested in?
Well I'll be a son of a ditch digger, I got it to work and I couldn't have done it without you Rich. I won't talk about how long or how much money I spent getting here because that's the special sort of conversation one share's when they're sure the folks listening will be kind and not tease you too much.
This channel is so underrated
Wow! I've been thinking about setting up a NAS in my home for a while now, and when I saw part 1, I remembered the Precision T5820 I got from work when they moved us to laptops and retired the machines we had on our desks! IT let me take the machine I had been using after they wiped it. After the 1st part of this series, I opened it up and was pleasantly surprised to find that all 4 SATA bays are in there (1 of them still has a 2.5" 1TB drive), as is an original Dell PCIe NVME adapter board that can hold up to 4 NVMe drives (with one slot populated by the 512GB boot drive), and video card. This build is going to be super cheap for me if all I have to worry about is adding more memory (I have to check if the two sticks add up to 16 or 32GB), more storage, and possibly some 2.5Gb Ethernet gear! 😁
That's a great find! Best of luck with your new home server!
4:59 In the first video I see that they install two WD Blue SN570 500GB and in this video it is shown that there are three that they installed....... where did they install the third?
I can't "create pool" (mirror) because one of my NVMe is the "boot-pool"
Help!
I bought the Dell Precision 7920 because of you guys. Put together truenas scale with ecc memory and appreciate your guidance from the first video.
So happy we could help you on your journey! This made our day!
I know this is an older video now, but I am contemplating replicating this build and I was curious what the power draw looked like at idle and when the drives were in use.
70-90W at idle. And while I don’t have a number for full power, I’d say you’d be around 200W at full unless you have a big GPU in the host.
This is just my opinion, and I am sure everyone has their own, but I recommend always installing the OS on GPT partitions, and set the BIOS to be UEFI and on Secure Boot if you can, just to have that extra layer of security while your server is booting the OS.
Why GPT?
@@gearboxworks Why, I am glad you asked. If you do not use GPT partitions, you will not be able to boot using UEFI mode.
All good points to add! Thanks for the comment!
I have a mini PC with limited internal storage upgrade optionss. Would s hard drive enclosure plugged into a USB port work?
I have a Dell R720 with 12 cores and 128 gigs of ram, running windows server 2019. Right now the only service I have running on it is blue iris.
On a side note, with only one camera (PTZ) running, its desk top quiet.
The R720 is a great platform!
What is the swap partition used for? Is it installed on the same drive as truenas?
It’s the Linux swap partition. Its sole purpose is for OS memory management and is self-managed by the Debian OS that SCALE is built on.
Great video - nice and clear steps. I was able to get a truenas seever tunning with some old hardware. I am lost when it comes to remote access. I dont have enough IT experience to get running. Experimented with Open VPN but underststand the server function does not exist anymore. Would love some assistance and maybe a video giving possible solution to safely get remote access. Would be a good example of how to take Truenas to the next level and a good video on getting applications running. I know there are some new services that may work, but again I do not have enough ability to implement.
I love requests like this! We’ll add it to the list, thank you!
@@2GuysTek Awesome - I did look into TailScale but was not able to get set up properly.
Raid Owl did a good video on how to get your install DISK to be usable - but I hope scale figures out how to utilize the boot disk in the future, especially if it's NVME.
32Gb RAM can be not enough. 128Gb can be overkill, so select something in between. Does it assign a name to host? I hate to use IP.
Is it better to run containers directly in proxmox or trueNAS?
Honestly, it’s going to come down to what you’re more comfortable with. Effectively both platforms offer the same functionality. I’m more pro TrueNAS personally, but you’ll get the same results either way.
thanks @@2GuysTek for taking the time to answer. =)
What's the power consumption in iddle with this disks?
70-90W so says my Kill-a-Watt.
@@2GuysTek thx🙂
NICE REAL TALK
THANKS, BUT WHY ARE YOU YELLING?! 😂
First home server, first comment
love it!
ventoy.......
Seems like a TrueNAS video with a click bait title.
We will be creating more videos using the build to help people with their first home servers. This one is showcasing TrueNAS SCALE, others will show case other systems. Is there one in particular you're interested in?