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This homelab setup is my favorite one yet.

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Dreams of Autonomy

Dreams of Autonomy

Күн бұрын

Hosting my own services using a homelab has been an absolute dream. However, my first homelab setup had some mistakes, and so I decided to rebuild it from scratch, and share with you how I did so.
Links to my hardware:
Beelink EQ12: amzn.to/3zK4Pbu
32GB Memory: amzn.to/3Lkotgy
2TB SSD: amzn.to/4eV117n
Ubiquiti Switch: amzn.to/3W5sJWp
Desk Whiteboard: amzn.to/3LogIGw
Keyboard: ZSA Voyager
The above are Amazon Affiliate Links which means I get a commission if you decide to make a purchase through them. This comes at no additional cost to you and helps to support the channel.
Other Links:
Github Repo: github.com/dre...
NixOS Installer: nixos.org/down...
NixOS Anywhere: github.com/nix...
Discord Community: / discord

Пікірлер: 407
@matwadoesgames
@matwadoesgames Ай бұрын
i did not understand anything past nixos but i still watched until the end
@erectlocution
@erectlocution Ай бұрын
`!!`
@daviar123
@daviar123 Ай бұрын
literally me haha
@flokkq7931
@flokkq7931 Ай бұрын
same
@_ingadi
@_ingadi 27 күн бұрын
Yup
@bigmak40
@bigmak40 23 күн бұрын
I hear I'm supposed to like NixOS but I still don't understand it
@Otakutaru
@Otakutaru Ай бұрын
We are really interested in a crash course about homelab computing. How is a cluster useful? What is the purpose of a DNS? Load balancer? Namespace? All of those questions are a search away, but a "getting started" video would blow up for sure.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
I shall add this to my backlog!
@georgebals5170
@georgebals5170 Ай бұрын
Second this, I work in devops so I have some understanding of what those things are (I'm still a junior) and how they are useful in a company. But for personal use? I can envision a usecase for hosting your own movies and maybe website.
@ChaiRuou
@ChaiRuou Ай бұрын
tbh, very limited you can learn from video like this, it's like a showcase of how he setup his home lab, to achieve that you need to learn lot of knowledge to has foundation to start to do same setup. From your question, can see that you're lack of very basic knownledge on computer networking, and it's more nightmare if you put your feet on thing like IaC as use Helm, complex system like Kubernetes.
@Otakutaru
@Otakutaru Ай бұрын
@@ChaiRuou That's why, a getting started video could cover the standard concepts without using advanced tools
@ChaiRuou
@ChaiRuou Ай бұрын
​@@Otakutaru try look at devops road map 🙂
@Standbackforscience
@Standbackforscience Ай бұрын
Devops engineer here. Ubuntu server + Ansible is how I roll, both for homelab and at work.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
I'm envious! I've never been able to get into the mindset for ansible. Now I've got a spare cluster (my old one) I may find some time to give it a go
@obvionaoe
@obvionaoe Ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy To be honest, even though it is simpler and easier to use, I feel like Ansible is a downgrade from NixOS, in regards to the control you have over the state of the machine. Nix allows you to rollback and specify the exact state of the machine, while Ansible only allows you to declare what you want to be performed on the machine, it doesn't give you any assurances that it is the state you wished for.
@areweevensomeoneoutthere
@areweevensomeoneoutthere Ай бұрын
@@obvionaoe Aren't these different tools? I am not sure you can achieve the same ideas ansible can bring to a bunch of a machines while having good compatibility. But please explain if it's possible, I am intrigued to know.
@gabbieblue
@gabbieblue Ай бұрын
@@areweevensomeoneoutthere the benefits of nixos being a declarative system, rather than a declarative tool used with a normal system, are the full system reproducibility (if you set it up right) and freedom from dependency hell (every program and library is installed to its own directory, allowing multiple installs of the same program/library) ansible is a great tool for reproducibility, but nixos can replicate all of ansibles functionality and a bit more
@goporororo7404
@goporororo7404 Ай бұрын
​@obvionaoe nix is great for the initial set up phase but ansible is good for controlling multiple servers
@BrianThomas
@BrianThomas Ай бұрын
It's funny this video found me. I just purchased 3 of those Mini-Pc's 3 days ago, and now this is sitting in my video feed. I guess the algorithms are on the job.
@nassimguelbi
@nassimguelbi 7 күн бұрын
You got the beelink? Which model did you get?
@TheSoberPirate
@TheSoberPirate Ай бұрын
Budget tip #574: Buy 8GB version of Beelink EQ12 + 32GB RAM stick. You can save some money especially when buying more nodes. Reselling the 16GB stick is not easy (and not worth it). I have 6 EQ12s in a cluster, fantastic little machines to play with!
@DogeMultiverse
@DogeMultiverse Ай бұрын
the main question i have is, what do you use it for? hosting websites? hosting game servers? unless you are renting out these in form of k8 compute, its really hard to justify the cost.
@SnorreSelmer
@SnorreSelmer Ай бұрын
@@DogeMultiverse Three control-plane nodes, three compute-nodes? It's always good to have options to try out different things.
@TheSoberPirate
@TheSoberPirate Ай бұрын
Do I need a justification for a hobby? I use them to test different technologies: hypervisors, hyperconverged storage, high availability. Currently running vSAN cluster, purely for learning purposes. When I’m done, I’ll tear it down and build something else.
@SnorreSelmer
@SnorreSelmer 21 күн бұрын
@@TheSoberPirate That's the same reasoning I used to justify a 4U storage-server with 160TiB usable storage and dual 10G fiber.
@purpshell
@purpshell 17 күн бұрын
@@SnorreSelmer hahahah
@Applepie931
@Applepie931 Ай бұрын
neat to see some examples of k8s based homelabbing/self hosting!
@samuelborn9004
@samuelborn9004 Ай бұрын
I did learn nothing from this video - too complex 😅 but it did spark interest for trying kubernetes stuff myself
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
I'll definitely go through concepts in more detail! This one was much for of a devlog/homelab log. I'm glad it inspired some interest though! Let me know if there's anything you'd like me to dive in more about and I shall do so :)
@MrDermases
@MrDermases Ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy what are your thoughts on k3s vs Proxmox?
@anakinsonone
@anakinsonone Ай бұрын
Relieved to see that I am not the only one.
@TheStuartstardust
@TheStuartstardust 28 күн бұрын
​@@dreamsofautonomy I thought longhorn was the Win Vista codename, but here it is what exactly?
@benjaminshtark5977
@benjaminshtark5977 21 күн бұрын
what makes it a bit "complex" is the fact that he is using kubernetes heavily, but in the end its all the same, DNS is DNS, TCP/IP and networking are the same, its just kubernetes introduces some new concepts to people not familliar but its not hard to learn and understand.. i would recommend some videos on kuberentes and helm on youtube then return to this video.
@mikkel3135
@mikkel3135 Ай бұрын
Nice to see more NixOS around! I am using colmena to keep a config of my nodes, so I don't need to SSH into them to apply changes to my NixOS nodes. Keep it coming!
@gungun974
@gungun974 Ай бұрын
Great video, just note. You should never writte a secret in a nix things even if you don't use git. Almost everything you put in secret will end up in the nix stores so beware of leaving behind secret there
@John-x3l7m
@John-x3l7m 2 күн бұрын
so where do you put it?
@gungun974
@gungun974 2 күн бұрын
​@@John-x3l7m I can't explain here the rabbit hole of nix encryption but basically you need to store in the nix store already encrypted secrets files and in your NixOS configuration a module that can at the start of your server decipher your encrypted secrets and expose them in some runtime temporary file only specific program can have access. Personally I use nix sops and sops to do that but like I said it's a rabbit hole and there more tools for the same jobs but here the ideas.
@roganl
@roganl Ай бұрын
This was excellent. Although I would love to have seen the HA feature testdriven; perhaps builidng out the k3s stack and THEN upgrading the RAM & storage iteratively. I would also love to see cert-manager integration, as well as acme/letsencrypt.
@raul824428
@raul824428 Ай бұрын
Last week in office cleanup I was asking for 2-3 cpus and two guys from leadership gave me their own old cpus. I was thinking about setting a kubernetes cluster. Lo and behold your video comes now I know what to do this weekend.
@ケブ
@ケブ Ай бұрын
How did it go?
@MaikDiepenbroek
@MaikDiepenbroek Ай бұрын
Great in-depth and detailed explanation for setting up a cluster from scratch, especially nice that in the end you explained why you needed two additional charts to get the final pieces of the puzzle working. Thanks!
@aaronperl
@aaronperl Ай бұрын
I still need to learn more about how Kubernetes works, but I really appreciate your approach of setting up part of it, encountering an error, then fixing that error. Moving along in small steps, showing the error and how to fix it, I find really helps me to understand how the pieces fit together, rather than just giving a config file that works for you and leaving it up to me to figure out what I need to change for my environment.
@danielleahelsie
@danielleahelsie 26 күн бұрын
Tried a similar setup about a year ago for some light homelabe stuff I wanted highly available. This would have made the exact thing I was trying, much simpler. I got flash backs multiple times in this video. The iscusi dependancy abd fix, metal lb crds with nginx as the ingress, yea identical and this is cleaner still. Add cert manager and you'll have everything I needed at the time. If you plan on continuing with this project and series I'd be interested to see, meanwhile I'll take a look at you're other videos. Good stuff, nice work.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 26 күн бұрын
Thanks! I'll definitely be continuing with this setup and have added in cert-manager etc as well 😁. Should be more content coming out soon!
@BrunoBernard-kn6vt
@BrunoBernard-kn6vt Ай бұрын
never heard of helmfile until today, thanks.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
It's pretty great for managing helm files without setting up any gitops or similar!
@PHoSawyer
@PHoSawyer Ай бұрын
me neither! flux and argocd are everywhere but normally a bit much
@maurolimaok
@maurolimaok Күн бұрын
This is a really nice channel. I hope it grows.
@Grstearns
@Grstearns Ай бұрын
The rest of the video was good enough to excuse not saying "i-skuzzy". Took me a second to realize that MetalLB was required for DHCP since its layer 2 and would not be routed in or out of the cluster without an outside relay.
@Baelfyr
@Baelfyr Ай бұрын
I didn't understand everything in this video, but it was good to watch, and certainly something to refer back to when i want to learn more about setting up my own home lab. I subscribed to see more videos about this and what you do with this home lab in the future.
@lucdew-ca
@lucdew-ca 9 күн бұрын
I manage some Kubernetes clusters in the cloud and I learned a few things. Very interesting video. I bumped into your video 2 days ago because I did some searches on mini-pcs with n100 Intel cpu. I wanted to setup a Proxmox server with a Home Assistant VM as a starter. I also already copied some of your zsh config and moved my prompt from PowerLevel10Kto oh-my-posh (I already used it for powershell with the default config). To test some Kubernetes configurations without deploying to the cloud I use K3D (in WSL on my laptop). Nodes are docker containers. It worked well for my use cases, I managed to validate some istio (service mesh) egress load balancing setup. But yes it is not a permanent home lab setup...
@BlueBockser
@BlueBockser Ай бұрын
Great video! As a follow-up, I'd be interested in more specifics on HA and disaster recovery, especially regarding Longhorn.
@banafish
@banafish Ай бұрын
this is so awesome and exactly the kind of video i was hoping for from you. i'm here for all the homelab content all day.
@BertPdeboy
@BertPdeboy Ай бұрын
i'm impressed by the clear and concise instructions you give in this video. to be honest, the whole kubernetes with helm with helm charts with helm values with ingresscontroller etc, sounds like a lot of work to setup. it doesn't give me the feeling this setup is stable, but don't really know any details beyond that first look. It would be interesting to hear about the usual breakage scenario's, and how updates look like.
@phyzix_phyzix
@phyzix_phyzix Ай бұрын
You can use avahi to broadcast hostnames to the network so you can refer to all nodes by their hostname and not have to remember ips.
@vG4u
@vG4u Күн бұрын
Great Homelab Setup Video, will also implement in my Homelab system
@DerekMurawsky
@DerekMurawsky 13 күн бұрын
Bookmarks for the video would be a *really* nice thing to have. Such an awesome setup! Thank you for sharing it!
@wackogames
@wackogames Ай бұрын
Great video and you have a talent to very cleary explain complicated concepts in a simple way. As a devops engineer working with this stuff daily I can say your setup is very nice and clean. But honestly I would not spend that much just to run a few containers! $200 worth of used laptops would be good enough for 10 times this workload. But I can also understand the desire to have a perfect setup. Looking forward to videos where you utilise that horsepower, maybe with Frigate and local LLMs?
@robertosebilla
@robertosebilla 16 күн бұрын
I mostly enjoyed how clean your UI looks.
@cheebadigga4092
@cheebadigga4092 Ай бұрын
The DNS automation is huge! Thank you.
@SnorreSelmer
@SnorreSelmer Ай бұрын
Can't wait to see your video on Talos Linux
@pushyoch.8252
@pushyoch.8252 Ай бұрын
😮 ngl the way the tooling is presented reminds me of the Microservices skit
@DanielPBullis
@DanielPBullis 21 күн бұрын
I just got my framework 16 recently. Loving it so far :). ⚙️
@porlando12
@porlando12 Ай бұрын
I understood maybe 10% of that, but enjoyed every second of it!
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
I'm glad! Is there anything you'd like me to do a deeper dive on?
@porlando12
@porlando12 Ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy I could watch a deeper dive on any of the individual services that you covered. Would love to have a better understanding of longhorn for example.
@CiaCon
@CiaCon Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video! This pretty much exactly encapsulates my vision of what i am currently in the process of building! The helmfile and kustomize were two Lego bricks i felt like i was missing in my current attempt. I'm excited to see more!
@FrontLineNerd
@FrontLineNerd Ай бұрын
I understood everything you just did and that’s honestly a fantastic process you laid out but I do NOT feel confident that I could do it myself. You ran into extremely difficult issues that I don’t know how I would have figured out on my own. Great video though.
@user-si2vn2si5c
@user-si2vn2si5c Ай бұрын
Who all saw yesterdays stream, nice thumbnail!
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
That was a fun stream! Crowd sourced design!
@a1mer06
@a1mer06 Ай бұрын
Great video as always, boss
@manvindarsingh
@manvindarsingh Ай бұрын
Great video! love how detailed it is
@diabawii
@diabawii 16 күн бұрын
Your automation tools and workflow is amazing, really interested if you make like crash courses for the tools you used.
@unforgivn81
@unforgivn81 Ай бұрын
This is the first time your channel has been recommended to me, and I subbed before I even watched the video.
@liamwoodleigh
@liamwoodleigh Ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for making! 🙏 Am curious to learn more about nix in upcoming videos
@warpcode
@warpcode 5 күн бұрын
This is the tutorial I wish i had a couple of years ago trying to figure all this out
@jofla
@jofla Ай бұрын
This seems fun, once i move to a bigger place i will definitely try to do something like this
@migueldecarvalho958
@migueldecarvalho958 Ай бұрын
Good video!
@thelazyyoutuber1324
@thelazyyoutuber1324 Ай бұрын
Im so jealous you had the knowledge to be able to execute this project. I would love to make your acquaintance and learn your background.
@rotors_taker_0h
@rotors_taker_0h Ай бұрын
That's some overkill setup for a pihole ;)
@pepeshopping
@pepeshopping Ай бұрын
Been there, done it. I would NOT use really small PCs, unless they are Enterprise grade (used, cheap) so you never have to worry about dangling cables.
@Reducer
@Reducer Ай бұрын
Highly relevant to my interests! I was dabbling with RKE2 but I'm not really in that mindset yet, so I think I'll go back to K3S. My nodes are running on RK3588 CMs, so I'm not sure if I can use Nix though. Will investigate further.
@nathannych
@nathannych Ай бұрын
excellent video! I appreciate your CLI-to-video approach and you cover interesting content.
@SlyEcho
@SlyEcho Ай бұрын
Wow, I learned a few things and it gives me some ideas to try in my clusters
@maxreuv
@maxreuv Ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you very much for sharing!
@arnaud7671
@arnaud7671 16 күн бұрын
Wow, that's brilliant ! Overcomplexifying things that could be done with bachelor's degree networking knowledge.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 15 күн бұрын
Do tell!
Күн бұрын
You can use sops nix to point to the k3s tokenFile in a secure way. The problem lies in setting up sops-nix to play well with nixos-anywhere.
@bone-a-lisa
@bone-a-lisa 27 күн бұрын
We are rebuilding our Kubernetes clusters at work to use Talos, highly recommend a look! Its the first time servers i deployed on-prem truly felt lile cattle instead of pets. Terraform + Talos config + Helmfiles + Gitlab CI pipelines is life changing lol. I can deploy a full production ready cluster from Gitlab in a matter of minutes
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 27 күн бұрын
I'll definitely be giving it a go!
@solido888
@solido888 25 күн бұрын
We use tf and talos for our ka8s cluster as well. talos was definitely a bit of a learning curve, as it is a bit different than a more traditional distro.
@bone-a-lisa
@bone-a-lisa 25 күн бұрын
@@solido888 yea learning to maintain the nodes in an API driven way is a learning curve for sure. But having essentially two config files to configure the nodes with a single command is wild. Plus the immutability drastically cuts down on maintenance required, and upgrading is as simple as changing the image in the file, and applying the config. It's great
@gingersmurf7057
@gingersmurf7057 Ай бұрын
MORE HOMELAB PLZ!!
@acubley
@acubley Ай бұрын
01:08 British accent and American plug. Brain went "huh?" 😀
@nobody-bt3iwnobod
@nobody-bt3iwnobod Ай бұрын
Nix mentioned 🙏
@klaernie
@klaernie Ай бұрын
Talos definitely would have been a quicker way of getting to a Kubernetes cluster. My firewall provides DHCP, which sets the hostname for each of my Talos nodes. This means I can use a single config for all nodes, only diverting controlplane and worker nodes. If you take a look at the quick start docs - yes, it is actually this easy. But kudos for going the long way, it builds experience ;)
@c0p0n
@c0p0n 8 күн бұрын
Great video! I would love to see a kube install of jellyfin with hardware acceleration. This is easy on raw-docker, but not so straightforward on kube.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 7 күн бұрын
I have it set up! If you join my discord and drop me a message I'll send you over my configuration.
@kenneencail
@kenneencail Ай бұрын
This is the most alt way Ive seem of setting up high availability. To to it from scratch like this seem overly complicated but fun
@bibekjha8129
@bibekjha8129 Ай бұрын
Loved the video after nixos anywhere I am lost but still saw the whole video at least I will sound smart when i will use the terms I learned here in front of my noobs friends. Hope to see many more videos in homelab series. ❤
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Let me know if there's anything I can break down easier and I'll do some more dedicated videos!
@mohammedhenni6478
@mohammedhenni6478 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! And bonus points for having the same laptop and keyboard as I do 👍
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
It's a great keyboard!
@lawrencejob
@lawrencejob 14 күн бұрын
Going to start calling it Kuberneddies from now on
@LampJustin
@LampJustin Ай бұрын
Pretty dope! But just some remarks: with Talos you'd have spend much less time setting up your cluster (I totally get why you had done this, but still maintenance is a lot better on Talos), also you should check out the piraeus storage operator, it is muuuuch better than longhorn in terms of draining nodes, speed and maintainability as It's using drbd kernel module under the hood. (Talos has an extension for the kmod btw). Still great setup, I'm pretty jealous. Maybe try out kubevirt and hosting some VMs;) but you'll probably want to use piraeus/drbd for the storage then 😅, Longhorn is just hella slow
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Definitely looking forward to trying out Talos in a future video! I'll be decommissioning my old cluster and using it for dedicated videos once I get everything migrated which should be end of this week! Kubevirt is also something I want to check out as well! So much fun k8s stuff to jump into.
@LampJustin
@LampJustin Ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy awesome! But really do try out Piraeus on that test cluster, it is much much faster and I am pretty confused why nobody is taking about it. Everyone's just using Longhorn and many complain about it's performance but still choose and use it
@obvionaoe
@obvionaoe Ай бұрын
@@LampJustin Longhorn has been a thing for longer than Piraeus, that's definitely the reason. Most people prefer stability of a known tool over faster performance or extra features, especially when running services with high SLOs
@LampJustin
@LampJustin Ай бұрын
@@obvionaoe while it's true that Piraeus is a younger project, the technology is not drbd is pretty dang old at this point and very much proven. Longhorn is known to have problems with lagging volumes that are out of sync, so slo is definitely worse. I also didn't mean for all people to talk about it, but I've seen no KZfaqr talk about Piraeus.
@eugenekostjuk7181
@eugenekostjuk7181 Ай бұрын
Just get a bunch of used optiplex with 10th gen intel for fraction of the cost. up-to 64GB ram. Can even upgrade to 2.5/10/25/40 GbE anytime.
@amtam05
@amtam05 3 күн бұрын
This video is like ASMR to me.
@MattJi
@MattJi Ай бұрын
i had a *fun time setting up pihole's recursive DNS server via docker on my NAS. in hindsight, recursive dns was a nice to have but not worth it for the extra container instability/troubleshooting during a reboot.
@lazzuuu21
@lazzuuu21 Ай бұрын
been into homelab for about a year. now wfh is never been the same
@lazzuuu21
@lazzuuu21 Ай бұрын
or even everywhere thanks to cloudflare tunnel
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
What do you use cloud flare tunnel for currently? I've been seeing some good things about it! Might try to find an excuse to add it to my homelab.
@DogeMultiverse
@DogeMultiverse Ай бұрын
what do you do for wfh?
@lazzuuu21
@lazzuuu21 Ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy I use it for ssh to my computer. So wherever I work I can just ssh to my computer and use my fast computer with tmux+neovim instead of 8GB laptop provided by my company lol
@lazzuuu21
@lazzuuu21 Ай бұрын
@@DogeMultiverse I make docker swarm cluster with my 2 server to replicate my office stacks (postresql, redis, timeseries db, prometheus, kafka, etc) and use them instead of try to run them all in my main working pc/laptop
@RSZA011
@RSZA011 29 күн бұрын
Man NixOS kicked my ass the first time I confidently decided to install it , had a small issue , no biggie ill just check the wiki ... 2 hours later and 30 tabs open I knew I was in over my head ! i will try again sometime though.
@andrewlalis
@andrewlalis 18 күн бұрын
I just use a basic server with SystemD, worked fine for years now.
@SeaDraGraphics
@SeaDraGraphics Ай бұрын
Awesome video. I do have a question: Why do you use Kustomize for a file that doesn't need any templating? Just use kubectl apply -f file.yaml instead of using kustomize and adding more complexity.
@adjbutler
@adjbutler 21 күн бұрын
NixOS is sooooooooo goooood!
@codeman99-dev
@codeman99-dev Ай бұрын
This is awesome. I also have own the Beelink EQ12. Really fantastic device. A thing to note is that you'll need at least a 6.6.x kernel to get the wireless interface(s) functioning. I wanted to use Ubuntu Server, but of course I purchased the device just before 24.04 dropped, so that meant more work. Instead I went with Pop! OS ... Definitely not ideal, but the machine is running pretty well. Next up, I would love to replicate what you've done here. We both need the rack-mount tray thing that "Techno Tim" used for his mini pc build. Though, he went with much more powerful Intel NUC machines.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Ohhh that's awesome I'm gonna check out the rack mount, currently I have both clusters in operation as I'm migrating and my tiny shelf is a mess. Good to know on the kernel as well! I'm pretty spoiled for ethernet runs so I forget to test out wifi capabilities!
@thepi
@thepi Ай бұрын
Great video, and a lot of cool ideas for me to now try over the next month or so. I setup a k3s "cluster" just this morning, the timing for this video could not be any more perfect. All I wanted was a postgres database for one of my side projects, so I just use an old rpi 3b that I had lying around and installed k3s on it just for fun. helmfile looks interesting though, I might give it a shot. I just made 5 different yaml configs to deploy postgres, followed a guide from digital ocean. A beelink eq12 cluster seems a little overkill for my use case, but I might add some more PIs to my cluster and then add kubernetes to my resume.
@fling97
@fling97 Ай бұрын
Another hardware to consider is the Odroid H3 or H4 mini boards. They can be more affordable depending on where you live (edit: spelling)
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Oh awesome! I'll add this to my backlog and take a look.
@hugodsa89
@hugodsa89 14 күн бұрын
I just want you to make actual in-depth courses, workshops and alike, to really push this sort of stuff forward. I'd be first on queue.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 12 күн бұрын
Soon! I promise. I'm looking for video editors currently so I can spend more time creating :)
@Dycell
@Dycell Ай бұрын
Nice video! It’s nice to see some alternative choices. You could also check out rancher and harvester. I’m currently building a new homelab with rancher, Traefik (feel the pain), cert-manager, longhorn and metallb.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
I'll check it out!
@Wanapold
@Wanapold 28 күн бұрын
Exactly what I was looking to do on my homelab (except I'm using debian/terraform/ansible, instead of Nix/helmfile). Two small things missing I think : `ingressClassName: "nginx-internal"` in `pihole.yaml`, and remembering to configure the router to use pihole as the default DNS. Otherwise, thanks for the base config!
@devchaudhary78
@devchaudhary78 5 күн бұрын
The last time I heard about home lab was from breaking bad
@motokokusanagi2675
@motokokusanagi2675 Ай бұрын
Great video! I know it's a bit off-topic, but I'd love to see a video of you showing how you setup your Hyprland, it looks so nice and clean at 5:00 😊
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Absolutely!
@GabrieleTurelli
@GabrieleTurelli Ай бұрын
Talos user here. If all you are interested in is k8s, Talos is a perfect set and (almost) forget solution (remember to update it!) I also run Talos on production clusters, I can vouch for the ease and stability.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Awesome! I'm really looking forward to giving Talos a go.
@etzbetz
@etzbetz 23 күн бұрын
I've been thinking about using nixos on the server side as well for a while. But I felt like it was more suited for clients. But after seeing this, I may should try it on the serverside as well..
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 23 күн бұрын
I've got a couple of plans for server side nixOS videos coming soon!
@mra2202
@mra2202 9 күн бұрын
Maybe try installing home assistant on this cluster.
@ronnietruman7296
@ronnietruman7296 Күн бұрын
I’m looking to do something similar but the n100 is not that adequate for running anything you throw at it. While capable, they are similar in performance to 8th gen laptop CPUs. N100 is perfect for a NAS or pfsense box but it’s a stretch for this application (depending on services hosted).
@_vr
@_vr Ай бұрын
I'd love to see how to get HTTPS in Kubernetes with local auto renewal. Like Kubernetes Cert-manager or something!
@cristian6402-t8y
@cristian6402-t8y 20 күн бұрын
You just got a new subscriber 👍
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 15 күн бұрын
Glad to have you on board!
@codingjake
@codingjake Ай бұрын
You should look into CUE and Timoni as a replacement for Helm. Very new projects but have tons of promise (and type safety + helm interop)
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy Ай бұрын
Adding both on to my backlog to take a look at! Thank you for the suggestions
@therealslimaddy
@therealslimaddy Ай бұрын
Isn't the point of high availability to have the nodes different locations (eg: having all nodes in one location is still a single point of failure), from what i see the benefit here is the replication of data into three different nodes, but a local DAS or NAS would have done the trick!
@M3MYS3LF1979
@M3MYS3LF1979 19 күн бұрын
Appreciate you documenting your homelab renovation! Any chance you have a public facing repo with some of the IaC shown here? ty!
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 15 күн бұрын
I should do in the description! At least I hope so.
@jean-paulroisin679
@jean-paulroisin679 Ай бұрын
Great video! Interested about your jellyfin setup
@tareqalsaleh2924
@tareqalsaleh2924 Ай бұрын
Great video, would love to see the next episode. I think I prefer Ubuntu server though
@mubashir1996
@mubashir1996 23 күн бұрын
Awesome video. Can you kindly explain your terminal setup? Especially what terminal based file explorer that was? I know about and use zen but your configuration was 👌
@stiljohny
@stiljohny 15 күн бұрын
Dude, you inspired me to get my Lab inorder :D Got two of those Belkins together with some HP Mini G3s I have One thing thought, Would you consider making a video abt NixOS? I am running MacOS with Nix installed ( dont know if I can do what you suggesting with nixOS anywhere ) Pretty decent lab you have there !
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! You can do nixos anywhere with macOS and nix! I have a couple of videos planned for nix! Going to start with one looking at Nix Darwin and then on nixos.
@jfmlima
@jfmlima 4 сағат бұрын
It'd be great if you add wireguard or any other VPN into the setup
@jakoolaboo
@jakoolaboo 3 күн бұрын
Please make a tutorial on home lab
@syrikii1312
@syrikii1312 9 күн бұрын
Hi, loved the video. I might be wrong, but I believe you have your cluster set up such that you have all three nodes as part of both the control plane and hosting worker pods. Is this correct? If so, are you not concerned about a possible container escape?
@mdfrick
@mdfrick Ай бұрын
Nice! I just added a Beelink SER5 to a RPi4 K3s cluster and was thinking I might want to add 1 more Beelink, thinking about the EQ!
@codeman99-dev
@codeman99-dev Ай бұрын
Personally, go EQ12. The new EQ13 is really cool, but they dropped the 2.5 Gbit Ethernet.
@vincentpham7445
@vincentpham7445 7 күн бұрын
Hmm. To be honest. 32 gb ram is bit overkill when deploying services on slow cpu. 20w is nice selling factor though. At the beginning, I often spend time thinking about how many nodes running and what are the specs? Overtime, I realize having a solid storage strategy is more important.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 6 күн бұрын
Absolutely! I make use of a NAS for more long term storage. Will be doing a follow up video on how that works as well
@TazzSmk
@TazzSmk Ай бұрын
neatly explained, nice setup! one question - aren't you creating potential bottleneck/inconvenience by using DRAM-less QLC SSD? compromising both performance and lifespan while not really saving much money or power draw?
@albinopepegas8391
@albinopepegas8391 Ай бұрын
You are lucky that you have all that shipping options available on amazon 😂😂
@vortexGamex
@vortexGamex 10 күн бұрын
An honest question: what's the advantage of having multi-nodes vs say using a tower pc for all services? I can only think of possibly redundancy and it being more modular. A larger tower pc also has the advantage of being able to use spinning hard disks, lower total idle power consumption, and is easier to administer. It also saves the headache from networking complexities.
@dreamsofautonomy
@dreamsofautonomy 9 күн бұрын
Redundancy is the big one. I also think power draw tends to be better on mini PCs as they use laptop hardware which is generally more efficient that desktop parts. As for spinning disks. I actually use a NAS for this which sort of acts as the desktop PC! Ill do a video on this soon and how it works. If you only have a tower PC available, then I'd recommend using that tbh, you do get the ability to use GPUs which is a benefit.
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