With all this migration i’ve been inspired to start self hosting some services.

I am looking for a mini pc to ideally run linux and host a media server with radarr and sonarr, pihole and some other stuff as i start getting more into self hosting.

Any recommendations / experiences that you can give? Or some general guidelines on what i should look for or things to avoid.

Thank you!!

  • animist@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I use a headless Raspberry Pi 4 connected via USB to an external 2TB SSD and host

    • Nextcloud
    • Pihole w/Unbound
    • Transmission
    • Jellyfin
    • Webmin
    • Apache webserver with a personal static webpage
    • Soon to host my own Lemmy instance
    • khi@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      A colleague at work said he was running a Raspberry Pi but in the end had to move to a more powerful system because he needed more power. AFAIK he’s use case is lighter than what i plan so i thought it wasn’t a viable solution. What you describe sounds very nice, especially because of the price of the Pi.

      Would love to hear more people’s experiences with this setup.

  • ComMcNeil@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I got myself a used/refurbished Lenovo ThinkCentre M910q Tiny, which works pretty well. Put in more ram and bigger storage and it is pretty beefy now as well as silent.

  • Getting6409@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve had mostly good luck with lower end NUCs. I say mostly because of 3, one died a hard and abrupt death after 2 years; but the other 2 have been fine going on 2 years now. The only problem with NUCs in general is they tend to be over priced. If you can find them on sale they are totally worth it. As others have pointed out, you should have a plan for more storage. Personally I’ve found a good usb hub and some external disks work great for what I do. As to why I like them: 1) form factor, low profile cube, 2) they happily run headless, 3) hardware seems to be of decent quality (ignoring my i3 box that never turned back on after a reboot), 4) most models have enough I/O to fit your needs.

  • okawari@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I have a big enough house to be able to put this machine somewhere out of the way but there are plenty of cheap server gear on classifieds. I paid ish 300 euros for a 32 core machine with 40gb ram. I can host all the things without it even breaking a sweat.

    Probably uses a lot more electricity, but I haven’t really noticed it on my power bill

  • xwToRdD3YHv8Up@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    You can also use hosts like linode with $100 credits to try out self hosting with no investment at all. If you need a coupon code, let me know.

  • fuzz@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Another vote for Asrock Deskmini. I’ve had an A300 going for a while now. It started off just doing a few things on Docker, it’s now been repurposed as a Proxmox host. The nvme plus 2x 2.5” sata is very useful for storage options, and you can put some reasonable desktop CPUs in - subject to cooling, of which you can get a very low profile replacement if you need to. As there’s no video on the motherboard and no space to fit a PCIe (let alone the video card) you are restricted to CPUs with onboard video, which I think is more of a restraint for the AMD version than the intel, but even so there are enough options in the AMD lineup if you need firepower.

  • Johnny 5@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I bought a Morefine N100 recently, it’s a great device. Support 1 NVMe and 1 SSD 2.5, you can use both combined in RAID and even backup options in the cloud or on an external disk through the USB3.0 ports.

    Quicksync for Plex/tdarr works great on the latest version of Debian Bookworm.

  • Fermiverse@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I just built a Server using J5040 board. With 16gb ram (yes it works) a 500gb m.2 as system , 2x4tb ironwolf as ZFS mirror pool, 350 W power supply all in the node 304 fractal case for 550 euro.

    Runs proxmox as hypervisor for VM or Container. As example LXC container for motioneye and syncthing

  • 8ender@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you just want something small and fun to play with Linux and containers try looking for used Chromeboxes. Just bear in mind that going down the *arr app rabbit hole usually means building something with more storage.