Proxmox, Debian containers.
Self-Hosted Main
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We welcome posts that include suggestions for good self-hosted alternatives to popular online services, how they are better, or how they give back control of your data. Also include hints and tips for less technical readers.
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Home serVER? Like ONE? 😅
Fedora Kinoite + podman
unRAID is fantastic. I used to use it as a monolith server, now it acts as my NAS.
I currently run a Kubernetes cluster on a handful of Ubuntu server nodes.
I really wanted to self host so I wrote my own OS, from scratch.
I've been on Unraid for years now with no complaints, much better then all the other NAS platforms. The docker app catalog is great. I also run a number of VMs on it including GPU pass through.
I use Debian stable just because I'm so familiar with Linux
I use a mix of truenas, debian, and proxmox
Almalinux period. Use smb for fileshares, rsync for backups and docker for everything else.
Harvester HCI
VMware on one, runs Ubuntu (and then docker) and various appliances. Xpenology on the other. Xpenology also runs Docker for more OOTB containerized apps.
I tried Unraid - left due to annoyance of losing server function when I had to take drive arrays down and only scrubbing on demand
Went to True Nas scale for the promise of ZFS and liked it, but had issues with the interface and getting GPU passthrough to containers was impossible.
Ended up ditching my large server case (still have it - anyone need a large 12 drive 3U case with a big threadripper and bunch of ram - hit me up) and switched to a NUC running ubuntu with portainer managing my dockers on it and all my data stored on a Synology NAS.
Arch Linux for my primary server. Raspbian for my SBCs.
Proxmox cluster for containers,alerts.etc
Openmediavault for my NAS
ESXi 8 with ISCSI shared storage. Love it.
Used Unraid for many years and moved to TrueNAS Scale, mainly due to lack of raid performance and bitrot.
Really happy with TrueNAS Scale and specially K8s.
I use Fedora.
Why not Promox or unraid or any of those? Because I didn't see a personal benefit to it over Linux+libvirt+qemu (I'm sure there is a benefit, I just don't care enough to find out)
Why not Arch/Debian/Ubuntu/etc? Because I partially use it as a way to learn or practice things from work and I want to stick as close to RHEL as possible.
Anything that can run docker works for me.
FreeBSD with its jails
Clean Debian + Docker w/ portainer, without installing anything extra on it. SOLID.
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Device support is great for older enterprise stuff
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Stable as it goes.
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Easy to find solution for problems you may come across due high userbase.
Currently running 1 server. Ubuntu, with docker because I'm not doing a ton, but I don't want to have to take down my pi-hole if I need to reboot jellyfin. etc.
VMware esxi. The only one I tried, and it works amazing.
Same here. A bunch of Ubuntu/docker and windows VMs running on one host, it’s great.
ESXi here too, on consumer hardware.
Ubuntu Server for Docker hosts.
TrueNAS for.. NAS.
All on one server.
RHEL 9 for all my servers home and abroad. I have a few vms that run with kvm and I use docker for everything else that I can
If you want a beautiful front end for docker containers
CasaOS/ZimaOS Cosmos-server Unbrel
Otherwise
- proxmox
- truenas
- unraid
Proxmox, truenas
Yup. Proxmox as OS and truenas as a VM + passtrough disks
My setup got too big, so im running proxmox and truenas bare metal. But passthrough is also a good option!
thats the best option, if you got the hardware for that ;)
I use TrueNAS, mainly because I wanted a solid storage solution. I don't really need many VMs, so I'm happy to run jails for stuff I need.
I also run a small RPi4 server with a few docker containers (a secondary Syncthing server, TVHeadend server, etc).
If I had a need for VMs, I'd run Proxmox (as I have some experience with it).
Ubuntu server, some bash scripts, and a docker install. KISS
Ubuntu LTS server. I chose it because it's got good support both in community and enterprise support. Also it's pretty simple to use and almost forgot it's got zfs built in.
If you’re looking for a NAS and don’t want to invest on all disks right now, unraid. Otherwise truenas
I don't have much of a homeserver, its more of an experiment - but I have Fedora IoT as hypervisor OS running a Open Media Vault guest and another Fedora IoT VM for container services.
I'm a big fan of Fedora's Ostree setup, and have used Silverblue on the desktop for a while now, so IoT makes a lot of sense for me.
Denian stable, openSUSE Leap
Yup, Debian is stable and rock solid for years