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First time software set up help

Hi everyone, I am trying to repurpose a Ryzen 1700 system for a home server, but not exactly sure what the best solution for my needs is, and how to find additional resources.

More context, I have 4 8th hdds (wd blue drives; would’ve preferred reds but, alas). I intended to run these in raid10, but open to other ideas also. These are connected via sata directly to Mobo. I’d like to selfhost a nice NAS stack, to include: my own office 365 / google docs thing, file storage, and storage and playback of music and video files. I’d like to run jellyfin and a myriad of ‘arr things. Please send any and all suggestions. Should all of these run on a single virtual machine?

Alongside this, probably in a separate virtual machine, I’d like to run a home assistant instance with some mild transcoding (I think) going on in regards to some cameras I have around the house.

I also think I’d run tail scale to vpn back in?

What I’ve researched so far is proxmox and casaos (lightly). Casaos is alluring mostly because it seems like an easy on ramp, with lots of visual configuration. I enjoy CLI config, but visual configs are easier to discover settings and options that might not occur to me. I’d ideally favor stability here, as I like to tinker, but don’t have a huge amount of time for it.

Am I on the right track with all this? Any pitfalls? Any must have self hosted software I should be sure to include? Should I set up the storage pool in proxmox first as raid10? Any general advice? Words of encouragement? I’ll take it all.

Apologies if this is the wrong forum — if so, please feel free to delete (and direct me hopefully to a more appropriate locale).

Edit: forgot to mention, system also has a slower ssd boot drive, and a 1070 I plan to pass thru as needed.

9 comments
  • I think you'll love Proxmox. I have a blast with it, however, I am not the selfhost guru, so you may want to wait for someone more authoritative than I. As far as everything running on one container, personally I like to split anything AI off to it's own VM. That way I can toggle it on or off when needed and it's not just eating up ram for no good reason.

    I have played with CasaOS. Pretty nice package, especially if you are just getting your feet wet, or just want to be able to quickly spin up containers. In this category there is also Umbrel, RunTipi, or Cosmos Server, to name a few. They all have their pros/cons.

    Tailscale rocks! Simply put. It's super easy to set up and you can tunnel a crap load of data through it.

    As far as 'must have' software, Searxng gets a huge workout on a daily basis for me. If you like tinkering/building work flows, N8N, LangFlow, and Flowise get steady use on my network. I can't speak to the 'arr stack' and I have all the media I could ever want, and I'm not much of a movie watcher, but sky's the limit based on what you want to do with your server. When you have Proxmox up and running, be sure to check out the Proxmox Helper Scripts. Lots of goodies there.

    Have fun bro.

  • I would make the case for proxmox on the machine so you can divvy up the hardware as you see fit— but also setup the hard drives as a zfs1 pool (1 redundancy failure allowed). This way you can make multiple isolated machines or use LXC containers directly for apps, services, etc. while benefiting from ZFS’s excellent performance and reliability. I would say that TrueNAS Scale has been a bit of a letdown for me because it feels bloated, easy to make mistakes with complicated setups, and I have less control over the hardware. I don’t like how updates have fully broken apps. That said it is a reliable ZFS wrapper with more bells and whistles in the UI over what proxmox offers— caveat being that both can do everything if you want to take the time to learn ZFS commands.

    There is also the TrueNAS based alternative HexOS that is more beginner friendly for just getting a nice NAS setup fast while still supporting apps / containers.

9 comments