That's truly impressive! Even though we're a startup of about 30 people with our own server room, our setup pales in comparison to yours. I'm going to take some time to seriously study how you've done it.
Ha, I came here to comment that it can’t possibly be as good as this[1] homelab that I saw on Reddit recently…then I realized it’s the same guy. Seriously incredible.
It sounds like a bunch of little pet projects that could be run on a very small cluster. I think he just has a lot of money to burn on what is essentially a curiosity, where the scale of the system necessitates all of the complexity in it… but it doesn’t actually DO anything of importance besides run. It’s not like he had workloads and needed a setup of that scale. The setup IS the workload.
It’s like the marble machine. The build is for the build’s sake.
I've seen many parallels to this in many domains, it's a "home" version of serious commercial setups that serves to keep in touch with bleeding edge setups, to experiment with the common place Vs the off beat and so on.
If that is what this is then it doesn't need much purpose besides that alone.
Chemists, mechanical engineers, and many other similar types have been known to have "home labs" that are mini commercial grade setups similar to what they work with or routinely setup | tear down.
I use Proxmox, but I feel ambivalent about it. If you are debating between ESXi, Proxmox, or Hyper-V, I would probably suggest Proxmox.
However, my feeling is that with the rise of containers, VMs are less relevant, and so I want a compute server OS that is more container forward (while still supporting VMs).
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 47.7 ms ] threadAnyway, some more info here:
[1]: https://www.reddit.com/r/homelab/comments/1bn3p75/comment/kw...
https://youtu.be/OSGLrzSuCtM
It sounds like a bunch of little pet projects that could be run on a very small cluster. I think he just has a lot of money to burn on what is essentially a curiosity, where the scale of the system necessitates all of the complexity in it… but it doesn’t actually DO anything of importance besides run. It’s not like he had workloads and needed a setup of that scale. The setup IS the workload.
It’s like the marble machine. The build is for the build’s sake.
There's gotta be at least a few dozen of these crazy homelabs out there, is anyone writing software specifically targeting them?
Maybe the distributed computing projects if those are still a thing?
Maybe not to you, but people will find things fun that others don't.
UnRaid is but one of many homelab OS choices.
If that is what this is then it doesn't need much purpose besides that alone.
Chemists, mechanical engineers, and many other similar types have been known to have "home labs" that are mini commercial grade setups similar to what they work with or routinely setup | tear down.
However, my feeling is that with the rise of containers, VMs are less relevant, and so I want a compute server OS that is more container forward (while still supporting VMs).
I was not prepared to hear him say the UPS was "only outputting 3.74 kilowatts because not a lot of stuff is running".
What struck me as slightly ironic were the two converted desktop systems in the "applications" rack appeared to have Noctua fans.