#tautulli — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tautulli, aggregated by home.social.
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@Codebender_Cate Take it one step at a time. For me it was starting with pictures. I installed Immich and moved my family off of Google/Apple for image sync. Then files was next for me, so I selected NextCloud. Then see what you have left going to big tech, rinse and repeat.
Also, I highly recommend an AI programming assistant like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex. It can greatly improve your IT abilities! In the last few months I have setup #Immich, #NextCloud, #Netbird, #UptimeKuma, #ForgeJo, #Authentik, #Pihole, #Beszel, #ActualBudget, #OpenWebUI, #Nfty, and #Tautulli.
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@Codebender_Cate Take it one step at a time. For me it was starting with pictures. I installed Immich and moved my family off of Google/Apple for image sync. Then files was next for me, so I selected NextCloud. Then see what you have left going to big tech, rinse and repeat.
Also, I highly recommend an AI programming assistant like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex. It can greatly improve your IT abilities! In the last few months I have setup #Immich, #NextCloud, #Netbird, #UptimeKuma, #ForgeJo, #Authentik, #Pihole, #Beszel, #ActualBudget, #OpenWebUI, #Nfty, and #Tautulli.
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@Codebender_Cate Take it one step at a time. For me it was starting with pictures. I installed Immich and moved my family off of Google/Apple for image sync. Then files was next for me, so I selected NextCloud. Then see what you have left going to big tech, rinse and repeat.
Also, I highly recommend an AI programming assistant like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex. It can greatly improve your IT abilities! In the last few months I have setup #Immich, #NextCloud, #Netbird, #UptimeKuma, #ForgeJo, #Authentik, #Pihole, #Beszel, #ActualBudget, #OpenWebUI, #Nfty, and #Tautulli.
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@Codebender_Cate Take it one step at a time. For me it was starting with pictures. I installed Immich and moved my family off of Google/Apple for image sync. Then files was next for me, so I selected NextCloud. Then see what you have left going to big tech, rinse and repeat.
Also, I highly recommend an AI programming assistant like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex. It can greatly improve your IT abilities! In the last few months I have setup #Immich, #NextCloud, #Netbird, #UptimeKuma, #ForgeJo, #Authentik, #Pihole, #Beszel, #ActualBudget, #OpenWebUI, #Nfty, and #Tautulli.
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@Codebender_Cate Take it one step at a time. For me it was starting with pictures. I installed Immich and moved my family off of Google/Apple for image sync. Then files was next for me, so I selected NextCloud. Then see what you have left going to big tech, rinse and repeat.
Also, I highly recommend an AI programming assistant like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex. It can greatly improve your IT abilities! In the last few months I have setup #Immich, #NextCloud, #Netbird, #UptimeKuma, #ForgeJo, #Authentik, #Pihole, #Beszel, #ActualBudget, #OpenWebUI, #Nfty, and #Tautulli.
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@[email protected] Nice. So essentially this is sort of #overseerr meets #tautulli kinda platform?
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I'm going to play along with #ShareYourHomelab and you should too! #homelab
Router:
HP EliteDesk 800 G2 SFF, Core i5-6500, 16GB RAM, 2x120GB SSD, Mellanox ConnectX-3 dual 10Gbps NIC running OPNsenseCore Switch:
Brocade ICX7250-48PWireless APs:
2x Ruckus R600 with Unleashed firmwareServer:
Quanta D51B-2U, dual E5-2660 v4, 384GB DDR4 ECC, onboard 10Gbps Intel NIC, 3x LSI SAS controller cards (2 internal, 1 external), 2x 120GB SSD boot volume, 2x EMC KTN-STL3 enclosures, 2x 1.6TB Intel P3605 PCIe NVMe (VM storage)Server Storage:
6x 10TB WD Red
4x 4TB WD Red
28x 8TB HGST SASI reserve the first 10 IPs in my /24 for direct static assignments. That's exclusively for #OPNsense, DNS, switches, and other core network infra. The next 30 are used for DHCP reservations for servers, services running on it, and permanent network devices.
DNS filtering is handled by AdGuard Home because it'll run natively via plugin on OPNsense. Local resolution is handled by Unbound. I was previously using BIND in place of Unbound, but the plugin for OPNsense doesn't implement all of the features I need.
The server runs #TrueNASCore on bare metal. Everything else on it is in #bhyve VMs. This includes #Plex, #Docker, #HomeAssistant, and most recently #SecurityOnion (still in progress!).
Plex runs in its own VM. Supporting services are on the Docker VM. This includes #Jackett, #Sonarr, #Radarr, #Deluge with VPN, #Headphones, #Tautulli, and #Bazarr. The CPUs are powerful enough that I don't even consider GPU transcoding. I'm also on 1Gbps upstream so I tell everyone to Direct Play when possible.
Home Assistant runs on its own VM. I have a #Hubitat to provide a bridge to ZigBee and Zwave devices in the house. Right now that's primarily door sensors which trigger a chime sound on the Google Home Mini, but I'm also adding motion/light sensors and some switches to automatically turn off lights upstairs because my kids are terrible at it.
I have a second server for backups. It's a Supermicro 2U box with 12x 10TB HGST SAS drives, dual E5-2630L, 64GB DDR3 ECC. I'm in the process of getting WireGuard setup so I can move it offsite. It currently pulls data from the primary box nightly.
I have all user systems on the network backing up to the server nightly using Veeam. Those backups get cloned to the backup server. Veeam is free for home users and does a great job at endpoint backups.
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I'm going to play along with #ShareYourHomelab and you should too! #homelab
Router:
HP EliteDesk 800 G2 SFF, Core i5-6500, 16GB RAM, 2x120GB SSD, Mellanox ConnectX-3 dual 10Gbps NIC running OPNsenseCore Switch:
Brocade ICX7250-48PWireless APs:
2x Ruckus R600 with Unleashed firmwareServer:
Quanta D51B-2U, dual E5-2660 v4, 384GB DDR4 ECC, onboard 10Gbps Intel NIC, 3x LSI SAS controller cards (2 internal, 1 external), 2x 120GB SSD boot volume, 2x EMC KTN-STL3 enclosures, 2x 1.6TB Intel P3605 PCIe NVMe (VM storage)Server Storage:
6x 10TB WD Red
4x 4TB WD Red
28x 8TB HGST SASI reserve the first 10 IPs in my /24 for direct static assignments. That's exclusively for #OPNsense, DNS, switches, and other core network infra. The next 30 are used for DHCP reservations for servers, services running on it, and permanent network devices.
DNS filtering is handled by AdGuard Home because it'll run natively via plugin on OPNsense. Local resolution is handled by Unbound. I was previously using BIND in place of Unbound, but the plugin for OPNsense doesn't implement all of the features I need.
The server runs #TrueNASCore on bare metal. Everything else on it is in #bhyve VMs. This includes #Plex, #Docker, #HomeAssistant, and most recently #SecurityOnion (still in progress!).
Plex runs in its own VM. Supporting services are on the Docker VM. This includes #Jackett, #Sonarr, #Radarr, #Deluge with VPN, #Headphones, #Tautulli, and #Bazarr. The CPUs are powerful enough that I don't even consider GPU transcoding. I'm also on 1Gbps upstream so I tell everyone to Direct Play when possible.
Home Assistant runs on its own VM. I have a #Hubitat to provide a bridge to ZigBee and Zwave devices in the house. Right now that's primarily door sensors which trigger a chime sound on the Google Home Mini, but I'm also adding motion/light sensors and some switches to automatically turn off lights upstairs because my kids are terrible at it.
I have a second server for backups. It's a Supermicro 2U box with 12x 10TB HGST SAS drives, dual E5-2630L, 64GB DDR3 ECC. I'm in the process of getting WireGuard setup so I can move it offsite. It currently pulls data from the primary box nightly.
I have all user systems on the network backing up to the server nightly using Veeam. Those backups get cloned to the backup server. Veeam is free for home users and does a great job at endpoint backups.
-
I'm going to play along with #ShareYourHomelab and you should too! #homelab
Router:
HP EliteDesk 800 G2 SFF, Core i5-6500, 16GB RAM, 2x120GB SSD, Mellanox ConnectX-3 dual 10Gbps NIC running OPNsenseCore Switch:
Brocade ICX7250-48PWireless APs:
2x Ruckus R600 with Unleashed firmwareServer:
Quanta D51B-2U, dual E5-2660 v4, 384GB DDR4 ECC, onboard 10Gbps Intel NIC, 3x LSI SAS controller cards (2 internal, 1 external), 2x 120GB SSD boot volume, 2x EMC KTN-STL3 enclosures, 2x 1.6TB Intel P3605 PCIe NVMe (VM storage)Server Storage:
6x 10TB WD Red
4x 4TB WD Red
28x 8TB HGST SASI reserve the first 10 IPs in my /24 for direct static assignments. That's exclusively for #OPNsense, DNS, switches, and other core network infra. The next 30 are used for DHCP reservations for servers, services running on it, and permanent network devices.
DNS filtering is handled by AdGuard Home because it'll run natively via plugin on OPNsense. Local resolution is handled by Unbound. I was previously using BIND in place of Unbound, but the plugin for OPNsense doesn't implement all of the features I need.
The server runs #TrueNASCore on bare metal. Everything else on it is in #bhyve VMs. This includes #Plex, #Docker, #HomeAssistant, and most recently #SecurityOnion (still in progress!).
Plex runs in its own VM. Supporting services are on the Docker VM. This includes #Jackett, #Sonarr, #Radarr, #Deluge with VPN, #Headphones, #Tautulli, and #Bazarr. The CPUs are powerful enough that I don't even consider GPU transcoding. I'm also on 1Gbps upstream so I tell everyone to Direct Play when possible.
Home Assistant runs on its own VM. I have a #Hubitat to provide a bridge to ZigBee and Zwave devices in the house. Right now that's primarily door sensors which trigger a chime sound on the Google Home Mini, but I'm also adding motion/light sensors and some switches to automatically turn off lights upstairs because my kids are terrible at it.
I have a second server for backups. It's a Supermicro 2U box with 12x 10TB HGST SAS drives, dual E5-2630L, 64GB DDR3 ECC. I'm in the process of getting WireGuard setup so I can move it offsite. It currently pulls data from the primary box nightly.
I have all user systems on the network backing up to the server nightly using Veeam. Those backups get cloned to the backup server. Veeam is free for home users and does a great job at endpoint backups.
-
I'm going to play along with #ShareYourHomelab and you should too! #homelab
Router:
HP EliteDesk 800 G2 SFF, Core i5-6500, 16GB RAM, 2x120GB SSD, Mellanox ConnectX-3 dual 10Gbps NIC running OPNsenseCore Switch:
Brocade ICX7250-48PWireless APs:
2x Ruckus R600 with Unleashed firmwareServer:
Quanta D51B-2U, dual E5-2660 v4, 384GB DDR4 ECC, onboard 10Gbps Intel NIC, 3x LSI SAS controller cards (2 internal, 1 external), 2x 120GB SSD boot volume, 2x EMC KTN-STL3 enclosures, 2x 1.6TB Intel P3605 PCIe NVMe (VM storage)Server Storage:
6x 10TB WD Red
4x 4TB WD Red
28x 8TB HGST SASI reserve the first 10 IPs in my /24 for direct static assignments. That's exclusively for #OPNsense, DNS, switches, and other core network infra. The next 30 are used for DHCP reservations for servers, services running on it, and permanent network devices.
DNS filtering is handled by AdGuard Home because it'll run natively via plugin on OPNsense. Local resolution is handled by Unbound. I was previously using BIND in place of Unbound, but the plugin for OPNsense doesn't implement all of the features I need.
The server runs #TrueNASCore on bare metal. Everything else on it is in #bhyve VMs. This includes #Plex, #Docker, #HomeAssistant, and most recently #SecurityOnion (still in progress!).
Plex runs in its own VM. Supporting services are on the Docker VM. This includes #Jackett, #Sonarr, #Radarr, #Deluge with VPN, #Headphones, #Tautulli, and #Bazarr. The CPUs are powerful enough that I don't even consider GPU transcoding. I'm also on 1Gbps upstream so I tell everyone to Direct Play when possible.
Home Assistant runs on its own VM. I have a #Hubitat to provide a bridge to ZigBee and Zwave devices in the house. Right now that's primarily door sensors which trigger a chime sound on the Google Home Mini, but I'm also adding motion/light sensors and some switches to automatically turn off lights upstairs because my kids are terrible at it.
I have a second server for backups. It's a Supermicro 2U box with 12x 10TB HGST SAS drives, dual E5-2630L, 64GB DDR3 ECC. I'm in the process of getting WireGuard setup so I can move it offsite. It currently pulls data from the primary box nightly.
I have all user systems on the network backing up to the server nightly using Veeam. Those backups get cloned to the backup server. Veeam is free for home users and does a great job at endpoint backups.
-
I'm going to play along with #ShareYourHomelab and you should too! #homelab
Router:
HP EliteDesk 800 G2 SFF, Core i5-6500, 16GB RAM, 2x120GB SSD, Mellanox ConnectX-3 dual 10Gbps NIC running OPNsenseCore Switch:
Brocade ICX7250-48PWireless APs:
2x Ruckus R600 with Unleashed firmwareServer:
Quanta D51B-2U, dual E5-2660 v4, 384GB DDR4 ECC, onboard 10Gbps Intel NIC, 3x LSI SAS controller cards (2 internal, 1 external), 2x 120GB SSD boot volume, 2x EMC KTN-STL3 enclosures, 2x 1.6TB Intel P3605 PCIe NVMe (VM storage)Server Storage:
6x 10TB WD Red
4x 4TB WD Red
28x 8TB HGST SASI reserve the first 10 IPs in my /24 for direct static assignments. That's exclusively for #OPNsense, DNS, switches, and other core network infra. The next 30 are used for DHCP reservations for servers, services running on it, and permanent network devices.
DNS filtering is handled by AdGuard Home because it'll run natively via plugin on OPNsense. Local resolution is handled by Unbound. I was previously using BIND in place of Unbound, but the plugin for OPNsense doesn't implement all of the features I need.
The server runs #TrueNASCore on bare metal. Everything else on it is in #bhyve VMs. This includes #Plex, #Docker, #HomeAssistant, and most recently #SecurityOnion (still in progress!).
Plex runs in its own VM. Supporting services are on the Docker VM. This includes #Jackett, #Sonarr, #Radarr, #Deluge with VPN, #Headphones, #Tautulli, and #Bazarr. The CPUs are powerful enough that I don't even consider GPU transcoding. I'm also on 1Gbps upstream so I tell everyone to Direct Play when possible.
Home Assistant runs on its own VM. I have a #Hubitat to provide a bridge to ZigBee and Zwave devices in the house. Right now that's primarily door sensors which trigger a chime sound on the Google Home Mini, but I'm also adding motion/light sensors and some switches to automatically turn off lights upstairs because my kids are terrible at it.
I have a second server for backups. It's a Supermicro 2U box with 12x 10TB HGST SAS drives, dual E5-2630L, 64GB DDR3 ECC. I'm in the process of getting WireGuard setup so I can move it offsite. It currently pulls data from the primary box nightly.
I have all user systems on the network backing up to the server nightly using Veeam. Those backups get cloned to the backup server. Veeam is free for home users and does a great job at endpoint backups.