brightside Posted November 29, 2018 Share Posted November 29, 2018 (edited) I've begun my journey into unRAID and wanted to document my progress and learning. I have used Windows/MacOS over the years but haven't really touch linux. My previous server was an i5-760 with 8GB RAM and some random drives thrown added each time I ran out of space. No backup, no redundancy. New build consists of the following: Case: Fractal Design R5 Motherboard: MSI Arctic Mortar B350 CPU: Ryzen 5 2400G CPU Cooler: Stock zen cooler RAM: Crucial 2133Mhz DDR4 24GB (3x8GB) PSU: Corsair 650W Modular SAS Card: lsi 9211-8i flashed to IT mode Cache Pool: 2 x 250GB Samsung 860 Evo in Raid 0 Parity Drive: 8TB Seagate Ironwolf Data Drives: 8TB Seagate Ironwolf 4TB Seagate Ironwolf 4TB Seagate Ironwolf 2TB WD Drive (with over 5500 hours uptime) 2TB WD Drive (with over 5500 hours uptime) Array Size: 20TB Current Usage: 6.8TB Pictures: to be uploaded Docker Containers: Plex Tuatulli Ombi Sabnzbd Sonarr Radarr delugevpn (with Sonarr and Radarr pointing to the PIA proxy) LazyLibrarian calibre rdp Krusader Plugins: to be updated Things to be done: Get Ombi to work correctly via app. Can't work it out. have posted in the support thread Would love to get lazylibrarian working but it just doesn't seem to find books Learn other new things. Still debating whether I run pfsense in a VM or a seperate box Need to purchase a UPS (unsure of which one) Post will be updated tonight when I get home from work... Edited November 30, 2018 by brightside Quote Link to comment
brightside Posted November 29, 2018 Author Share Posted November 29, 2018 Reserved... Quote Link to comment
Vr2Io Posted November 29, 2018 Share Posted November 29, 2018 How this board connect 8 SATA device ? My 2nd Ryzen build will available soon, also use 2400G, but not for Unraid. Quote Link to comment
hitman2158 Posted November 29, 2018 Share Posted November 29, 2018 5 hours ago, Benson said: How this board connect 8 SATA device ? I think he has to install a separate sata controller Quote Link to comment
binhex Posted November 29, 2018 Share Posted November 29, 2018 My vote is physical box for pfsense, imho I think key infrastructure should always be sperate, but other people will probably disagree.Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted November 29, 2018 Share Posted November 29, 2018 1 hour ago, binhex said: My vote is physical box for pfsense, imho I think key infrastructure should always be sperate, but other people will probably disagree. Agree, to some extent. I have an older box with pfsense loaded and configured that I can boot if my VM doesn't. If everything with the VM is working properly, I get the advantage of using already powered hardware, and a much faster CPU with more RAM. If the VM is problematic, the transition is seamless save for more power consumed and download speeds suffer. In an ideal world I guess I would update my pfsense hardware, but that costs $$$ and the VM only costs time to set it up. Quote Link to comment
brightside Posted November 30, 2018 Author Share Posted November 30, 2018 10 hours ago, hitman2158 said: I think he has to install a separate sata controller Correct. Forgot to add that into original post. Now edited. lsi 9211-8i with 2 x SATA breakout cables. Quote Link to comment
brightside Posted November 30, 2018 Author Share Posted November 30, 2018 6 hours ago, binhex said: My vote is physical box for pfsense, imho I think key infrastructure should always be sperate, but other people will probably disagree. Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk This is what i'm more leaning towards. Simply for the fact that if I need to take the server offline (upgrade drives, install new parts etc.) then i'm taking the internet down. If a part fails and the server is down for a few days then i have to reconfigure the network to keep the internet up. Quote Link to comment
binhex Posted November 30, 2018 Share Posted November 30, 2018 (edited) 5 hours ago, brightside said: This is what i'm more leaning towards. Simply for the fact that if I need to take the server offline (upgrade drives, install new parts etc.) then i'm taking the internet down. If a part fails and the server is down for a few days then i have to reconfigure the network to keep the internet up. Yes that's my reasoning too I don't want everything to stop working just because I need to do some maintenance on my unraid server. As for Jonathan well he is obviously far too rich and can afford to buy hardware and run a VM . one question for you seriously though how do you manage to keep the configuration of pfsense in sync between your hardware instance and your VM? Manual exports and imports perhaps also what happens if you needed to cut over to your hardware box won't you then have to deal with DHCP leases and options specified for DNS etc and reconfigure each device or at least reboot each device in order to pick up a new lease FWIW i have a Qotom Q355G4 5300U NO WiFi and its really awesome, runs silent (fanless), CPU usage for me sits around 5% to 20%, so lots of head room (can handle vpn tunnel at gigabit speeds), and memory usage is also very low, i put it in 45 days ago and its not dropped my connection once, i love it. Edited November 30, 2018 by binhex Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted November 30, 2018 Share Posted November 30, 2018 3 hours ago, binhex said: As for Jonathan well he is obviously far too rich and can afford to buy hardware and run a VM . one question for you seriously though how do you manage to keep the configuration of pfsense in sync between your hardware instance and your VM? Manual exports and imports perhaps Heh. I am using an OLD spare machine as my backup pfsense box. Since the DHCP info was migrated from the hardware to the VM, I just make sure when I add a new device I fire up the old hardware and make the same changes. I've never had any issues, since the IP's are defined as static DHCP. The guest network drops everyone, but who cares. The only issue I originally had was a poorly defined gateway detection rule in my unifi wireless config. The stoopid access points would turn off their SSID's if the internet was down, which meant I had to boot up a wired box with a static IP, or find one that had a valid DHCP lease to manage / troubleshoot the network if the internet gateway dropped. I have since fixed that by defining the watched IP to be my unraid box running the unifi docker, that way the access points are up even if my cable modem has a heart attack. 3 hours ago, binhex said: FWIW i have a Qotom Q355G4 5300U NO WiFi and its really awesome If I could afford that, I wouldn't have to set up a VM to get decent VPN throughput. Quote Link to comment
binhex Posted November 30, 2018 Share Posted November 30, 2018 Ok if you are reusing old hardware then I let you off Jonathan the qotom box I have though really wasnt too much, I think I paid £230 all in, pretty reasonable in my opinion.Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment
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