OK, I'm going down the TrueNAS route and it's all you fault.

I think it's escalating into a beefy home server. I've been looking at the System76 lineup.

Any recommendations?

Will be NAS, Node, Plex, etc. Might put a GPU in there to play with local LLMs.

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I think diy with AMD and ECC ram is the way to go.

Install proxmox as hypervisor, run truenas in a vm, although this can be pretty complicated and annoying, might be simpler to just get a dedicated device with truenas running bare metal

Truenas has this annoying thing where the host reserves a GPU, so without integrated graphics you can't actually pass it to your Plex instance, kinda fail

What does truenas need the GPU for?

It doesn't need it but the software blocks you, it's so stupid πŸ˜”, apparently no fix that I could find

I went this route with TrueNAS running in a Proxmox VM and the HBA card with the entire array of spinning disks passed thru to TrueNAS. I chose Intel because of its video transcoding capabilities (media server is one of my use cases). 70 different Docker containers running including my LN node and Nostr relays. I also roll without ECC RAM because I’m a fucking maniac. But the system is rock solid and was super rewarding to cobble together.

Just finish installing most of the apps I want on my new DIY TrueNAS machine that should replace a 9 year old Synology. It's really great once you passed the learning curve.

Still have to find a good automated backups scheme, I had to make compromise here ad it's not possible to fully encrypt the backups with rsync but I'm almost there.

However I keep my Bitcoin node on a separate machine, I don't feel confident running all media apps togheter with Bitcoin.

I'm using encrypted backups with rsync and backblaze πŸ€”

You mean data are encrypted by TrueNAS before being sent to Backblaze with rsync? Without sitting as an encrypted copy locally, which would double space needed.

I want to do this if possible but destination will be my old Synology that will be moved to another location later on and linked over a Wireguard tunnel. As I trust the place where the backup NAS will be, it's more of an extra protection than necessary.

It does take up more space on the remote server, and is encrypted on your device before hitting backblaze.

Any li:k explaining what you did?