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WFloyd@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Fully self-hosted password manager optionsEnglish10·1 month agoAgree with others, Vaultwarden is probably your best bet. I’ve found the default app to be a little flaky, but ended up using Keyguard, which I’ve found really good.
I used to use Keypass+Syncthing, but found sync conflicts too often (due to Syncthing support for Android), hence the switch.
WFloyd@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•CIA deputy director’s son killed while fighting for Russia in Ukraine, investigation claimsEnglish161·1 month agoCompletely aside from what he was doing in Russia, he gives me the same vibe as Ché Cook from The OC.
Anything USB connected more likely to be flaky, but a good enterprise disk shelf and a HBA card would be rock solid (just noisy…)
Unfortunately my solution when I did a big data migration was to buy more (cheap) storage lol. Ultimately it was a cost vs. time/stress tradeoff.
Physical space is actually a huge issue
Ah then I’d recommend keep the existing machine as the server (it sounds like it’s serving you well hardware wise), and get a SFF machine for regular desktop use, be that a new build or a used office machine. The trick will be in migrating the server to Linux, and without endangering your data in the process.
Examples of some of the deals I’ve personally gotten (ymmv, some were auctions):
- 5 x 3.84TB SAS SSDs
- $521.54 total (stunning deal, I got lucky)
- $104.31/drive
- $27.16/TB
- 5 x 960GB SAS SSDs
- $165.17 total
- $33.03/drive
- $34.41/TB
- 7 x 12TB Toshiba SAS HDDs
- $427.31 total
- $61.04/drive
- $5.09/TB
- 2 x 8TB Seagate SAS HDDs
- $49.99 total
- $25/drive
- $3.13/TB
- 2 x KTN-STL3 JBODs each including 15x3TB SAS HDDs
- $532.73 total
- $266.37/shelf
- $17.76/drive bay+drive
- $5.92/TB not including value of JBODs (~$150/each without drives)
- 5 x 3.84TB SAS SSDs
In short, I’d recommend option B/C, where you buy used enterprise grade equipment, learn to run Linux, and build out that way. I can’t overstate just how good a deal can be had on eBay, even from reputable sellers. This goes for everything, from the computer itself, to disk shelves, to HDDs and SSDs. Plus you’re reducing on e-waste! Used HDDs are a great deal if you buy enough to run redundancy (RAID 6 or equivalent), because the seller will often include a warranty (up to 5 years!). I’ve only had a handful of drive failures and 0 issues with warranty refund/exchanges.
You’re running roughly the same services as I do (though a bit more storage), so if it means anything, I’ve ended up using the following (all purchased used)
spoiler
- HP Z440 Workstation (upgraded over time)
- CPU: Intel Xeon E5-2698 V4 (20 core)
- RAM: 128GB DDR4 2133MT/s
- GPU: Intel Arc A380
- Storage: Boot SSD + HBA card for bulk storage
- 2 x Dell EMC KTN-STL3 JBOD
- 15 x 3.5" bays
- Mix of HDDs spread across the two JBODs
- 7 x 12TB
- 6 x 14TB
- 6 x 10TB
- 2 x 16TB
- 1 x 8TB
- 1 x HP QR490A JBOD
- 24 x 2.5" bays
- Mix of SSDs
- 6 x 3.84TB
- 5 x 1TB
Broadly, I find the following with my setup:
- Pros
- Easily expandable storage using a HBA
- High reliability (ECC memory, server grade equipment)
- Used equipment is cheap
- Cons
- Running mostly older-gen hardware, not cutting edge performance
- Bulky, noisy cooling, less power efficient
- HP Z440 Workstation (upgraded over time)
A few things that might help narrow options down:
- What’s your budget?
- Do you expect to host more stuff in the future? Do you need more RAM/CPU performance?
- How much physical space do you have? Do you have a place where could store equipment if it were noisier?
- How expensive is your electricity? Is efficiency important?
- How much of your 100TB is full?
For sure, there could be one person with 1.1 and 10 people with 0.99, but the average will still be 1.0
“Half our students are below average!” kinda vibes - KDR necessarily means that for every person with 1.5, there is someone with a 0.67, that’s just how the math works. If I’m anywhere near 1.0, I’m happy.
As an apples to oranges comparison, here’s a fun datapoint.
I just rented a BMW 5 series for a week, for a grand total of ~$300. That’s a good deal, sure, but some very rough napkin math tells me a $60,000 car / $300 / week = 200 weeks of rental should pay for the cost of the vehicle (ignoring maintenance for now). So, let’s say it’s a $5k bike (implausible), that should really only be $25/week, or generously $4/day. The fact even the cheaper option mentioned is 6x this is terrible - bikes really shouldn’t be this expensive.
I wish bikes were more cost effective :(