ithilelda
@ithilelda@lemmy.world
- Comment on Proxmox running TrueNAS and NextCloud or Nextcloud on TrueNAS via Docker? 1 year ago:
well, it actually has a UI for managing ZFS volumes in proxmox lol. proxmox is very versatile I’ll admit. I use it also, but because I absolutely need the vm capability to run opnsense and debian on the same machine. If OP only needs a NAS with docker, he may not need that power. well who am I to decide. this is selfhosted so people can just try anything.
- Comment on Proxmox running TrueNAS and NextCloud or Nextcloud on TrueNAS via Docker? 1 year ago:
well, there are many things to consider. TrueNAS’s ZFS is memory hungry, and is best used on it’s original BSD. Also, you may need SMART directly in your NAS, then you’ll need to PCI passthrough the disk controller if you are on proxmox. With that said, either directly running TrueNAS Scale or TrueNAS Core on proxmox isn’t ideal. Also, running database storage over NFS has great disadvantages, so I would really advice against going proxmox+truenas route.
IMO, a mature NAS system is only useful as it is designed to be: bare metal system for your disk management. If you really wanna ZFS, then use TrueNAS Scale. If you are a guru and can or are willing to setup things yourself and doesn’t care about RAID5/6, just use regular linux + docker/podman + btrfs.
- Comment on Question on SSL traffic between podman containers and clients (should I run k3s?) 1 year ago:
if I’m understanding your question correct, you are trying to use tls on containers that may not have tls libraries? there are two ways to that. one is to rebuild every container by yourself modifying its services to contain tls. the other is to use a pod. you put your service container and a reverse proxy into the same pod, setup that reverse proxy correctly as an edge proxy terminating tls, and expose only the reverse proxy’s port. that way, it will just look like a service with tls enabled.
- Comment on Docker vs Podman, which one to choose for a beginner and why ? 1 year ago:
definitely docker. it just has so much more documentation and community involvement.