trilobite

joined 1 year ago
[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Ah yes, thanks for raising. I had forgotten. So we have three Foss contenders:

  • Frigate
  • Motioneye
  • Zoneminder

I've only tried ME about 6 years ago with RPi camera. It was alright but I'm sure things have moved on.

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

Thankyou for taking the time to explain. I was in fact going to get one Loryta cameras recomended by the Frigate website ... If i can even find it in EU. Don't want to pay the premium import taxes ๐Ÿ˜‰

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Are you able to expand? What exactly did not impress you? Motioneye (which I briefly used 3-4 years ago with a dodge camera) and Frigate seem to be those that are used mostly as OOS solutions and hooked up to either OpenHab or HA.

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago

Yip, I already have pfSense installed with an isolated virtual network just for my home automation.

 

Starting to think about setting up my home camera surveillance system and what to avoid making poor decisions, so need to tap into community experience ... you guys :-)

Frigate seems like the direction to take if I want to strike a good balance between cost, integration and reliability. Hardware is a key issues. I could install HA and Frigate on my VM running on my Truenas server but I feel I'm putting all my eggs in one basket so thinking of having a dedicated machine for HA + Frigate. The Frigate website advertises this little beasts with a Coral PCIe unit. That about 300โ‚ฌ if I'm lucky, but I could live with that.

For camera I definitely do not want chinese-call-home/cheap stuff. The Lorytas advertised on the Frigate website seem to be difficult to get hold of (are these not chinese btw?) in Europe so was wondering what other peoples experience is. Cameras need to be comparable to these Lorytas in terms of quality and functionality (no chinese, no call home, good image quality, good relibility, weather proof)

Keen to hear whether others have tried the hardware/setup recomended on the Frigate website and whether there are people out there that have actually got even better setups.

This guy is recommending that the Frigate unit is separate from the HA unit. I'm unlikely to have more than 5 cameras installed and it feels a bit overkill to have two separate machines?

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 days ago

As I'm thinking of getting HA to look after my IP cameras with Frigate, I'm thinking of a mini PC wiht a PCIe Coral device installed. Would this make sense and are there others doing this i.e. have HA on a miniPC with Cora PCIe installed and Frigate on top?

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 days ago (6 children)

But setting up a VPN on a VPS is not really going to do much for privacy is it? It wouldn't take much to work out who is renting the VPS and the VPS has no incentive to hold back any info if a they were issued a search warrant.

Feels like it becoming more and more challenging living on the Internet without leaving breadcrumbs all over the place.

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 days ago

Although some appear to not be maintained anymore

 

I've been noticing over la last few years that is is becoming more and more difficult to login to accounts, whether a bank account, a membership account, sometimes even browsing websites for shopping, through my VPN server. Is this just my impression or is there something going on now whereby there are services that keep list of VPN servers that are then sold to backs so that these parties can keep out anyone from trying to login via a VPN. It feels like the general consensus is VPN=malicious rather than "VPN="this guy is just trying to protect his privacy". I use AIRVPN but was wondering if there are VPN services that are more sophisticate and try to circumvent these VPN server blocks? It becoming a real pain to the point I'm wondering what it the point of paying fro a VPN is I'm finding myself having to login through my ISP IP rather than my VPN IP.

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 weeks ago

Awesome Privacy looks goog. Need to explore.

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 weeks ago

The problem with many of these apps is that when you go looking for them on fdroid they are not there. Example in the above list is YouTube Revanced.

 

I've noticed that with time, my homelab is growing and with this comes complexity and time required to maintain. A big challenge is keeping on top of updates of firmware and key components (router and NAS, with pfsense and Truenas Scale respectively). What area people doing to ensure they keep on top of their homelab?

 

I have LMS at its latest version (8.5.3) installed on a VM. I hadnร t updated for a while and so decided to do so. To my surprise, I learnt that Logitech Media Server is now called Lyrion Music Server. Has anyone migrated from one to the other in a non-painfull way? I did a quick search. There are some guides for Synology and QNAP servers but I was after a more generic guide for pure docker. Anyone come across any?

 

I recently update pfBlockerNG on my pfsense box and after login in several days after I have loads of messages saying: "pfBlockerNG ASN - To utilize the ASN functionality, you must register for a free IPinfo Account. Review IP Tab for more information." Once I register are they going to start collecting data every time pfSense querries their ASN database?

[โ€“] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

I just find nextcloud bloated for my use case.

1
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by trilobite@lemmy.ml to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

I moved from next cloud to syncthing some months back. I had nextcloud as an app for Truenas scale. Several times after app dates, next cloud would stop running and would have to setup up everything again.

Syncthing is OK but 2 things annoy me:

A. I get huge amounts of conflict file generated that use up space

B. File sharing with family is complicated. I tried to setup a share account that everyone uses but as syncthing works with device ids, it refuses two accounts from the same machine. I share my Linux laptop with my wife. We each have our own linux account. I've got syncthing running but can't even get my wife's account to sync because I get errors that device I'd already exists.

I don't want to go back to next cloud just for file sharing. I don't generally like the idea of relying on one service for multiple objectives (calendar, file sharing, etc.).

Is there a way to get syncthing to do what I want?

 

I've been running VMs on some old DELL T110ii but realise that I've loaded it a bit too much so want to leave it doing the job of NAS with Truenas Scale and move all my VMs to Proxmox. The idea is that I would have two optiplex that provide redundancy. Truenas Scale has got me used to ZFS but clear may not be an option with Optiplex 3020 as ZFS is pointless with one SSD. Has anyone got some similar arrangement and has their VMs and containers running on these simple desktop machines? How are you managing high availability and resilience?

 

Hi folks, I've got a VM that is running my Firefly iii instance and Paperless instance as containers. A lot of work and time goes into managing these tools and I want to make sure I don't lose them. This is my setup:

Turenas Scale machine 1 -> VM1 - Docker containers. The VM sits on its own dataset in Truenas.

I replicate the dataset to Truenas Scale 2 one a week and this machine only goes on on Sunday to save power.

I Rsync the dataset to a 3rd machine where there is a hard disk that I store offsite.

I recognize that I could lose up to one week of work but that is nothing compared to the human hrs spent building those databases from scratch.

Apart from snapshotting e rsyncing every day, what else could I do to make this more resilient without increasing CAPEX and OPEX costs?