TrueNAS NAS: Difference between revisions
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Here it is: my main server and NAS. It runs TrueNAS core, based off FreeBSD (since TrueNAS Scale didn't exist when I set it up). As a NAS, it has NFS, iSCSI and SMB shares running off a ZFS file system. In FreeBSD jails it runs jellyfin and nextcloud. On a BHYVE VM ([[ubuntu0]]) which runs lots of services in docker, including a netboot server, numerous websites and twitter and reddit bots){{PhysicalMachine | Here it is: my main server and NAS. It runs TrueNAS core, based off FreeBSD (since TrueNAS Scale didn't exist when I set it up). As a NAS, it has NFS, iSCSI and SMB shares running off a ZFS file system. In FreeBSD jails it runs jellyfin and nextcloud. On a BHYVE VM ([[ubuntu0]]) which runs lots of services in docker, including a netboot server, numerous websites and twitter and reddit bots){{PhysicalMachine | ||
| image = 4u_inside.jpg | | image = 4u_inside.jpg |
Revision as of 16:43, 22 April 2023
Here it is: my main server and NAS. It runs TrueNAS core, based off FreeBSD (since TrueNAS Scale didn't exist when I set it up). As a NAS, it has NFS, iSCSI and SMB shares running off a ZFS file system. In FreeBSD jails it runs jellyfin and nextcloud. On a BHYVE VM (ubuntu0) which runs lots of services in docker, including a netboot server, numerous websites and twitter and reddit bots)
In terms of hardware, it has a low powered six-core 9400T, 32Gb of memory for lots of VMs and a nice big ZFS cache. It has a dual port 10 gigabit NIC, and an 8 port HBA for connecting lots of disks.