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Ralsina.Me — Roberto Alsina's website

Radxa Zero!

Lo qué?

Las Ras­pbe­rry Pi son úti­le­s, bue­nas y ba­ra­ta­s. Ex­cep­to por un de­ta­lle: es im­po­si­ble com­prar­la­s.

No hay sto­ck de Ras­pbe­rry PI 4, no hay sto­ck de Ras­pbe­rry Pi Ze­ro 2W, no hay sto­ck de na­da, ex­cep­to Pi Pi­co (que son mi­cro­con­tro­la­do­res) y Pi 400 (que no son lo que quie­ro­).

En­ton­ces bus­qué al­ter­na­ti­va­s, y en­contré la bue­na gen­te de All­net Chi­na que ven­de la lí­nea Ro­ck Pi.

¿Cómo son las Rock Pi?

  • Son ... pa­re­ci­das a las Ras­pbe­rry
  • En har­dwa­re, en al­gu­nos ca­so­s, son me­jo­res!
  • En so­ftwa­re ... es­tán un po­co más cru­da­s.
  • En com­pa­ti­bi­li­dad son más com­pli­ca­da­s.

Pe­ro ... HAY STO­CK y A BUEN PRE­CIO y MAN­DAN A AR­GEN­TI­NA!

Así que me com­pre un par de Ra­d­xa Ze­ro­s. Son co­mo una Pi Ze­ro ... pe­ro la CPU es mas o me­nos co­mo la de una Pi 4????

Tu­ve un pro­ble­mi­ta ini­cial­men­te pa­ra pa­gar­lo pe­ro me lo re­sol­vie­ron de in­me­dia­to y me upgra­dea­ron el shi­pping a Fe­dEx, así que lle­ga­ron en dos se­ma­nas y no pa­gué adua­na.

Eso sí, Fe­dEx no te avi­sa que cuan­do te lo traen te van a co­brar "al­go­", y no te di­cen cuán­to ni que te­nés que pa­gar cas­h.

En mi ca­so fue­ron $5400 y no me avi­sa­ron a tiem­po asi que tu­ve que es­pe­rar un día ex­tra.

Y qué tal andan?

Her­mo­so. La CPU es rá­pi­da. Man­ja­ro an­da 10 pun­tos (u­na vez que en­ten­dí co­mo ins­ta­lar­lo­).

Tie­ne eM­MC así que no ne­ce­si­ta tar­je­ta SD!

Un pro­ble­ma es que no he po­di­do ha­cer an­dar mi dis­play 1920­x480 (hay so­lo una men­ción de otra per­so­na en la In­ter­net in­ten­tán­do­lo, tam­po­co le an­du­vo)

Sal­vo eso? Ex­ce­len­te.

Es­toy mi­gran­do mi ser­ver Pi­nky a una Ra­d­xa, ya que la ten­go y con­su­me lo mis­mo que la Pi 3

Si bien leí va­rias ad­ver­ten­cias so­bre que se pue­den re­ca­len­tar no pa­re­cen pa­sar de los 48 gra­dos en uso nor­ma­l.

En ge­ne­ra­l, las re­co­mien­do, pe­ro ca­da uno ten­drá que ver cuán­to quie­re gas­tar y pa­ra qué.

The cases I built for my mini servers

I have writ­ten a cou­ple posts about my rasp­ber­ry-pi home server­s. And peo­ple seem to like the cas­es I 3d-print­ed for them.

Well, if you liked them here they are.

For a Rasp­ber­ry pi 3-based serv­er you need:

  • The case it­self
  • Caps to lock each disk in its slot: 1 and 2
  • Cap to lock the pi in its slot

For a Rasp­ber­ry pi 4-based serv­er you need:

  • The case it­self
  • Caps to lock each disk in its slot: 1 and 2
  • Cap to lock the pi in its slot

All these are just the fol­low­ing de­signs from thin­gi­verse slapped to­geth­er:

  • Pi 3 sleeve case: here
  • Pi 4 sleeve case: here
  • HDD case: here

They work bet­ter (or at al­l!) if you use a pow­ered USB hub. There is no room in the case for it, just buy one you like and glue it to the side :-)

Case with a USB server glued to it

Owning a Pet Server in 2022 (Part 2)

Owning a Pet Server in 2022 (Part 2)

In part 1 I de­scribed why I want­ed this server, and some of the trade­offs and de­ci­sions I had to make to make it hap­pen and work nice­ly.

This is an up­date af­ter re­view­ing some of those de­ci­sion­s, and adding some more soft­ware.

Hardware Changes

  • I added a pow­ered hub. This makes the two-HDD sit­u­a­­tion much more man­age­able avoid­ing un­der­­volts that could harm the hard­ware. I used a cheap pow­ered USB HUB.

  • I tried us­ing a Pi 4 with 4GB of RAM, USB 3 and faster CPU and ... there was no per­­ceiv­able dif­fer­­ence in per­­for­­mance. So, it's back to a Pi 3B+ with 1GB of RAM.

Mem­o­ry us­age hov­ers around 500MB so no prob­lem there.

  • I will get a 4-­port white HUB and in­te­grate it in­to the case (or do a new case) at some point.

Software Changes

  • Moved all ser­vices to run dock­er­ized.

I was re­luc­tant at first, sus­pect­ing a per­for­mance im­pact. Well, it's neg­li­gi­ble and it makes run­ning things MUCH sim­pler.

Spe­cial h/t to lin­uxserv­er.io for their nice, qual­i­ty con­tain­er­s.

  • Added Hedge­­Doc a kick­­ass mark­­down ed­i­­tor / note-­­tak­ing ap­­pli­­ca­­tion / many oth­­er things. Us­ing it to write this!

  • Added FreeRSS as a re­­place­­ment for my us­age of In­­ore­ad­er.

  • Added Medusa, Tran­s­mis­­sion and Jel­­lyfin which com­bined turn in­­­to a nice "hey, I want to watch this TV show" so­lu­­tion.

  • THi­­sis in ad­di­­tion to a we­b­site, gitea and mux­imux to give a uni­­fied fron­­tend to ev­ery­thing.

How does it perform?

I can be stream­ing a video via Jel­lyfin (with transcod­ing) and read­ing news on FreshRSS with nice re­sponse times, and mem­o­ry us­age hov­ers around 500M­B, which CPU load is around 4.

So, I think this is about as far as I can push it, but it's a lot of func­tion­al­i­ty for a tiny, cheap, home serv­er.

Owning a Pet Server, in 2022

Introduction

The slow­est pen­du­lum in tech is the dis­tri­bu­tion/­cen­tral­iza­tion one. It takes years, even decades to swing. That's why we once had cen­tral­ized time­shar­ing com­put­ers with dumb ter­mi­nal­s, and then we had per­son­al com­put­er­s, which we turned in­to in­ter­net ter­mi­nal­s, which we are stuck with.

This seems to be stick­ing, but hey, so did the oth­er two. It may swing the oth­er way, or it may not. Who knows, I am not a fu­tur­ol­o­gist, but I am swing­ing it a lit­tle bit, for my­self, in one small area: I am not hap­py with my da­ta liv­ing pri­mar­i­ly in large serv­er farms owned by oth­er­s.

So, rather than hav­ing my da­ta live in a cat­tle serv­er in a serv­er far­m, it now most­ly lives in a pet server, at home.

Al­low me to in­tro­duce you to ... pinky.

Picture of a small white plastic computer

Pinky will not wow you with spec­s, it's per­haps the slow­est prac­ti­cal serv­er pos­si­ble:

  • Rasp­ber­ry Pi 3b+, 1GB of RAM
  • 16GB SD card
  • 2x500GB HDD (mir­rored)

But it is more than enough for some spe­cif­ic class­es of work I need­ed. In this doc­u­ment I will try to ex­plain why I want­ed to do them, de­scribe them, and ex­plain the trade­offs in­volved, and the de­ci­sion process that lead me to the de­ci­sion to adopt this so­lu­tion.

Software

One of the most im­por­tant things here is Gitea.

It's hard to over­state what a game chang­er it is for a spe­cif­ic kind of user: Gitea makes host­ing a user-friend­ly git ser­vice easy and cheap.

So what? You may ask.

Well, a git serv­er is use­ful as a back­end for many ac­tu­al­ly use­ful ser­vices, even if you don't care about soft­ware de­vel­op­ment (which I do).

Pass

For ex­am­ple, sup­pose you want to man­age your own pass­word­s, in­stead of re­ly­ing on a third par­ty ser­vice. Well one way to do it is to use pass which is an open source im­ple­men­ta­tion which is sup­port­ed in most web browser­s, desk­top ap­pli­ca­tion­s, ter­mi­nals and what­not.

But if you have more than one de­vice ... then how do you sync your pass­words be­tween them? Yes, us­ing a git serv­er.

Chezmoi

Yes, I use more than one com­put­er. I have one at home, one in the of­fice, an­oth­er one for work, plus I am build­ing some home­made stuff us­ing rasp­ber­ry pis, and I want some things to work in the same way in all of them.

Chez­moi is an im­ple­men­ta­tion of the dot­files con­cep­t.

Ba­si­cal­ly: you tell it to man­age some of the con­fig files in your home di­rec­to­ry, which are then ver­sioned and shared be­tween com­put­ers us­ing ... you guessed it, a git serv­er.

It took some ef­fort to get things in a use­ful state but now I think it's ac­tu­al­ly adding val­ue to my sys­tem­s.

My Website

Yeah, I know, so 2003. But hey, it works for me. A cen­tral­ized lo­ca­tion for:

  • Things I write, like this one
  • Books I read and com­ment one, via goodreads
  • Videos I make, via youtube

Again, one of the goals is that my da­ta is mine so all those book list­s, and com­ments and star-rat­ings and what­ev­er ... why would they live on­ly in goodread­s? What if Ama­zon clos­es it?

Well, be­cause I can write soft­ware, I just get it all and put it in my own site, thank you very much.

And guess where the canon­i­cal source of all that is? Yeah, a git repos­i­to­ry, au­to­mat­i­cal­ly built and de­ployed.

Dis­clo­sure: my site is most­ly host­ed on a VPS I al­ready pay for, but there is a mir­ror at home­.ralsi­na.me which is, in­deed, in my pinky serv­er.

Gateway to my Office / Home VPN

All these ser­vices need to be ac­cessed from some­where. Us­ing some gen­er­ous free-ti­er ser­vices from fly and tailscale plus some con­fig­u­ra­tion ef­fort I can, from any of my com­put­ers (and my phone too) ac­cess any oth­er, re­gard­less of where they are, as long as they have some sort of in­ter­net con­nec­tion.

Hardware

Why THIS Hardware?

Be­cause I had it ly­ing around.

  • The rasp­ber­ry from old pro­ject­s, gath­er­ing dust.
  • Two 500GB HDDs from old note­books and giv­en as gift­s.

I had to buy 2 US­B-SA­TA ca­bles (about 5 dol­lars) and a nicer knit­ted mi­cro-usb an­gled ca­ble so it looked pret­ty (1 dol­lar).

Performance

Yes, it's pret­ty slow, but ... is it?

The rasp­ber­ry pi 3b+ is a 4-­core ma­chine, so it can run gitea, a web serv­er and a cou­ple oth­er things with­out any is­sues.

Sure, it's USB 2.0 on­ly, so ac­cess to stor­age is ... not fast.

OTO­H, most of the time I am ac­cess­ing ei­ther very small things (a git pull is pret­ty ef­fi­cien­t!) or over a slow link (30Mbps at most) so stor­age speed is hard­ly ev­er the bot­tle­neck.

One spe­cif­ic thing that makes no sense would be RAID mir­ror­ing be­tween the two disks, it would just make ev­ery­thing slow­er be­cause of the need to write each change twice.

So I turn off one of the disks (saves on wear) and turn it on at night to back­up the whole serv­er in­to it.

Adi­tion­al­ly, I can once a week take the sec­ondary disk and back it up off­site.

Power Usage

Run­ning at full throt­tle, my USB pow­er con­sump­tion mea­sur­ing thing I got for a dol­lar (so take it with a grain of salt) says it may use 1.1A at 5v, so in av­er­age it's prob­a­bly us­ing some­thing like 4W.

I checked my pow­er bill and that comes down to about 20 ar­gen­tini­an pe­sos a mon­th, or 10 US cents.

The Case

I grabbed a rasp­ber­ry "sleeve" case and a 2.5" HDD "sleeve" case out of thin­gi­verse, and slapped them on­to a few box­es, then print­ed it in the cheap­est 3D print­er mon­ey can buy. It works great.

Be­cause it's a Pi 3 and not a Pi 4 it can be pas­sive­ly cooled with no prob­lem and I print­ed the HDD sleeves at 50% in­fill so they would muf­fle the noise a bit. I can on­ly hear the oc­ca­sion­al click from the hard drives, but it's pret­ty much silen­t.

It's al­so around 10cm in each di­men­sion. That's pret­ty smal­l.

Conclusion

This serv­er (with­out the case, that's new) has been work­ing for around a month. It has au­to­mat­ic soft­ware up­dates for ev­ery­thing and if some­thing would hap­pen to break I can live with­out it for a few days with­out any is­sues.

I con­sid­er it a com­plete suc­cess.


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