• 14 Posts
  • 261 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • It does. I use Mosquito but I believe HA has a built in one too. Mosquito was easy enough to set up though.

    Honestly MQTT is like the nervous system of my HA setup. I started using it with Tasmota when I Tasmotised all my cheap WiFi bulbs, then opted for Zigbee2mqtt for my ZigBee setup.

    But I also have things like my bedside clock (an old phone running WallPanel), my doorway tablet (a Nexus 7 running Fully Kiosk Browser), my PC and even my alarm clock app on my phone, all running through MQTT.

    I even had Tasker on my phone communicating with HA via MQTT before I gave up on that. It’s really useful




  • LifeBandit666@feddit.uktoMemes@lemmy.mlthe data does not lie
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    4 months ago

    I used to go to a metal club in my small town in Yorkshire, England, and get drunk and dance to stuff like this.

    I also used to get beaten regularly because of the way I dressed.

    So when Limp Bizkit played a gig last year in my small town in Yorkshire I had to go. It was fucking mental and I loved every second of it.

    This year Korn are playing, can’t wait






  • Me too, except it’s Adguard for me.

    Came in handy yesterday actually. I have a friend who works for a University which was recycling some Chromebooks.

    He managed to grab 3 for me, one for myself and one for my kids.

    Problem is that one of my kids is being supervised through Google Family Link which means for some reason the Play Store won’t work.

    So he is now unsupervised in Family Link just to get the Chromebook working.

    So I’ve just given both my kids static IPs and pointed their Chromebooks at Adguard, then turned on Safe Search and adult content blocking.

    Now I’m fairly confident they’re protected from a lot of the bad shit on the internet.











  • Yeah the new VM should just draw from your remaining RAM. My Debian VM is only using a few GB (6? 8?) but my Dell (I have a 7050 so it can’t be so different from yours) still has 10gb to play with.

    As for the running out of USBs I guess you could run a usb hub to one of the usb ports and just pass through the one, although I don’t know if that would break something.

    I don’t think they do a powered usb c to sata but I could be wrong. I’ve used 3/4 of the ports on the back for HDDs, and the remaining one for my ZigBee stick for Home Assistant VM and have one spare (on the front) plus the usb C. I have passed that usb C through to a VM for a usb c to 3.5mm (to send music to speakers) in the past though.

    You could try a usb to sata (powered) and a usb c to usb a to plug in to the usb C socket I guess, try that? I have a few usbc-a adapters knocking around the house so if you’re the same you could try it for nothing


  • I have also got a dell optiplex and Proxmox and a Debian machine with mostly Arr in containers.

    I also have 3 old HDDs that I’m using for it, of various sizes (2x1tb and 3/4tb)

    I have used a powered usb3 to sata connector to hook them up to the Dell. As in I have 3 usb to sata connectors, and each one also has a plug socket. I’ve got those 3 plus my Dell in a 4 gang extension lead so it’s only using 1 plug socket in my kitchen. They were about £15 each on Amazon.

    I have had a gotcha from using usb that destroyed my setup.

    I now have a working solution that will stop this happening again:

    So I have 3 usb-sata HDDs hooked in via the usb ports. I set up Open Media Vault as a VM. Then I passed through the USB drives to the OMV VM.

    Those drives are then shared via SMB (I’ve just added NFS) to everything that needs it via the OMV VM.

    I can then access the HDDs via this SMB share in Proxmox for backups if that’s what you wanna do.

    Now the reason I’ve done it this way is because originally I had the drives in Proxmox. I gave them names and then put those names in the Fstab of Proxmox. One of the drives “forgot” it’s name and Proxmox wouldn’t then boot because one of its drives wasn’t accessible.

    You could get around this by adding an option to the end of your fstab, I think the option is “nofail” but I’m not 100% so just check up on it.

    I’ve used this option in my Debian VM Fstab to mount the NAS drives so my Arr stack can see them, and even got my Squeezebox server using them too. I’m using CIFS so I can see the drives on my Windows PC so I can manage the storage on my desktop.

    So there you go, usb HDDs with passed through usb sockets to OMV VM is how I do it. If one of the drives fails OMV still runs and I just find I have no media in Plex and have to figure out why my drive isn’t working anymore.