

thanks <3
former cake day: January 25th, 2025 -> lemm.ee refugee


thanks <3


do you know how many of the features you’re describing work on haiku?
i was gonna ask why she isn’t allowed to be comfortable and play legos, but in my mind she was still wearing a t-shirt. very much like your idea too though!
my guess is bunny ears


ed is a truly wonderful editor indeed!
from what little i’ve seen of south korea, i honestly find this to be a pretty pretty spot. living is probably gonna be at least ok, and having nature nearby is really nice.


+1 for delta. it’s a really cool concept and has been working pretty well for me so far, though i’ve not used group chats yet. for decentralisation/ selfhosting it’s probably the simplest and most battle tested option as it just needs a mail server and nothing fancy


I get your point, it can be really quite confusing to go from a compose file or just general instructions and mby a docker run command to the settings of truenas.
you mention jails and that’s a core (no pun intended) issue of truenas. Truenas core is based on BSD which uses jails, whilst truenas scale is based on debian and uses docker. then recently it was all combined back into one, based on linux. hence no jails, just docker.
additionally, truenas scale was using kubernetes instead of docker until a year ago i’d guess. so what im trying to say is that whatever info you may find online could be very irrelevant if it’s for truenas core or truenas scale back in the kubernetes days.
besides the ui, if you have a compose yaml and just wanna use that for setup, you can go to apps -> discover apps -> three dots next to custom app -> install via yaml. now this is a pain to find, but it is there an it works pretty well. if you hate how that editor works, you can just paste a stub there that imports a specific other yaml file and then you put all the relevant config into that one. this extra file can then be edited via the cli, copied, moved, and version controlled, which can be very convenient.
regarding storage, using ixVolumes is perfectly fine. i prefer to have a generic dataset called apps that then contains specific datasets for each app i’m running. those specific datasets i set to the apps preset.
beyond that, i’ve got more diverse setups too. for example audiobookshelf. the config and metadata storage live in an audiobookshelf dataset in the apps dataset, as described before. this apps dataset is on a small ssd pool.
the podcasts and audiobooks themselves are stored on a larger HDD mirror. basically i have a media dataset there that uses the share preset and then within that i got an audiobooks dataset that uses the apps preset. that way audiobookshelf can use the books and i can easily access the directory via smb. additionally i run a cloud sync task from the data protection tab once a week that syncs all my audiobooks to pcloud.
now all of that isn’t necessarily easy, but i find it easier and more intuitive than doing it all via the cli on debian. then again i’ve never used debian with some specialised nas ui as others have recommended.


imma give you another opinion and start out with the unhelpful statement of „what’s best for you is gonna depend on what you need“
I‘ve never used debian as my personal NAS, but did manage a debian cluster at work. Compared to TrueNAS and later TrueNAS in a proxmox VM, debian is a lot more effort and in that sense „a hobby“.
Things that TrueNAS just handles for me without much work:
there probably is lots more, but i can’t think of anything else as of right now. I’ve used „plain“ Truenas scale for over a year and then switched to proxmox with a truenas VM when i built a new nas. the transition went pretty smoothly and i really like it. it does however add a layer of complexity you must be willing to deal with.
all things considered, i would like some things about truenas to work differently, but i would never wanna trade it. proxmox is very cool, and i like using it with a truenas VM, but i wouldn’t wanna use it without truenas i think. also i absolutely love debian and use it in many places. if i was running services on one machine and storage on another, id have the services on debian(or proxmox mby) and the storage on truenas, but as long as its just one device, its truenas.
additional thoughts:

yeah, beyond that i’m feeling really odd about the general lack of any information.
really, i read the about page and it sounded like a politicians speech. there are some good points, but it really lacks in tangible/ falsifiable information.


so, whilst the other comments want through the risks of using cloudflare, i’d like to point out that hetzner DNS is free, easy to use, and a european solution. so, if you’re really not using any of the cloudflare features, its just as simple if not simpler to avoid that internet monopoly and use hetzner.


please do not use cloudflare. it’s risking everyone’s privacy and security. they may seem like the most inconspicuous part of your dependencies, but actually are the weakest/ most dangerous part. i think codeberg tends to be supportive and the right place, but cloudflare is 99.9% gonna snitch on all of your readers.
https://www.devever.net/~hl/cloudflare


btw, i tried to add two HDDs today and sata passthrough didn’t allow me to create a new pool despite them showing up in truenas. something about duplicate serial numbers and such. i then decided to pass through my cpus sata controller (proxmox and the truenas virtual boot drive run off nvme). rebooted proxmox and it worked. all drives detected and functional (after removing their individual passthrough because proxmox couldn’t find them as it didn’t have access to the sata controller anymore)


I’ve used truenas scale on an old xeon with 32gb ram and then moved it over to proxmox on an i5-12600 with 64gb ddr5. truenas is installed to a virtual drive provided by proxmox, but all the other drives are sata passthrough and truenas handles the bare metal. the truenas vm has eight cores, 32gb ram and is running scale 25.10.0.1. so far i’ve got four sata ssds attached to it and am running 20+ apps without issues.
i know this doesn’t help you much besides ensuring that it does actually work within proxmox 9.0.11
good luck!
i honestly don’t know, but there’s a slim chance i may run into him again at 39c3. in that case i’ll ask
i actually ran into the dude who made this design and he gave me a lot of these stickers. so, while it could’ve been made with AI, i can tell you that it was done in 2024 and i met him in an AI critical setting and he was very proud of having made this. since i don’t remember him having mentioned AI at all, i find it likely for this to be done without AI
interesting, i knew it in a longer form: If you meet one asshole in a day, then you met an asshole. If all day all you meet is assholes, you’re the asshole.
this, and i’m playing both brand new titles as well as windows games and sims from about 20+ years ago like settlers II and EasyFly3
Debian.