Edit: wow, this is a never ending comment section!

Lupec
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I use Proxmox, running a mix of regular and NixOS based LXCs. One of those also runs Docker for simpler services.

april
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I’m running FreeBSD I actually like it a lot.

I picked it for zfs. A lot of the ways things work seem cleaner and simpler than on Linux and zfs is awesome with the copy on write snapshots and filesystem compression and all that. I like rc.conf and pf is way nicer than iptables and even when you upgrade it automatically makes a snapshot so you can rollback.

Sometimes I do need to patch and compile things because people seem to not know freebsd exists but that’s really the only downside.

@legios@aussie.zone
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Same here for the same reasons (although I started with FreeBSD 4.x) and have adapted to ZFS and Jails over the years.

The POLA (Principle Of Least Astonishment) when it comes to changes is awesome too.

@nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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Debian + Docker.

I used unraid for a long while. I recently switched to opensuse microos for a better desktop experience, and it’s been fantastic

Ubuntu, but I’m very strongly considering switching out to Debian or Rocky. Ubuntu has a lot of really unnecessary cruft that I think I’d be better off without.

I use Fedora on my laptop now, so going the RHEL/Rocky/Alma route for my servers is really tempting. Especially as I’m also considering switching to Podman.

OpenMediaVault

Good OOTB customizations, works on Pi, and easy to extend with plugins (Docker/Portainer is pretty much all I needed).

Same

@SigHunter@feddit.de
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Gentoo because it can do it all

Shimitar
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Fellow Gentooer, Gentoo rocks!

shadowbert
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Unraid, mostly due to the flexible arrays.

CazRaX
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Same here, when I made mine I had a whole mix of different sized drives so it made sense. I like not having to worry about drive size, as long as they are smaller than the parity drives.

@kinther@lemmy.world
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Ubuntu 22.04 server. It works well enough for my purposes and until it doesn’t I don’t see a reason to switch distros.

@Zeon@lemmy.world
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Proprietary 🤮

@lefaucet@slrpnk.net
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I didnt realize. Do you have more info on this?

It’s not proprietary. Canonical pulls some weird shit, but that’s it.

@kinther@lemmy.world
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Yeah, well it works for me.

@Discover5164@lemm.ee
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arch + docker for the services

z3bra
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OpenBSD for all of them.

@Zeon@lemmy.world
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How is the OpenBSD experience? I have 2x4TB hard drives in my Libreboot server (Dell T1650 motherboard), can I easily setup RAID 1 through the OS?

z3bra
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OpenBSD is the most pleasing expérience I’ve had with an OS. It’s fully contained and has all the tools you need without needing to install anything (eg a DNS, HTTP, SMTP servers, a proxy, a good firewall). All config files look alike and use the same keywords for the same things, making it straightforward to configure everything.

And regarding RAID 1, I’ve never done it myself, but it totally works out of the box (as well as full disk encryption).

Zefie
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Hey @Zeon,
Any chance you still have that libreboot t1650 rom still? I’ve bought your exact setup instead of the rtx 2080 super I have rtx 2070 super founders edition. If you don’t have the rom it’s fine I can build one but just wanted to see the specifics on your rom.

@Zeon@lemmy.world
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The rom for the T1650 is weird, I tried updating mine and got no display, so I’m sticking with my old rom right now. Are you having the same issue? You can build the rom in lbmk or download the roms from one of the Libreboot mirrors.

I am currently adding support for the Dell Optiplex 9020 MT, it supports a i7 4790K and 32GB of DDR3 1.5v RAM (Non-ECC). The i7-4790K is a little bit faster, like 6% overall, but it’s main feature is having AVX2 support. This increases the peformance drastically for machine learning (e.g. LLMs), compiling peformance, and even virtual machines. It’s basically modern-like gaming computer. It’s actually the first Libreboot desktop computer to support AVX2.

Happy to hear I inspired you to build a Libreboot gaming machine! Stay tuned for the next port, you can expect a release by next week!

@lntl@lemmy.ml
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bsd fam

synae[he/him]
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Ubuntu LTS and k3s for all workloads (except for plex, which I’ve not gotten around to migrating yet…)

Scrubbles
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Hello fellow k3s friend!

It’s okay. You aren’t alone anymore.

@harsh3466@lemmy.world
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Ubuntu LTS, with all my services in Docker containers.

I know Ubuntu gets a lot of (deserved) hate for some of the shit Canonical pulls, but for now, I like Ubuntu and it works for me.

When I rebuilt my server at the beginning of the month, I was gonna jump to Debian, but my god the Debian website is obtuse. After looking at the site and trying to determine what to download to get Debian with non-free (I’m unfortunately working with an NVIDIA card), I decided to go with Ubuntu. I needed a smooth rebuild process and with Ubuntu I know exactly what I’ll get when I download the LTS server.

Edit: grammar

@BlueBockser@programming.dev
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After looking at the site and trying to determine what to download to get Debian with non-free (I’m unfortunately working with an NVIDIA card)

FWIW, Debian 12 now includes non-free firmware in the installation media by default and will install whatever is necessary.

I agree that the Debian website has its weaknesses, but beyond finding the right installer (usually netinst ISO a.k.a small installation image on https://www.debian.org/distrib/) there isn’t much of a learning curve. I started out with Ubuntu too, but finally decided that enough was enough when snap started breaking my stuff on desktop.

@harsh3466@lemmy.world
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The inclusion of non-free by default was what was unclear to me from the website. Knowing that now, I’ll likely give Debian a spin next time I need an install.

@krash@lemmy.ml
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I went with Ubuntu server and was pleasantly surprised when it offered to pull my pubkey off my github profile for ssh. A nice touch that I haven’t seen in other servers flavors of various distros.

@harsh3466@lemmy.world
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That’s pretty cool!

lemmyvore
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It’s always best to use whatever distro you’re most comfortable with. Especially if you’re going to install stuff in containers/VMs so the repos of the base distro don’t even matter that much.

@harsh3466@lemmy.world
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Exactly. That’s ultimately why I skipped Debian and went with Ubuntu

Tywèle [she|her]
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TrueNAS Scale

@AtariDump@lemmy.world
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Hyper-V / ESXi for host. Mostly windows with some Ubuntu server.

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