[-] T_K@partizle.com 1 points 1 year ago

1250/40, $90/mo, Suburb if Denver, CO. Comcast. 1TB data cap.

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submitted 1 year ago by T_K@partizle.com to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

I've had a home server for years, at first using Windows Server, then Unraid, and now using Ubuntu server. I've long known that I should keep a close eye on my spinning rust, but I never really knew the best way to have that monitoring quietly automated in the background, only sending me a message when something bad shows up. If it matters at all (I assume it doesn't) I am using ZFS on Ubuntu (but not using ZFS as root. It's mounted in e.g ~/user/storage. My primary drive is an SSD)

What are you all using for hard drive monitoring? What are you using for notifications and (generally) how are you linking those two together?

[-] T_K@partizle.com 0 points 1 year ago

Various computers/robots from media.

My desktop is Eddie (The name of the shop's computer from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy) and my home server is HEX (the weird magic computer in the High Energy Magic building at Unseen University in the Discworld novels)

[-] T_K@partizle.com 1 points 1 year ago

Agreed, but if you are looking into self hosting anything, whether internet connected or not, you should be following proper data backup and redundancy rules

The 321 data backup rule is to have three copies of everything across at least two different types of storage media, with one backup in a separate geographic location for emergencies.

For most people who self host, this means backing up primary devices to a NAS, then backing up the NAS to a backup service. This option is often cheaper than cloud storage in exchange for being more annoying to set up or recover from.

Also keep in mind that redundancy is not backup. All of your backup options should also be redundant. In a NAS, that means having additional drives with parity data so that if a drive fails, it can be replaced without losing anything, but that parity drive isn't backup. Pretty much any backup service or cloud storage you use is going to be redundant, so making sure your local data is resilient is important.

T_K

joined 1 year ago