Home Server Notes Revision as of Friday, 6 January 2023 at 02:14 UTC
Migrated from FreeBSD v11 to Ubuntu Server 22.04. These are some notes from my migration.
Hardware
Read the Community Hardware Guide to pick my components this time. Cheap shit causes headaches and I expect this build to last me a while.
- SuperMicro X11SSM-F-O Micro-ATX: website, manual
- Intel Xeon E3-1230 V6 Kaby Lake
- Seasonic FOCUS Plus Series SSR-850PX 850W 80+ Platinum
- Crucial 16GB ECC Unbuffered memory (
CT7982341
: DDR4-2133MHz PC4-17000 ECC Unbuffered CL15 288-Pin DIMM 1.2V Dual Rank Memory Module) - Finding additional memory was a nightmare. - 5 x Western Digital 4TB Red NAS Drives
- NZXT Source 210
- Rosewill RFT-120 fan filters. Used nylon 8-32 × ½ Phillips flat-head screws to install them.
- An old Intel 80GB SSD Drive
Ran smartctl
short, conveyance, and long test with an ArchLinux ISO. Two more resources on drive testing. Ran about 10 rounds of memtest86
on the memory.
Backups
Made sure to do this to two external, encrypted drives. All datasets and snapshots.
Image
Got it from here. Verified via:
echo "10f19c5b2b8d6db711582e0e27f5116296c34fe4b313ba45f9b201a5007056cb *ubuntu-22.04.1-live-server-amd64.iso" | shasum -a 256 --check
Formatted FAT with GUID Partition Table in Disk Utility on macOS. Then used BalenaEtcher (brew install --cask balenaetcher
) to transfer the image.
Post Install
Basic Stuff
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install \
zfsutils-linux \
docker-ce \
docker-ce-cli \
containerd.io \
docker-compose-plugin \
yadm \
ntp \
awscli \
silversearcher-ag \
ncdu \
tree
# This is annoying
sudo apt remove command-not-found
# Install SSHD and change the default port
sudo apt install openssh-server
# Will install the NTP service and enable it as well.
apt install ntp
Disable Swap
The installer created an 8GB swapfile for some reason…
# Check if enabled
sudo swapon --show
# Disable if so
sudo swapoff -a
# Now edit /etc/fstab to remove swap
Firewall
Used ufw
that shipped with Ubuntu. It does the trick.
Login Logo
____ _____ _ _ _____ ______ _____ ______ _______ ________ _____
/ __ \| __ \ /\ | \ | |/ ____| ____|/ ____| ____| __ \ \ / / ____| __ \
| | | | |__) | / \ | \| | | __| |__ | (___ | |__ | |__) \ \ / /| |__ | |__) |
| | | | _ / / /\ \ | . ` | | |_ | __| \___ \| __| | _ / \ \/ / | __| | _ /
| |__| | | \ \ / ____ \| |\ | |__| | |____ ____) | |____| | \ \ \ / | |____| | \ \
\____/|_| \_\/_/ \_\_| \_|\_____|______|_____/|______|_| \_\ \/ |______|_| \_\
Updated this in /etc/update-motd.d
Set hostname
Screwed this up during installation.
hostnamectl set-hostname newNameHere
# Now edit this
vim /etc/hosts
Netplan
System would hang on this for a while:
[** ] A start job is running for Wait for Network to be Configured (XX / no limit)
This is because of something called netplan
. Saw the config in /etc/netplan/00-installer-config.yaml
, noted that I was not using eno2
(using ip a
) and added optional: true
as shown.
# This is the network config written by 'subiquity'
network:
ethernets:
eno1:
dhcp4: true
eno2:
dhcp4: true
optional: true
version: 2
This fixed the issue. I don’t know what netplan
is. I see YAML and smell ‘Enterpriseâ„¢’…
Importing the Zpools
# Look for zpools
sudo zfs import
# Import a zpool named 'tank'
sudo zfs import tank -f
# To see where things are mounted. In Ubuntu's case, it will be at /tank
sudo zfs get mountpoint
# See the list of upgrades to the zpools
sudo zpool upgrade
# Perform the upgrades to ALL zpools (YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT THIS MEANS AND WHAT
# YOU'RE DOING HERE.)
sudo zpool upgrade -a
# See when a snapshot is created. You can get other properties this way as well.
sudo zfs get creation -t snapshot tank/dataset
Removing Encryption on Backup Drive
TODO: Finish this section.
# Get the ID of the drives. It will look like
#
# gptid/66e2c3c2-2786-11ea-bc58-ac1f6b83246e.eli
#
zpool status
# Assume that my pool is called `backup`
zpool offline backup gptid/66e2c3c2-2786-11ea-bc58-ac1f6b83246e.eli
Groups
For the tank
sudo groupadd wheel
sudo usermod -aG wheel nikhil
sudo usermod -aG wheel root
sudo chown -R :wheel /tank
ACLs were trouble, however. I had to do this to prevent “Operation not permitted” errors when I was trying to setgid with chmod
. This post helped me.
zfs set aclmode=passthrough tank/dataset
# Then this was OK
chmod g+s /tank/dataset
Cron Jobs
Prefixed all of them with custom__
to distinguish them from things that came with the system or were installed via packages.
Used this favorite as a preamble to any new jobs
# +---------------- minute (0 - 59)
# | +------------- hour (0 - 23)
# | | +---------- day of month (1 - 31)
# | | | +------- month (1 - 12)
# | | | | +---- day of week (0 - 6) (Sunday=0)
# | | | | |
Docker
# Get the keys
curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/keyrings/docker.gpg
# Set up the Docker repo
echo \
"deb [arch=$(dpkg --print-architecture) signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/docker.gpg] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu \
$(lsb_release -cs) stable" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list > /dev/null
# Update apt
sudo apt update
Got all my images via the amazing LinuxServer.io project.
Note that there used to be a docker-compose
command (a standalone Python script) but they made it a plugin to the docker
command. Woo. So you omit the hyphen and rock and roll.
You will need a UID and GID that the containers run as. On a base Ubuntu Server system, these are 1000
and 1000
which map to the non-root user the installer had you create.
Created separate configurations for each of the services.
# Start the container in the background (-d)
docker compose -f /path/to/service.yml -p service up -d
# Stop the container
docker compose -f /path/to/service.yml down
# Restart the container
docker compose -f /path/to/service.yml restart
# Tail logs
docker logs --follow <Container ID>
# Check if a container is set to start at boot
docker inspect <container_id> | restart -A 5
Review this for the differences between always
, unless-stopped
, etc.
Networking was a bit iffy. I want the containers to appear as if they were on the LAN. macvlan
networks appeared to be the answer. There are two modes: Bridge and 802.1q Trunk Bridge. I tried the former.
# Create a simple bridge. The 802.1q stuff is a complicated PITA for your use-case...
docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.1.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.1.1 \
-o parent=eno1 \
my-macvlan
# Make sure it exists
docker network ls
# Inspect it
docker network inspect <Network ID>
And now you add the bridge on the host so it knows how to route traffic.
# ip link add $INTERFACE_NAME link $PARENTDEV type macvlan mode bridge
ip link add mac0 link eno1 type macvlan mode bridge
# Assign an IP to this interface
ip addr add 192.168.1.100/32 dev mac0
# Bring up the interface
ip link set mac0 up
# Tell docker to use the interface to communicate
ip route add 192.168.1.0/24 dev mac0
These should persist across reboots. People configure stuff in /etc/network/interface
but I didn’t need to do that (which mystifies me…)
Some containers didn’t have the ip
command. Install via apt install iproute2
.
Constrained on router to assign same IP based on MAC. Docker appears to assign 02:42:0a
as the OUI. So be it.
This is how you specify an external default network in Docker Compose.
Desktop Environment
Meant for this to be headless but I am a lazy person. Used my lovely XFCE4 and TigerVNC.
sudo apt install xfce4 tigervnc-standalone-server
# Set the password for the current (NON-ROOT) user
vncpasswd
# Upon connection via VNC, start XFCE4
cat <<EOF > ~/.vnc/xstartup
#!/bin/sh
unset SESSION_MANAGER
unset DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
exec startxfce4
EOF
chmod u+x ~/.vnc/xstartup
# Create your own preferences for startup
cat <<EOF > ~/.vnc/config
geometry=1280x960
depth=32
EOF
# Now create a service for the VNC Server. As root:
cat <<EOF > /etc/systemd/system/vncserver@.service
[Unit]
Description=Remote desktop service (VNC)
After=syslog.target network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=nikhil
Group=wheel
WorkingDirectory=/home/nikhil
PAMName=login
ExecStartPre=/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/vncserver -kill :%i > /dev/null 2>&1 || :'
ExecStart=/usr/bin/vncserver :%i -alwaysshared -fg
ExecStop=/usr/bin/vncserver -kill :%i
PIDFile=/home/%u/.vnc/%H%i.pid
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
EOF
# Tell systemd about it and bring it up at reboot. This is a single instance btw.
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable vncserver@1
sudo systemctl start vncserver@1
# Now on the client, create an SSH tunnel
ssh -p 3227 -L 5901:127.0.0.1:5901 -N -f -l nikhil 192.168.1.10
Note that you will have to adjust the bit depth/quality on your viewer. This is not something TigerVNC controls.
Samba
This was an excellent guide! Also see this.
Setting up Samba shares was rather easy in /etc/samba/smb.conf
.
Sanoid
Nice little Perl script to automate ZFS snapshotting. apt install sanoid
installs a cron
script in /etc/cron.d/sanoid
. Configuation in /etc/sanoid/sanoid.conf
was as simple as this.
[tank]
use_template = base
recursive = yes
# --- Templates ---
[template_base]
frequently = 0
hourly = 0
daily = 30
monthly = 12
yearly = 1
autosnap = yes
autoprune = yes
See the options for more info on each. Note that the defaults are /usr/share/sanoid/sanoid.defaults.conf
.
Glances
sudo apt install glances
Then added this to /etc/systemd/system/glances.service
[Unit]
Description = Glances in Web Server Mode
After = network.target
[Service]
ExecStart = /usr/bin/glances -w -t 5 -B 0.0.0.0
[Install]
WantedBy = multi-user.target
Then had to follow this thing to get it to not display a blank page… :/
Miscellaneous Notes
- I use DuckDNS for Dynamic DNS
- No password on PiHole via
sudo pihole -a -p
followed by an Enter. It’s how you set a password as well. - Found myself not being able to run more than two containers at once. Docker Compose is strange. Each
docker compose up
command needs to be given its own-p
Reset HomeBridge password
Remove auth.json
in /var/lib/homebridge
if installed on a RaspberryPi.
Else you can find it in $HOME/.homebridge
.
Else you can find it in /var/lib/docker/volumes/homebridge
if running in Docker.
(Else just reinstall the damn thing and keep better track of your passwords…)
Then sudo systemctl restart homebridge.service
. It’s on http://192.168.1.75:8581
References
- Migrating FreeNAS ZFS Pools to Ubuntu
- Fantastic Overview of macvlans
- https://www.linuxtechi.com/create-use-macvlan-network-in-docker/
- https://github.com/sarunas-zilinskas/docker-compose-macvlan/blob/master/docker-compose.yml
- https://runnable.com/docker/docker-compose-networking
- https://collabnix.com/2-minutes-to-docker-macvlan-networking-a-beginners-guide/
- Ansible NAS