Cross posted to r/homeserver
proxmox. i fine its very easy to work with and manage. also proxmox backup server is amazing
Wow I just realized that I’m not backing up any of my Proxmox vms Thanks for the reminder friend!
Arch. No Window Managers or Desktop Environments. Its easy to work with when no extra fluff is installed.
Debian
Home Server: VMware ESXi NAS: Unraid
Proxmox 4 lyf
Debian Stable. Clean, easy, and reliable. Upgrades smoothly without drama.
Debian. All day, everyday.
Debian. I use mostly docker containers and super easy to spin up and manage.
Debian, FreeBSD. Proxmox is awesome for hosting VMs, LXC, and Docker Containers (via a VM).
Debian, I wouldn’t pick another one.
If you’re looking for a NAS and don’t want to invest on all disks right now, unraid. Otherwise truenas
If you want a beautiful front end for docker containers
CasaOS/ZimaOS Cosmos-server Unbrel
Otherwise
- proxmox
- truenas
- unraid
Denian stable, openSUSE Leap
Yup, Debian is stable and rock solid for years
I think it really depends on what you intend to do with it… Many answers here will mention what they use but not why.
In my case I want to have various services installed in docker containers, and I have the skills to manage Linux in console. A very simple solution for me was to use a rock-solid, established Linux distro on the host (Debian stable) with Docker sourced from its official apt repo. It’s clean, it’s simple, it’s reliable, it’s easy to reinstall if it explodes.
Why containers (as opposed to directly on the host)? I’ve done both over several years and I’ve come to consider the container approach cleaner. (I mention this because I’ve seen people wondering why even bother with containers.) It’s a nice sweet spot in-between dumping everything on the host and a fully reproducible environment like nixOS or Ansible. I get the ability to reproduce a service perfectly thanks to docker compose; I get to separate persistent data very cleanly thanks to container:host mapping of dirs and files; I get to do flexible networking solutions because containers can be seen as individual “machines” and I can juggle their interfaces and ports around freely; I get some extra security from the container isolation; it’s less complicated than using VMs etc.
Arch, because I’ve always had a better experience with it than Ubuntu, be it server or desktop. I also daily drive it on my desktops.
It’s so much easier to setup. Only with Docker and MergerFS it’s a command and easily updatable, instead of the PPA setups or bash installs you have to do on Ubuntu. The wiki is still the best.
And it’s way easier to maintain when there’s less stuff.
Oh… Look at that…
You use arch BTW