State of Homelab 2026

(mrlokans.work)

64 points | by swq115 4 hours ago

17 comments

  • AdrienPoupa 1 hour ago
    This is very cool, but you should not use Cloudflare Tunnels to stream media. This is forbidden by their terms of service (or at the very least not the intended use of Tunnels and they may disable your service). Use Wireguard or Tailscale instead.

    https://www.xda-developers.com/cloudflare-tunnels-are-great-...

    • ZeWaka 1 hour ago
      Yep, I rent a $5 VPS in my region that I tailscale to for exactly that reason, as well as to un-CGNAT myself.

      For an easy GUI solution for the latter, highly recommend Nginx Proxy Manager.

    • watermelon0 40 minutes ago
      Cloudflare Tunnel publicly exposes your services, whereas Wireguard/Tailscale are VPNs.

      Tailscale (but not Headscale) offers Funnel, which is a reverse proxy, but you cannot use it with your own domain.

      Pangolin is the closest alternative to CF Tunnel, but self-hosted NetBird with reverse proxy functionality can also be used.

      • oynqr 17 minutes ago
        The intersection of people who can self host headscale or netbird and those who can not set up their own reverse proxy is probably the empty set.
  • cadamsdotcom 1 hour ago
    There should be volunteer groups at local libraries running these services for their local communities.

    It’d be a great way for kids to learn to operate services and a great alternative for anyone who wants to use the fantastic open source stuff that’s out there but lacks expertise or time.

    • bsder 1 hour ago
      > There should be volunteer groups at local libraries running these services for their local communities.

      The problem with bespoke anything in computers is always the support.

      No one wants to be on the hook for customer support. I absolutely agree with them.

      There are a ton of "services" that exist solely to enable people to cut a check and say "Customer support is over there. Go talk to them and leave me alone."

  • jsphweid 2 hours ago
    This is not so much a fantasy about "being independent". Instead, it's a fantasy about being a sysadmin.
    • hombre_fatal 1 hour ago
      A good example of that is the guys on r/homelab explaining how they built a NAS so their wife could save her phone media without Google Photos.

      Man, paying Google/Apple $5/mo is surely a much better solution for her. And are you really doing 3-2-1 on that?

      Save the dicking around for your own stuff.

      • stratts 1 hour ago
        Both my wife and I are reluctant to upload our entire photo collection spanning 20+ years to the cloud. Immich has been working really well for us, the experience for her is just as seamless as it would be for Google Photos, I think.

        And at $180/yr for the 2TB of storage we'd need to pay for, vs. maybe $200 in hardware, it pays itself off pretty quickly... if you exclude the time spent setting it up and administering it. But I don't mind, it's a bit like digital gardening for me.

        • kyriakos 48 minutes ago
          $200 hardware only? my main concern with storing photos locally is the need for a NAS. Even at 2-3TB you still need: a NAS device, 2-3 hard drives and the mini pc to run immich + power bill to run them. it will cost more than $180/yr. cost should not be the main factor people store photos locally.
          • stratts 26 minutes ago
            You don't need a NAS, really. My setup is a second-hand i5-7300U fanless mini-PC I got for $90, 2 x second-hand 4TB HDDs, and 2 x USB 3.5" enclosures. It's messy but it works... I haven't measured power in a bit but I reckon it pulls around 20-30W, which is around $15-20 a year at my current prices.

            We back it up daily using restic to an old 2TB NAS that's at my parents place + the occasional manual backup

      • puppymaster 1 hour ago
        ha even better on /r/localllm husbands are scratching their head why their wives and kids just won't use their local chatgpt. It's fast and i bought 4 5090 for this why won't they use it!

        Brothers, maybe they don't want you to see all their private chats with AI?

      • user_7832 1 hour ago
        > Man, paying Google/Apple $5/mo is surely a much better solution for her. And are you really doing 3-2-1 on that?

        Just some days back someone on reddit posted how their 14yo son (via a family/linked Google account) used Gemini Live to, err, enjoy himself with the camera on.

        All his accounts are now permanently locked for CSAM.

        So, yes, not being beholden to a megacorp absolutely has its uses.

        • Aurornis 47 minutes ago
          That Reddit post was thoroughly debunked as untrue. It had some obvious plot holes and inconsistencies.

          Google even came out and said that’s not how account suspensions work: They don’t sequentially ban other accounts that have been associated with a device that was associated with an account, as many pointed out.

          I’m surprised how many people fell for that obvious piece of Reddit creative fiction. I think we’ll be hearing about it as an urban legend for years.

          Reddit has become a place for posting fiction on advice subs. It started on the relationship advice subs but has spread to all of the advice subs now, like the legal advice post you saw. You have to read Reddit with a lot of skepticism.

        • user_7832 1 hour ago
          Oh, by the way - this was the account he used for his business (I don't remember if it was a custom domain). He's pretty much lost his only way of communicating with customers. This isn't just a "whoops, let me make a new email" situation.

          (You can go to the legal advice UK subreddit if you want to see the post.)

          • Aurornis 47 minutes ago
            > (You can go to the legal advice UK subreddit if you want to see the post.)

            It was removed quickly because it was obviously untrue. The details of the story weren’t even consistent across the posters comments.

      • whoahwio 1 hour ago
        yes, the economics, and ease of use, of google/apple cloud storage is unmatched

        and yes, most people willing to endeavor into the area are hobbyist, with all that entails

        however, reading even one story of someone losing access to their cloud photos for xyz reason, is enough to decide that you ought to have some mechanism in place to ensure ownership of your data

        • snoman 52 minutes ago
          I just sync down everything from my wife/kids’ Google Drive/Dropbox/whatever nightly to my NAS. Usability of a cloud solution, but with on-prem backup.
      • dugite-code 1 hour ago
        Except with modern tooling it's not a huge task anymore to run these services.

        Cost wise on the right hardware it is very cheap to run, add the privacy/personal control aspect it's no wonder so many people do it.

        • Gigachad 1 hour ago
          Software wise I find stuff pretty easy to set and forget. It's hardware that's always been the issue for me. When your power or internet goes out, everything goes down. While you move property, every thing is down. Currently my server has developed an issue with randomly crashing and rebooting I haven't been able to resolve yet.

          Using a VPS entirely removes the hardware aspect, but it also mostly defeats the point of self hosting.

          • prmoustache 1 hour ago
            Your personal photos likely do not need 99.99999999999% of availability, especially if you still have a local copy of the most recent and interesting ones on your smartphone.
          • anon7000 1 hour ago
            I don’t think it defeats the point at all. Uploading photos to Google is a massive privacy concern. Apple is maybe better in that way, but very limited cross-platform support, and when I’ve tried it, poor performance & pricing. Neither do well at higher end photography either.
            • Gigachad 1 hour ago
              I self host for privacy, which makes me feel uncomfortable about all my private data sitting unencrypted on a server I don't control. It's better in that you don't have fully automated google AI scanning your data, but it's still exposed. None of the self hosted apps are designed with e2e encryption in mind so you'd be better off using icloud.
    • altmanaltman 21 minutes ago
      Isn't responsibility the trade off for independence?

      You can't have one without the other.

  • arjie 2 hours ago
    Cloudflare Tunnel is a wonderful thing. In fact, Cloudflare itself is fantastic for homelabbers because it gives you so much for free. I used to just host direct on my own home IP, but nowadays I find it easier to just `cloudflared`. Don't have to worry about the firewall and any breaches into my network and all of that stuff.

    I started from a similar place as you and then eventually now my IaaC for my homelab is just idempotent bash scripts written by Claude. The pattern I find with dependencies is that they have the property that someone wants to change some attribute and so the program needs to evolve for the attribute to be changeable. This means programs evolve to have many hinges and the interactions cause bugs one cannot reason about.

    My needs for the homelab are fairly simple and the script can encode all the information it needs. As a human, writing such a script is tedious. As a human with an AI assistant, I've found that this is so much easier to worry about because bash is a fairly stable target.

    Anyway, apart from that, I landed on using systemd's containers that use podman but otherwise not too different. My (far less polished) version of this post as a memory aid to myself: https://wiki.roshangeorge.dev/w/One_Quick_Way_To_Host_A_WebA...

    • lorenzohess 32 minutes ago
      How do you feel about the privacy implications of Cloudflare theoretically being able to read all your data? I guess this theoretical downside is outweighed by the practical upsides?
    • Hamuko 48 minutes ago
      What's the benefit of Cloudflare Tunnel over just using Wireguard?
      • radicality 10 minutes ago
        Same question from me too - I do have a few services on my homelab at home - stuff like a NAS, synology surveillance, homeassistant, few lxc containers hosting random services on Proxmox - and it all works just fine for my needs with standard WireGuard vpn setup on all my devices (macbook/ipad/iphone/android). What would cloudflare tunnel get me?
  • lorenzohess 32 minutes ago
    How do you feel about the privacy implications of Cloudflare theoretically being able to read all your data? I guess this theoretical downside is outweighed by the practical upsides?
  • import 44 minutes ago
    > There’s something appealing in that idea, being independent and prepared, a male fantasy likely never coming to life

    There’s still cloudflare in the middle of the everything and it doesn’t make it “independent”.

  • SuperMouse 49 minutes ago
    For me it's a Intel n100 box with Proxmox. Auto Updates (without auto reboot) fully activated). It just works.

    For accessing my home network I've rented a 1€-VPS that acts as a Wireguard connection hub.

  • nateberkopec 2 hours ago
    For secrets management, I basically just use fnox everywhere (https://fnox.jdx.dev/). It's a frontend to tons more options than sops, although `age` is still included. I also think the DX is better but to each their own.
    • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 2 hours ago
      Looks interesting, thanks for sharing. I am using SOPS, might be a good replacement.
    • znnajdla 1 hour ago
      I just use Infisical self hosted
  • znnajdla 1 hour ago
    In Ukraine I have visited SaaS company offices serving production traffic with an actual bunker like this. Physically underground.
  • willio58 1 hour ago
    I recently did the math and was floored to see I’d be spending 1.3k per year on streaming alone. So I said screw it, bought a nas and 36 TB of hard drives and set up an arr stack. I cancelled all of our streaming subscriptions 2 months ago and it’s been the best decision I’ve ever made. Plus my whole family is doing the same from all around town. I’m saving my extended family on the order of 5-6k per year total.

    The nas is going to pay itself off in a few months, then it’s all savings from there. If only these media billionaires didn’t get so greedy, I would have happily kept paying them.

    Especially with Claude code, setting up something like this is basically just sitting down and prompting for a couple of hours.

    The emerging benefits are nice too. Like we don’t have to sift through junk of Netflix or Hulu to find stuff we would actually watch. All of it is stuff we would watch because we added it ourselves. Really fun!

    • ZaoLahma 11 minutes ago
      I do a hybrid, where I keep lowest tier subscriptions but choose to watch content off of our media server setup at the highest available quality, without advertisement.

      I don't mind paying for what I consume, but God damn is the value proposition at the floor currently. Here even the rather expensive mid tier subscription gives you 1080p at most with all the big players. It's as if they somehow converged to this model and aren't competing anymore. Coincidence, I'm sure.

    • anon7000 1 hour ago
      Another huge benefit is you can actually get high-bitrate streaming. Ripping a 4k Blu-ray & streaming it from home (for those who may not want to sail the seas) is sooooo much higher quality than typical streaming.
      • Gigachad 1 hour ago
        It is so sad how with the internet we have accepted terrible media quality. Instant messaging and social media reduces photos to 1MP and heavily compressed. It's fine for a photo or meme you are only looking at once and scrolling past. But if it's something you'd want to save, the quality is garbage.

        I'd honestly rather apps stop providing hosted media and just do the delivery, let me worry about backing up history. iMessage seems to be the only one sending things in full quality.

        • watermelon0 34 minutes ago
          The main difference is that iMessages count towards iCloud quota, whereas (most?) other messaging services have free storage.
          • Gigachad 25 minutes ago
            iMessage doesn't require you to store history in icloud, it can just store everything locally if you want. But yes, I'd rather not have stored history, or the option to pay for storage than to have all media crushed beyond recognition.

            A few times I've wanted to print something and found it was sent over an IM app and compressed to 100kb rendering it useless.

    • kenniskrag 1 hour ago
      Is that legal? Do you avoid uploading somehow?
    • globular-toast 45 minutes ago
      Alternatively, you could not give them your money or your time. Find other hobbies and kick the "content" addiction.
  • ceinewydd 2 hours ago
    Looking forward to the follow up post, State of Bunker 2029.
  • oaiey 1 hour ago
    Sounds more like a state of the private download engine to me :)
  • nodesocket 1 hour ago
    I have a homelab with 4x Raspberry Pi 4's running Kubernetes a GMKtec Intel i5-12450H and a ProLiant ML350p Gen8 (which uses an ungodly amount of power). I'd add the following software/tools which have been awesome:

      - Portainer running on GMKtec & ProLiant
      - Dozzle (docker log viewer) on GMKtec & ProLiant
      - Beszel (server monitoring, awesome) all hosts
      - Kubetail (Kubernetes log viewer on Pi K8s)
      - HomeAssistant
      - Jellyfin
      - UptimeKuma (uptime and notifications)
      - Semaphore UI (ansible playbook runner)
      - Metabase (querying and visualization for dbs)
  • oofbaroomf 2 hours ago
    Seems like it's down right now. I guess that's the "State of Homelab"? :)
    • KomoD 2 hours ago
      Up for me.
  • colordrops 1 hour ago
    > I originally intended to try out the NixOS for the sake of reproducible builds and being able to store the configuration in a single place but got too lazy about it.

    Ironically once I got over the hump of learning NixOS, I can't imagine using anything else for declarative configuration. Too lazy to use a traditional system which requires custom wiring.

  • atlgator 2 hours ago
    You are doing more than I am (e.g. synchronized file storage, books, music), but I have radarr, sonarr, overseerr, plex, and supporting apps for movies and tv shows. Plex is available externally through its remote access feature. For the actual request system, I run OpenClaw with an Overseerr extension. This allows me to manage titles remotely via Telegram without any kind of tunnel or SSO. Simple and gets the job done for the solo-user scenario.
  • imbus 2 hours ago
    [dead]