HomeLab
yet-another-bench-script
HomeLab | yet-another-bench-script | |
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30 | 23 | |
209 | 3,742 | |
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9.9 | 6.9 | |
about 23 hours ago | 9 days ago | |
Python | Shell | |
- | Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License |
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HomeLab
- Some Kubernetes stuff testing
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Do I need Kubernetes?
And if you are interested how I've done it: https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab
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How do you automate the setup of file-less config applications (eg. Uptime Kuma)?
Example of a service that is being backed up (see backup.velero.io/backup-volume): https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab/blob/master/Helm/apps/uptimekuma/templates/deployment.yaml
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I'm a noob at homelab stuff, have three spare rack mount PC's to build something out of. What services are you hosting?
But for me https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab/tree/master/cluster/homelab/apps
- K3S With ContainerD Grafana Dashboard And Dashy HomePage
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Has anyone used BotKube?
So I've been trying to get botkube to work, but it seems to me like the helm chart documentation is outdated? I've been looking at the values and trying to make things work and it didn't really work for me.. https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab/blob/master/cluster/homelab/apps/botkube/helmrelease.yaml is what I tried
- What do you have running on your Homeserver?
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Looking for some thoughts on backup solutions for Kubernetes
And here is some documentation and specifics I've ran into. https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab/blob/master/docs/Backups.md
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How to orchestrate all services on server?
Also for configuration storage and git, I recommend taking a gitops approach to things. You can checkup FluxCD2. Here is my repo for reference https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab
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Looking for tips / recommendations for new selfhoster
A few suggestions and thinks I wish I knew when I started ( personal opinions incoming ): 1. Get a single well sized server ( I'd go for 8 cpus .. And like more than 16 gigs of ram and 250+ ssd, ideally m.2 nvme ). Don't bother with raspberry pis.. Check my profile for my previous post to see a comparison of raspberry pi cluster and a x86 cluster... 2. Install proxmox to do virtualization 3. The majority of People in this sub hate kubernetes and the minority is scared to speak, but install k3s on the vms you spin up, this way you can scale resources and not worry about some elaborate setup of which containers go to which node and how to setup tls offloading, load balancing and much much much more as kubernetes will handle it for you. ( bonus since you are a devops engineer so you are probably used to kube clusters ) 4. Use Velero to do restic backups to s3 for services that are critical like dbs and password managers etc. 5. Do everything with ansible or GitOps! My personal homelab is here: https://github.com/Michaelpalacce/HomeLab utilizing ansible, flux for GitOps and renovate to keep my services up to date ( note to say my cluster spin up isn't as nice as I want it to be since when provisioning I have a Dependency on some secrets which I do manually.. But this is only first cluster setup ) 6. Setup a VPN and administrative services on the raspberry pi you have lying around. Personally my VPN is on the router but if yours doesn't support it, do that. 7. After you are done setting everything up and you have a backup, format the drives and reinstall the vms and re set everything up. Document the process, write automation scripts until satisfied... I genuinely recommend you do this like 3 times...... 8. Vpn I guess a lot of people like wireguard or adguard home... Doesn't really matter as long as it's not open vpn and it supports multiple threads. 9. Setup nodered for some automation around your new home, you'll love it. 10. Firefly is amazing! 11. Make sure that your CSI ( Container storage interface ) supports replication. Keep 3 replicas of critical volumes! 11. If you need any help, don't forget to ask :) personally shoot me a dm and I'll do my best to help, but I'm sure most of us here would
yet-another-bench-script
- YABS: Yet-Another-Bench-Script
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Yet Another VPS Benchmark – Cloudfanatic, DigitalOcean, Linode, Vultr [Aug 2023]
Interesting benchmark script [1], but the post really would benefit from a comparison table or graphs.
https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script
- Spaceberg on LET.
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High server response time Hetzner (AX102)
What nginx/php stack are you running? Also run https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script to test network speeds, cpu etc.
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Anyone using Hetzner Arm64 line? Looks really good, is it "too good to be true"?
# ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## # # Yet-Another-Bench-Script # # v2023-04-23 # # https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script # # ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## # Thu Jun 8 10:09:28 AM UTC 2023 ARM compatibility is considered *experimental* Basic System Information: --------------------------------- Uptime : 0 days, 0 hours, 2 minutes Processor : Neoverse-N1 CPU cores : 4 @ ??? MHz AES-NI : ✔ Enabled VM-x/AMD-V : ❌ Disabled RAM : 7.5 GiB Swap : 0.0 KiB Disk : 75.0 GiB Distro : Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS Kernel : 5.15.0-69-generic VM Type : KVM IPv4/IPv6 : ✔ Online / ✔ Online IPv6 Network Information: --------------------------------- ISP : Hetzner Online GmbH ASN : AS24940 Hetzner Online GmbH Host : Hetzner Location : Falkenstein, Saxony (SN) Country : Germany fio Disk Speed Tests (Mixed R/W 50/50): --------------------------------- Block Size | 4k (IOPS) | 64k (IOPS) ------ | --- ---- | ---- ---- Read | 137.43 MB/s (34.3k) | 1.07 GB/s (16.8k) Write | 137.34 MB/s (34.3k) | 1.11 GB/s (17.3k) Total | 274.78 MB/s (68.6k) | 2.18 GB/s (34.2k) | | Block Size | 512k (IOPS) | 1m (IOPS) ------ | --- ---- | ---- ---- Read | 1.91 GB/s (3.7k) | 1.92 GB/s (1.8k) Write | 2.08 GB/s (4.0k) | 2.14 GB/s (2.0k) Total | 4.00 GB/s (7.8k) | 4.06 GB/s (3.9k) iperf3 Network Speed Tests (IPv4): --------------------------------- Provider | Location (Link) | Send Speed | Recv Speed | Ping ----- | ----- | ---- | ---- | ---- Clouvider | London, UK (10G) | 5.49 Gbits/sec | 8.30 Gbits/sec | 20.9 ms Scaleway | Paris, FR (10G) | 6.22 Gbits/sec | 8.51 Gbits/sec | 24.6 ms NovoServe | North Holland, NL (40G) | 10.9 Gbits/sec | 13.2 Gbits/sec | 12.9 ms Uztelecom | Tashkent, UZ (10G) | 2.43 Gbits/sec | 2.15 Gbits/sec | 92.8 ms Clouvider | NYC, NY, US (10G) | 1.19 Gbits/sec | 116 Mbits/sec | 89.0 ms Clouvider | Dallas, TX, US (10G) | 1.38 Gbits/sec | 1.45 Gbits/sec | 124 ms Clouvider | Los Angeles, CA, US (10G) | 734 Mbits/sec | 1.15 Gbits/sec | 149 ms iperf3 Network Speed Tests (IPv6): --------------------------------- Provider | Location (Link) | Send Speed | Recv Speed | Ping ----- | ----- | ---- | ---- | ---- Clouvider | London, UK (10G) | 6.33 Gbits/sec | 8.14 Gbits/sec | 20.5 ms Scaleway | Paris, FR (10G) | 7.64 Gbits/sec | 7.45 Gbits/sec | 22.7 ms NovoServe | North Holland, NL (40G) | 10.0 Gbits/sec | 14.5 Gbits/sec | 12.7 ms Uztelecom | Tashkent, UZ (10G) | 2.22 Gbits/sec | 2.01 Gbits/sec | 92.6 ms Clouvider | NYC, NY, US (10G) | 1.20 Gbits/sec | 56.9 Mbits/sec | 86.4 ms Clouvider | Dallas, TX, US (10G) | 1.29 Gbits/sec | 1.44 Gbits/sec | 123 ms Clouvider | Los Angeles, CA, US (10G) | 928 Mbits/sec | 1.19 Gbits/sec | 149 ms Geekbench 6 Benchmark Test: --------------------------------- Test | Value | Single Core | 1059 Multi Core | 3404 Full Test | https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/1521109 YABS completed in 12 min 38 sec
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Linode Alternative
I ran this script https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script on digital ocean and it's trash at their pricing. Linode and Hetzner were great.
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Test upload/download speed of a webserver
If so use YABS
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Azure App Service vs Linode Benchmarks (Linode is 12x the value)
First off, I'm astonished by these results. Maybe there's more to it that I didn't account for or am not seeing but - I used the benchmark script here: https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script
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Any Cloud Hosting Service Which Is Free And Not Requires Bank Details?
It's just the speed test part of YABS:
- Yet Another Bench Script (YABS): evaluate Linux server performance with this simple Bash script and utility
What are some alternatives?
changedetection.io - The best and simplest free open source web page change detection, website watcher, restock monitor and notification service. Restock Monitor, change detection. Designed for simplicity - Simply monitor which websites had a text change for free. Free Open source web page change detection, Website defacement monitoring, Price change notification
wslu - A collection of utilities for Windows Subsystem for Linux
charts - ⚠️ Deprecated : Helm charts for applications you run at home
LinuxGSM - The command-line tool for quick, simple deployment and management of Linux dedicated game servers.
draw.io - draw.io is a JavaScript, client-side editor for general diagramming.
Gogh - Gogh is a collection of color schemes for various terminal emulators, including Gnome Terminal, Pantheon Terminal, Tilix, and XFCE4 Terminal also compatible with iTerm on macOS.
docker-traefik - Docker media and home server stack with Docker Compose, Traefik, Swarm Mode, Google OAuth2/Authelia, and LetsEncrypt
photoshopCClinux - Photoshop CC v19 installer for Gnu/Linux
dashboard-icons - 🚚 Dashboard Icons has moved to another home!
netcheck - A shell script to check and log when your internet connection goes down. Pull requests are welcome.
sealed-secrets - A Kubernetes controller and tool for one-way encrypted Secrets
homelab - A collection of awesome resources and a ready to go stack of self hosted services with Docker and docker-compose.