Been messing around with Home Assistant for a while now wanting to finally put together a real server rack, and finally had a chance after mom said she wanted to put up security cameras after an incident at work (she works in mental health so "work" coming home with her is a real concern)
The setup:
I had the rack on hand after finding it free on marketplace. The tower off to the right is the server running Frigate which I plan to get a rack case for from a friend I'm visiting in a few days.
The 48 port switch is complete overkill but I got it for $20 and it's gigabit.
The little gray box with the radio dongle is my Home Assistant server with a Zigbee stick (I plan to move this onto the Frigate server when I can upgrade it a bit)
The white disc is the TP-Link Deco that acts as my router and a wireless bridge to two other Decos, one giving the printer in mom's office a connection and the other in my room just so I have an ethernet jack for now till I have a chance to run an actual wired connection.
The small 5-port switch is PoE for a handful of LaView cameras around the house which are terminated into the lower patch panel.
The top patch panel currently has one coupler to a cable for the WAN from the Xfinity gateway, and the other is a cable going to a MoCA bridge on the wall for the wireless cable box in our living room.
And of course, the protobean vibing on the monitor is essential, he guards the servers
As for where it actually lives, I was given permission to commandeer the living room coat closet and run power and coax to it, so the only thing that makes its presence known is a quiet muffled fan noise, which neither mom nor I mind
It's a modest setup, and I'm sure it doesn't win any awards but I'm proud of what I've managed to put together with the budget (the few parts mom paid for as part of the camera install plus doordash while I'm doing a few certificate courses until the place I work at in the summer opens up again) and existing resources I had, and it's my first Linux setup. I went with Ubuntu because I'm new and it's easy to use, but it's Linux, and I got it running, so I'll take that victory.
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