Retro games seem to be most use of these devices. Although look around the house to see what you can computerise.Pi 1 model B. Sat on a shelf for atleast 6 years. Anyone got a use for it?
pretty sure that it'll make very little difference in the real world.Pi Zero is WiFi only. Wouldn’t recommend setting up PiHole on such a device as you’ll introduce latency and reliability issues to your network.
Pretty sure it would. WiFi will introduce a noticeable degree of latencypretty sure that it'll make very little difference in the real world.
ok I've smokeping running on my network.Pretty sure it would. WiFi will introduce a noticeable degree of latency
Updated after a couple of changes.
Pi 4, 4Gb. Pi-Hole.
Pi 4, 2Gb. 2nd Pi-Hole. Kept in sync with primary Pi-Hole using gravity sync.
Pi 4, 4Gb. Flight tracker reporting to Flight Aware & Flight Radar 24. Also running a RIPE Atlas Probe.
Pi 4, 4Gb. PiVPN (WireGuard & OpenVPN) & Cloudflare Tunnels endpoint.
Pi 4, 2Gb. Home Bridge.
Pi Zero 2 W. Running Mosquitto, an MQTT broker that feeds into Home Assistant.
Pi CM4, 4Gb/16Gb eMMC. Home Assistant, installed in a Home Assistant Yellow.
Any reason why these all couldn't just be consolidated onto a single mini PC as docker images (or at worst VMs)?
Mini PCs can run Linux though?- Passing hardware into Docker (in the case of Flight Tracker) is a pig to get working properly and isn't overly reliable. Mini PC not an option as the software runs on Linux.
Fair point- Putting 2 x Pi-Hole instances into Docker on a Mini PC doesn't make sense as there's no hardware redundancy.
Take it that needs GPIO?- Home Assistant needs a Zigbee radio so that largely rules out Docker.
Absolutely better to use what you have, just always intrigued especially when people are running the amount of Pi's (guessing £300+) that could easily have paid for a Mini PC.but I'd have to buy a Mini PC to run in when I had a Pi 4 sitting spare.
You can run KVM on most Linux distros, or go for a specific Linux based Hypervisor such as ProxmoxAs for VM's, in most cases it's doable but to run VM's I'd need a Hypervisor.
Lots of Pi's soon add up though in terms of power draw (~5w load each), a typical Mini PC could be around the 30w markThe Pi's are completely silent, power efficient and don't kick out any appreciable heat.
They can, but I refer you to the point on not waiting to run both my DNS servers on a single bit of hardware.Mini PCs can run Linux though?
No, just USB but I haven't found that overly reliable with Docker. Considering I'm using automations in Home Assistant to control Zigbee devices I don't want them to fail because Docker has decided that the USB Zigbee stick isn't working.Take it that needs GPIO?
Yeah, cost of the Pi's plus PoE HAT's will be higher than a Mini PC but I've been obtaining Pi's since the Pi4 was released in 2019 so according to my man maths, they're cheaper. Especially as I'd need at least 2 Mini PC's to not have all my eggs in 1 basket.Absolutely better to use what you have, just always intrigued especially when people are running the amount of Pi's (guessing £300+) that could easily have paid for a Mini PC.
I've never actually experimented with Proxmox, I'm an ESX/Hyper-V guy. The HP Microserver I've retired was running ESXi.You can run KVM on most Linux distros, or go for a specific Linux based Hypervisor such as Proxmox
Total PoE draw is around 30w at present so significantly less than my old Microserver + NAS setup with a total of 10 HD's. Whilst a Mini PC would be about the same as the Pi's that'd be for a single Mini PC and I'd need 2.Lots of Pi's soon add up though in terms of power draw (~5w load each), a typical Mini PC could be around the 30w mark
not tempted to move to mainsail/klipper/moonraker?Running one Pi3 as octopi for my my 3d Printer
and a Pi4 running my home nas using openmediavault
I have an older pi2 which is setup as pihole
Not really, my ender 3 is totally dialled in and running great with octopi so don't want to upset it really for just a speed increasenot tempted to move to mainsail/klipper/moonraker?