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- | ====== The Approach ====== | ||
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- | **Self-hosting** and **Home-Automation** are something that grow over time, getting more complex and elaborated. You start small, with some recycled hardware and makeshift cables to host some experimental services, then you start self-hosting important stuff. | ||
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- | But then... | ||
- | * One day your home internet connection is down and so you find out about **reliability**... | ||
- | * One day power goes out at home, and you find out that an unexpected server reboot might cause side issues... | ||
- | * One day, maybe during a hot summer day, your USB network card fails on you, when you are on vacation... | ||
- | * One day that critical CalDAV service stop working due to a Python update and you miss an appointment... | ||
- | * One day maybe you get hacked.... | ||
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- | So you start studying and investing in UPS, reodundant ISPs with failover capability, advanced routing for your services, containers, backup techniques... | ||
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- | I went trough the process (except i never got hacked, maybe my security measures where good from the beginning, or i was lucky, o maybe i just never noticed?), and you will as well go trough it. | ||
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- | At the beginning i started out with a very simple approach, spent one year and half more or less expanding to the point where something a little bit more advanced was actually required. I will describe my final implementation (which, actually, is in constant evolution) and, along the way, also describe simpler ways to achieve similar results. | ||
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- | ==== Basic Requirements ==== | ||
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- | The following are the **very basics** that i assume you will take into consideration, | ||
- | * Have a **proper backup plan** in place (see [[selfhost: | ||
- | * Have **two** ISPs to provide a failsafe internet connection (see [[router: | ||
- | * Stored your data on some redoundant **RAID array** (see [[selfhost: | ||
- | * Have an **UPS** solution to protect your server / disk RAIDS from blackouts | ||
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