Never really considered clusters to be useful in a homelab, but after watching the video I've changed my mind. Thinking about trying this with my Zerotier account as a relatively secure way of distributing incus VM's to my security indifferent family, who no way will ever be allowed to have direct access to my homelab network.
Good timing. I just set up my first little cluster 3 days ago and enjoying the experience. I have run into one problem that the host nodes with kernel 6.9 are not showing the IPV4 column in incus list even though the guests do have an IP. Other than that cosmetic glitch, it's interesting to compare with my Proxmox cluster. I'm not sure about lxconsole though.
@@scottibyte Too many things to enumerate. You can see for yourself if you try it. It's not just the GUI but the system around it like useful graphs, easy Ceph install and management and SDN, and of course the almighty Proxmox Back Server which is the killer feature.
the awaited 101. Thx !!
Never really considered clusters to be useful in a homelab, but after watching the video I've changed my mind. Thinking about trying this with my Zerotier account as a relatively secure way of distributing incus VM's to my security indifferent family, who no way will ever be allowed to have direct access to my homelab network.
Not sure I understand the use case, but would be interested in you sharing in the chat.
@@scottibyte I'll gather my thoughts on the idea and put on the chat over the weekend.
Good timing. I just set up my first little cluster 3 days ago and enjoying the experience. I have run into one problem that the host nodes with kernel 6.9 are not showing the IPV4 column in incus list even though the guests do have an IP. Other than that cosmetic glitch, it's interesting to compare with my Proxmox cluster. I'm not sure about lxconsole though.
LXConsole is an amazing with some awesome upcoming features.
@@scottibyte It's promising, but nowhere near as comprehensive and complete as the Proxmox VE interface.
@@MarkConstable What is lxconsole missing that Proxmox has in its GUI?
@@scottibyte Too many things to enumerate. You can see for yourself if you try it. It's not just the GUI but the system around it like useful graphs, easy Ceph install and management and SDN, and of course the almighty Proxmox Back Server which is the killer feature.
@@MarkConstable so, proprietary ways of implementing standard storage and management functions.