barnaclebill

joined 1 week ago
[–] barnaclebill@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

These notes are gold—thank you so much for sharing!

[–] barnaclebill@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 day ago (3 children)

You swapped the kernel? I guess I'll find out soon enough when I attempt my setup, but as I gather up the motivation to dive in, I'm assuming it will be as simple as installing a proxmox package or something. I guess I should re-read the guides. 🤣

That would be dope if you wouldn't mind sharing your notes. There's a decent amount of documentation out there already, but I often find it extremely valuable to read different people's perspectives from real life experience in addition to the official guides. No pressure. Either way, thanks for chiming in!

Good to know. Thanks!

[–] barnaclebill@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Thanks for the tip. I have no experience w/ ZFS, but I'll keep this in mind in case I go that route. Thank you!

Thanks, I'll look into dropbear. I've seen it mentioned in other posts, and with a quick search I found what appears to be a nice, solid guide: Full Disk Encryption Reboot with DropbearSSH. Thank you!

 

Background: I'd like to turn an old personal laptop into a Jellyfin server so that I can stream media to my living room TV. I want to be able to expand what I use this server for over time. I'm leaning toward Proxmox as the OS so that I can spin up new containers for various services instead of installing a bunch of services on a base Debian install. I also want full disk encryption so that any data on the OS drive is less likely to be compromised by theft or Craigslist.

Question #1: I gather the general accepted approach for this is to first install Debian as a base w/ full disk encryption enabled and then install Proxmox on top because there is no option for full disk encryption in the native installer for Proxmox. Is this still the case?

Excerpt from this tutorial from November 2023 on the Proxmox Forum:

This tutorial deals with encryption of an existing installation. If you are starting fresh, my recommendation would be to install Debian with full disk encryption and then add Proxmox to it.

Excerpt from this post from February 2019 on the Level1Techs Forum:

The easiest way to do an encrypted Proxmox setup is to start with a minimal, vanilla Debian install. Set up the encrypted partition using the installer like you would with any other Debian system. Once installed, reboot. Then follow the guide for installing Proxmox on Debian.

Question #2: I don't mind entering the key manually whenever I reboot the server, but will I be able to unlock the server remotely? For example, suppose I'm tinkering in the web admin panel or an SSH session and I want/need to reboot—will I have to physically go over to the laptop and enter the key every time?

Also, I appreciate any other tips from the community to help me think about this in the right way. Thanks!