My Weird Prompts

Proxmox vs Stock Linux for Home Servers

34 min · 21. Juni 2026
Episode Proxmox vs Stock Linux for Home Servers Cover

Beschreibung

When your home server dies and you're rebuilding, the default choice for many is Proxmox — but is it actually the right call? This episode digs into the real differences between running Proxmox VE and a stock Ubuntu Server install with KVM and libvirt for a simple three-VM setup. We cover resource overhead (Proxmox uses about 1GB RAM idle vs ~350MB for minimal Ubuntu), ZFS management differences, USB passthrough for Zigbee dongles, and the hidden cost of running Corosync on a single node. If you've ever wondered whether muscle memory is hiding architectural inertia in your homelab, this one's for you.

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Episode Server Distro Showdown: BTRFS, ZFS & Pragmatic Picks Cover

Server Distro Showdown: BTRFS, ZFS & Pragmatic Picks

Why do server admins make such boringly pragmatic distro choices while desktop users debate wallpaper defaults? This episode unpacks the real decision tree behind server distro selection — where kernel versions, package availability, installer behavior, and support lifecycles matter far more than identity or aesthetics. We trace how filesystem support for BTRFS and ZFS can effectively pick your distro for you, examine what "supported" actually means across Ubuntu, Debian, OpenSUSE, and Fedora Server, and explore why Ubuntu dominates at 33% of web servers while Debian holds 20%. We also cover the death of CentOS, the rise of Rocky and AlmaLinux, OpenSUSE Leap's impending migration to ALP, and the CDDL vs GPLv2 legal standoff that keeps ZFS out of the Linux kernel tree.

21. Juni 202628 min