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Home Lab

VMware Community Homelabs Project:

  • Submit Community Homelab
  • View Community Homelabs

Homelab Hardware Options:

  • VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Homelab Hardware Options
  • Interesting VMware Homelab Kits for 2024
  • Interesting VMware Homelab Kits for 2023
  • Interesting VMware Homelab Kits for 2022
  • Supermicro VMware Homelab 2020 Options

Homelab Podcasts:

  • Unexplored Territory - VMware Homelabs for AI
  • Unexplored Territory - William Lam's top 10 home lab gifts for under the Christmas tree!
  • VirtuallySpeaking - vSphere 8 Homelab Edition
  • Home Labbers - William Lam

Nested Lab Deployment Scripts:

  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 5.2 Import Tool
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 5.1
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for Aria Suite (Lifecycle, Identity, Operations, Logs & Automation)
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for vSphere & vSAN 8.x
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 4.2
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for vSphere with Tanzu using NSX Advanced Load Balancer (NSX ALB)
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for vSphere with Tanzu using HAProxy
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for vSphere with Tanzu using NSX-T
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for vSphere 6.x
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for NSX-T 2.x
  • Automated Lab Deployment Script for VMware PKS

ASUS/Intel NUC General Resources:

  • VMware customer production use cases for Intel NUC
  • Experimenting with ESXi CPU affinity and Intel Hybrid CPU Cores
  • How to disable the Efficiency Cores (E-cores) on an Intel NUC?
  • ESXi PSOD due to GP Exception 13 in world with Intel 13th Generation CPU
  • ESXi with Intel Arc 750 / 770 GPU
  • Video of ESXi install workaround for Fatal CPU mismatch on feature for Intel 12th Gen CPUs and newer
  • Updated findings for passthrough of Intel NUC Integrated Graphics (iGPU) with ESXi

ASUS NUC Hardware Review Resources:

  • ASUS NUC 14 Performance (Scorpion Canyon)
  • ASUS NUC 14 Pro (Revel Canyon)

Intel NUC Hardware Review Resources:

  • Intel NUC 13 Pro (Arena Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 12 Enthusiast (Serpent Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 12 Pro (Wall Street Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 12 Extreme (Dragon Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 11 Extreme (Beast Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 11 Pro (Panther Canyon & Tiger Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 10 Pro (Frost Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 9 Extreme (Quartz Canyon & Ghost Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 8 Extreme (Hades Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 7 Pro (Baby Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 6 Extreme (Skull Canyon)
  • Intel NUC 6 Pro (Swift Canyon)

Additional Hardware Review Resources:

  • ESXi on GMKtec NucBox K11
  • ESXi on GMKtec EVO-X1 with AMD Ryzen AI Pro 300 Series (formally Strix Point)
  • ESXi on SimplyNUC extremeEDGE 3000 Series
  • ESXi on Protectli Vault Pro 6650/6670
  • ESXi on Minisforum MS-01
  • ESXi on iKOOLCORE R2
  • ESXi on Lenovo ThinkStation P3 Ultra
  • ESXi on SimplyNUC Moonstone
  • ESXi on Lenovo ThinkStation P3 Tiny
  • ESXi on SolidRun V3000
  • ESXi on ASUS PN64-E1
  • ESXi on palm size iKOOLCORE R1
  • ESXi on AMD ChangWang CW56-58
  • ESXi on Dell Precision 7770 & 7670
  • ESXi on Supermicro E302-12D
  • ESXi on Supermicro E100-12T
  • ESXi on SimplyNUC Ruby and Topaz
  • ESXi on Supermicro E100-9W
  • ESXi on ASRock 4x4 BOX V2
  • ESXi on Supermicro E300-9D
  • ESXi on ASRock 4x4 BOX

ESXi on Arm Resources:

  • ESXi-Arm Articles

Homelab Resources:

  • 128GB memory mini PCs is now a reality with 64GB DDR5 SODIMM
  • Sharing a single NVMe device with NVMe Tiering, ESXi-OSDATA & VMFS Datastore?
  • Intel Neural Processing Unit (NPU) with ESXi
  • Experimenting with ESXi CPU affinity and Intel Hybrid CPU Cores
  • ESXi support for Intel iGPU with SR-IOV
  • Heads Up - ESXi 8.0 Update 2 requires XSAVE CPU instruction even with allowLegacyCPU=true
  • Synology NFS VAAI Plug-in support for vSphere 8.0
  • Synology DS7233+ in Homelab
  • Removable drive tray accessory for Supermicro SYS-E302-12x fanless chassis
  • VMware Cloud Foundation 5.0 running on Intel NUC
  • DDR5 SODIMM capable kits for ESXi
  • 96GB SODIMM memory for DDR5 system with ESXi
  • USB Network Native Driver Fling for ESXi 8.0 Update 1
  • How to enable passthrough for USB Network Adapters claimed by ESXi CDCE Driver?
  • SSD with multiple NVMe namespaces for VMware Homelab
  • Interesting VMware Homelab Kits for 2023
  • Quick Tip - How to deploy vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) to legacy CPU without VMX Unrestricted Guest feature?
  • VMware Cloud Foundation on Intel NUC?
  • Removing NSX CPU/Memory reservations when deploying a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Management or Workload Domain
  • VMware Cloud Foundation with a single ESXi host for Workload Domain?
  • VMware Cloud Foundation with a single ESXi host for Management Domain?
  • Heads Up - 24GB & 48GB DDR5 SODIMM memory now available
  • Quick Tip - Additional NVMe vendors (SK Hynix & Sabrent) for ESXi homelab
  • How to bootstrap ESXi compute only node and connect to vSAN HCI Mesh?
  • ESXi with Intel Arc 750 / 770 GPU
  • How to bootstrap vSAN Express Storage Architecture (ESA) on unsupported hardware?
  • USB Network Native Driver for ESXi Fling now supports vSphere 8!
  • Homelab considerations for vSphere 8
  • vSphere 8 productizes Community Networking Driver Fling for ESXi
  • Potentially interesting VMware Homelab Kits for 2022
  • USB Network Adapters without using the USB Network Native Driver for ESXi
  • Updates to USB Network & NVMe Community Driver for ESXi 7.0 Update 3
  • Considerations for future vSphere Homelabs due to upcoming removal of SD card/USB support for ESXi
  • New storage devices added to Community NVMe Driver for ESXi Fling
  • Passthrough of Intel Iris Xe Integrated GPU on 11th Gen NUC results in Error Code 43
  • USB Network Native Driver for ESXi Fling supports ESXi 7.0 Update 2
  • Community Networking Driver for ESXi Fling v1.2
  • Easily create custom ESXi Images from patch releases using vSphere Image Builder UI
  • Community NVMe Driver for ESXi
  • Community Networking Driver for ESXi
  • Supermicro VMware Homelab 2020 Options
  • Intel NUC with 512GB memory
  • vSphere with Tanzu Homelab with just 32GB memory
  • USB Network Native Driver now supports ESXi 7.0 Update 1
  • ESXi 7.0 Update 1 now includes NIC driver for Intel NUC 10
  • USB Native Driver Fling for ESXi v1.6
  • Disabling TPM 2.0 connection cannot be established message in ESXi for Intel NUC 10
  • Other Intel and AMD small form factor (SFF) systems for vSphere Homelabs
  • Enhancements to the community ne1000 VIB for Intel NUC 10
  • Removable M.2 NVMe SSD PCIe enclosure by Icy Dock
  • How to patch Intel NUC 10 with latest ESXi 7.0 update?
  • Passthrough of Integrated GPU (iGPU) for Apple Mac Mini 2018
  • Passthrough of Integrated GPU (iGPU) for standard Intel NUC
  • How to passthrough USB Keyboard/Mouse HID and CCID devices to VM in ESXi?
  • Configure NSX-T Edge to run on AMD Ryzen CPU
  • Quick Tip – Suppress new core dump warning in ESXi 7.0
  • Changing the default size of the ESX-OSData volume in ESXi 7.0
  • Deploying a minimal vSphere with Kubernetes environment
  • Important – NVMe SSD not found after upgrading to ESXi 7.0
  • Heads Up – Nested ESXi crashes in ESXi 7.0 running on older CPUs
  • Quick Tip - Allow unsupported CPUs when upgrading to ESXi 7.0
  • Homelab considerations for vSphere 7
  • Sonnet Solo5G Multi-Gig (1G/2.5G/5G) USB Adapter works with ESXi
  • How to automate the creation multiple routable VLANs on single L2 network using VyOS
  • USB Native Driver Fling for ESXi adds support for Multi-Gig (1G/2.5G/5G) Adapter
  • New hardware support & enhancements to USB Network Native Driver for ESXi
  • Thunderbolt 3 enclosures with (Single, Dual & Quad) M.2 NVMe SSDs for ESXi
  • Quick Tip – Crucial NVMe SSD not recognized by ESXi 6.7
  • New Thunderbolt 3 to 10GbE options for ESXi
  • Aquantia 10GbE ESXi Driver for Apple 2018 Mac Mini
  • 64GB memory on the Intel NUCs?
  • Touch screen + case for the Raspberry Pi 3
  • ESXi Native Driver for USB NIC Fling
  • PowerShell for PhotonOS on Raspberry Pi 3
  • GPU Passthrough of Radeon RX Vega M in Intel Hades Canyon
  • Dual Intel M.2 Optane 4801x in Supermicro E300-9D
  • How to change the default CPU and Memory requirements for deploying the VMC vCenter Cloud Gateway
  • Supermicro Home Lab Group Buy
  • Is a DNS server still required when using a Static IP for VCSA?
  • Update on running ESXi on Intel NUC Hades Canyon (NUC8i7HNK & NUC8i7HVK)
  • Useful M.2 NVMe accessories for vSphere (VSAN/VMFS) Home Labs
  • How to simulate Persistent Memory (PMem) in vSphere 6.7 for educational purposes? 
  • vYetti – Fun animated vSphere Login UI customization
  • Cool browser plugin for Dark Theme vSphere H5 Client 
  • Native MAC Learning in vSphere 6.7 removes the need for Promiscuous mode for Nested ESXi
  • Thunderbolt to 10GbE Network Adapters for ESXi
  • AHCI (vmw_ahci) performance issue resolved in ESXi 6.5 Update 1
  • Project USB to SDDC – Part 3
  • Project USB to SDDC – Part 2
  • Exclusive vGhetto discount on homelab hardware from MITXPC
  • Project USB to SDDC – Part 1
  • Copying files from a USB (FAT32 or NTFS) device to ESXi
  • Functional USB-C Ethernet Adapter for ESXi 5.5, 6.0 & 6.5
  • KMIP Server Docker Container for evaluating VM Encryption in vSphere 6.5
  • ESXi 6.5 Virtual Appliance is now available
  • USB 3.0 Ethernet Adapter (NIC) driver for ESXi 6.5
  • How to deploy the vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) 6.5 running on VMware Fusion & Workstation?
  • Virtual NVMe and Nested ESXi 6.5?
  • Functional USB 3.0 Ethernet Adapter (NIC) driver for ESXi 5.5 & 6.0
  • Working USB Ethernet Adapter (NIC) for ESXi
  • Deploying Nested ESXi is even easier now with the ESXi Virtual Appliance
  • How to deploy and run the VSAN 6.1 Witness Virtual Appliance on VMware Fusion & Workstation?
  • Running Nested ESXi / VSAN Home Lab on Ravello
  • Subscribe to vGhetto Nested ESXi Template Content Library in vSphere 6.0
  • Home Labs made easier with VSAN 6.0 + USB Disks
  • Thunderbolt Storage for ESXi
  • A killer custom Apple Mac Mini setup running VSAN
  • New VMware Fling to improve Network/CPU performance when using Promiscuous Mode for Nested ESXi
  • VMworld vBrownBag Tech Talk : Nested Virtualization & Dev/Test/Home Lab Panel
  • Quick Tip – Minimum amount of memory to run the vCenter Server Appliance
  • Installing ESXi 5.0 Update 2 on Mac Mini is Now a Breeze! (No Custom ISO/patches Needed!)
  • Running ESXi 5.0 & 5.1 on 2012 Mac Mini 6,2
  • #NotSupported Sessions at VMworld 2012, A Dream Come True
  • How to Access USB Storage in ESXi Shell
  • How to Enable Support for Nested 64bit & Hyper-V VMs in vSphere 5

A killer custom Apple Mac Mini setup running VSAN

10.21.2014 by William Lam // 12 Comments

*** This is a guest blog post from Peter Bjork ***

The first time I was briefed on VMware VSAN, I fell in love. I finally knew how I would build my Home Lab.

Let me first introduce myself, my name is Peter Björk and I work at VMware as Lead Specialist within the EMEA EUC Practice. I fortunately have the opportunity to limit my focus on a very few products and truly specialize in these. I cover two products; VMware ThinApp and VMware Workspace Portal and one feature; the Application Publishing feature of VMware Horizon 6. I’m an End-User application kind of guy. That said, you should understand that I’m far from your ESXi and vSphere expert. If you want to keep up with the latest news in the VMware End-User Computing space make sure to follow me on Twitter, my handle is @thepeb. When I’m not a guest blogger, I frequently blog on the official ThinApp and Horizon Tech blogs.

In my role I produce a lot of blog posts and internal enablement material. I perform many tests using early code drops and on a daily basis I run my home lab to deliver live demos. I need a Home Lab that I can trust and that supports all my work tasks. I started building my lab many years ago. It all started with a single mid tower white box, but pretty soon I ran into resource constraints. I started to investigate what my next upgrade would look like.

I had a few requirements:

  • Keep the noise down
  • Shouldn’t occupy that much space
  • Should be affordable
  • Modular, I do not have money to buy everything upfront so it should be something I could build on top of.
  • Should be able to run VMware ESXi/vSphere
  • Should be cool

[Read more...]

Categories // Apple, ESXi, Home Lab, VSAN, vSphere Tags // apple, ESXi 5.5, mac mini, VSAN, vSphere 5.5

Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 8

09.25.2014 by William Lam // 3 Comments

Company: Mid-Pacific Institute (Private School in Hawaii)
Software: VMware vSphere and Fusion
Hardware: Apple Mac Pro

[William] - Hi Derick, I appreciate you taking some time out of your busy schedule to talk with us all the way from Hawaii 🙂 Before we get started, can you quickly introduce yourself?

[Derick] - Sure William. My name is Derick Okihara, and I work for Mid-Pacific Institute. We are a private K-12 institution with about 1600 students. My role here is general IT and server administration. I've been working with computers since I was in high school. I have been a long time Apple user (since //gs), but really started working with them professionally about 10 years ago. We currently have a 1:1 iPad program for the students, and 2:1 iPad+laptops for faculty, so there's a lot of technology to support.

[William] - That’s awesome Derick. Look forward to hearing more about your environment. Speaking of which, I hear you are currently managing some Apple hardware running on VMware? Could you tell us a little bit about the hardware configuration and the VMware software you are currently using?

[Derick] - We are currently using vCenter with ESXi 5.5, we have 2 Mac Pro (5,1s) in a cluster with a Synology 1813+ shared storage. The network storage is connected via the iSCSI software initiator using round-robin. We also use VMware Fusion for the Mac. The Mac Pros have 24GB of RAM and 4 port Intel Gigabit Ethernet cards for a total of 6 ports each.

[William] - What made you decide on using a Synology for shared storage and what configuration/capacity did you go with? Were there any other options you were looking at?

[Derick] - A lot of the decisions for this setup was made on price. How this all started, was that I was asked to create an ESXi server to host a VM Appliance to run our campus wide Informacast speaker system. I had already been planning an ESXI deployment on the Mac, testing on Mac Mini. Instead of building a PC server just for this appliance, I was given the OK to build on an existing Mac Pro, so it could serve multiple purposes.

Being forward thinking, I knew we needed redundancy, so I opted to go for network storage. With a tight budget, and being able to use CPUs we already had, I decided on the Synology 1813+ for it's 4 gigabit ports. This allowed me to later add the 2nd host in our vcenter cluster when we expanded.

[William] - Can you talk a little bit about the type of workloads and applications you are currently virtualizing on the Mac Pro’s and are these all OSX VMs?

[Derick] - Since this is still version 1.0, we aren't heavily taxing our cluster. Right now it hosts 5 VMs (2 Virtual Appliance, 2 OS X Server, 1 Windows Server). I'd want to add more RAM as well, OS X VMs are very RAM hungry.

The OS X servers are a student file server (AFP/SMB) and an Apple Caching server / Munki repository. The Windows server is mostly a test bed, the Virtual Appliances are the aforementioned Informacast manager and VCenter Appliance.

Here is a picture Derick's two Apple Mac Pros:

derick-mac-pro
[William] - The Mac Pro’s have a maximum amount of memory that it supports, do you plan on expanding the infrastructure to accommodate additional workloads or would you be looking at upgrading to the latest generation of Mac Pro (black)?

[Derick] - Honestly, with our current needs and budget, I think I would be looking at the next generation Mac Mini combined with some sort of PCI-E enclosure. Like the Sonnet XMac server. I know the Mini will likely not be fully supported, but I like what i've seen on virtuallyGhetto with the current generation 🙂 That is, if the next gen Mac Mini supports 32GB of RAM!

[William] - Very cool! So from your point of view, you would rather have more Mac Mini’s than a couple of Mac Pro’s? It sounds like cost plays a huge factor, but what other constraints or requirements that is making you lean more towards Mac Mini’s instead of going to a new Mac Pro which can get up to 64GB of memory and 6-Core CPU?

[Derick] - Footprint - the Mac Pros we currently have take up a large amount of rack space. Even the new mac pros would not be rack mountable without an additional enclosure. For us, having 3 x Mac Mini with 32GB of RAM would be ideal price/performance ratio. (We have a 3 CPU license). Eventually our Mac Pro 5,1's will die, so I'm already thinking about what's next. Having 3 x Mac Mini servers in a cluster, that takes up only 3U would be pretty sweet!

[William] - Speaking of support, did you purchase any type of extended contracts with Apple on the hardware or you going to deal with them on a case by case basis? Have you had any issues with failing hardware on the Mac Pro’s?

[Derick] - We only had the initial Apple Care (now since expired). We have 1 spare Mac Pro currently running other loads but that could be migrated in the event that we have a hardware failure. We have not had many issues on the Mac Pro 5,1s other than internal hard drive failure. They've been rock solid.

[William] - Has there been any interesting issues or challenges you had faced while setting up this infrastructure? Either the hardware, software or managing the VMs?

[Derick] - This whole process was a learning experience for me. At a previous job, I had inherited an ESXI server running multiple CentOS and Ubuntu VMs, but I had never set it up myself, let alone on a Mac. Thanks to the multiple resources on the web (Rich Trouton's blog, VirtuallyGhetto, and a P2V script from Alan Gordon at MacSysAdmin) the process and gotchas were mostly done before me

The biggest challenge for me was configuring the Synology for iSCSI-round robin. In my research I found that one could utilize multiple gigabit connections with Multi-path IO for higher bandwidth. After lots of configuring and back and forth with Synology / VMware support, I finally found the proper settings that allowed me to utilize more than 1 gigabit link.
However, after I updated to ESXi 5.5, it broke.

I was stuck, because I needed to upgrade to 5.5 in order to run an OS X caching server (12-character serial number fix in 5.5). But Synology said the 1813+ was not compatible with 5.5 and would not help me. Long story short, one of my hosts is running 5.5 (with OS X Caching server) and the other host is running 5.1 (file services) because it needs the greater throughput.

[William] - Derick, I want thank you for taking the time and sharing with us your experiences with managing VMware and Apple hardware. Before I let you go, do you have any tips for our readers that may be in a similar environment (academic) and needs to build out an infrastructure to support their end users? Any gotchas or things you would recommend if you had to do this all over again?

[Derick] - Anyone looking to reduce their machine footprint should definitely look into virtualization. VMware has very attractive pricing for the EDU market if you're looking to build a cluster with high availability, or you can run a single host for free. The best piece of advice I can give is just to test thoroughly. Virtualization is very complicated, and combines a multitude of areas of expertise (Storage, Networks, Workloads, and ESXI platform itself). It can be daunting but it's very rewarding. If you get stuck, just ask William on Twitter @lamw, jk

If you are interested in sharing your story with the community (can be completely anonymous) on how you use VMware and Mac OS X in Production, you can reach out to me here.

  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 1
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 2
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 3
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 4
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 5
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 6
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 7
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 8
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 9
  • Community stories of VMware & Apple OS X in Production: Part 10

 

Categories // Apple, ESXi, vSphere Tags // apple, ESXi, fusion, mac pro, osx, vSphere

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William is Distinguished Platform Engineering Architect in the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Division at Broadcom. His primary focus is helping customers and partners build, run and operate a modern Private Cloud using the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) platform.

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