January 22, 2025

“Project Mini Rack” wants to make your non-closet-sized rack server a reality – Ars Technica

Wiki-style guide compiles all the pieces and potential of a rack you can carry.
I have one standard rack appliance in my home: a Unifi Dream Machine Pro. It is mounted horizontally in a coat closet, putting it close to my home’s fiber input and also incidentally keeping our jackets gently warm. I can fit juuuuuust about one more standard rack-size device in there (maybe a rack-mount UPS?) before I have to choose between outer-wear and overly ambitious networking. Were I starting over, I might think a bit more about scalability.Along those lines, technologist and YouTube maker Jeff Geerling has launched the Project Mini Rack page for folks who have similarly server-sized ambitions, coupled with a lack of square footage. “I mean, if you want to cosplay as a sysadmin, you need a rack, right?” Geerling says in the announcement video. It’s a keen launching point for a new “homelab” or “minilab” project, also known as bringing the networking and hardware challenges of a commercial network deployment into your home for “fun.”It’s a good time fall into the compact computing space. As Geerling notes in a blog post announcing the project, there’s a whole lot of small-form-factor PCs on the market. You can couple them with single-board computers, power-over-Ethernet devices, and network-accessible solid state drives that allow you to stuff a whole lab into a cube you can carry around in your hands.Geerling’s guide aims to save everybody a whole lot of Reddit reading, question-asking, and blind-faith-buying as they get started or seek to expand their rack. Most 10-inch, or “half-width” racks (despite the “standard” rack being 19 inches wide) have only a few major manufacturers, and their availability varies by country. Each type of device that fits into the mini rack—power distribution units (PDUs), uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), HDD-sized shelves—gets linked by Geerling, along with important specs. There are also links to 3D-printable rack systems, cable management ideas (harder on a half-size setup than full), and showcases of mini racks of note.Geerling’s page acknowledges the collective efforts of communities like Reddit’s /r/minilab have put into the burgeoning half-size market, long before his project. But seeking a central compendium, Geerling compiles gear, tips, and compatibility advice for mini-builds, along with ongoing discussions about the merits of individual components and broader build-out strategies.”The community feedback around Project Mini Rack has been great so far,” Geerling wrote in an email to Ars. The 3D-printed links and suggestions have been showing up steadily since he started committing to the page in earnest in mid-January. He’s particularly excited to see that a “LACK rack,” or using IKEA shelving for budget rack mounting, can be downscaled to mini-rack size with an Edet cabinet. “It’s like someone at IKEA is a Homelab enthusiast,” says Geerling.This post was updated to better define homelabs and minilabs.Ars Technica has been separating the signal from
the noise for over 25 years. With our unique combination of
technical savvy and wide-ranging interest in the technological arts
and sciences, Ars is the trusted source in a sea of information. After
all, you don’t need to know everything, only what’s important.

Source: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/01/project-mini-rack-wants-to-help-you-make-your-non-closet-sized-homelab-a-reality/

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