I have an R320 that has 4 SAS drives 10TB each, which holds a lot of my data + backups from other systems, I also have an R710 which runs a lot of heavy workloads for my homelab, now I have to move to the other side of the EU and I don't know what to do with that lab, the electricy cost on the new country will be around 0.33c per Kw, while now I was paying under .10c.
Here are the options that I have considered
Take R320 with me As the SAS drives are in a unique configuration in xcp-ng it would be the safest option to transport the drives in a secure case with me and have the R320 moved to the new country, where I will set it up again and have some of my VMs and data.
Make current pc the new server I have a quite powerful and recent pc build from 4 years ago, I was thinking of buying SAS pcie interfaces for my PC so I can cinvert it to a server and be able to read the SAS drives, but this is a bit expensive and requires me to buy a new computer for my self.
Also, as I won't be keeping the R710, I was thinking of buying a few lenevo sff mini PCs and setting up a low power virtualization cluster and using the R320 or my PC as the storage medium.
I have also backed up everything to storj and the most important data are also synced to a few cloud storage providers for safe keeping.
How would you handle something like that? Would you start from scratch or try to bring as much as you can? I plan to invest at max 1k in rebuilding if needed but I would like to avoid it if possible, the SAS drives are enterprise grade and bought just a year ago so I would like to keep using them.
What kind of workload? It might be cheaper to run some stuff in the cloud.
I have a baremetal server at hetzner but I like to have some stuff locally for full control of the data, + if I forget to pay a cloud bill my data won't be lost.
I run over 80 services locally, in total homelab and cloud I run over 220 services, some are duplicate docker containers DBs and HA systems, but primarily I have replaces any SaaS product that I used with self hosted alternatives.
My current pc with some extra ram should be enough to handle the basic workloads, and in the future an SFF should be able to fully cover my needs.