this post was submitted on 07 Oct 2023
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I don't think that'd be sufficient because it looks like most of the storage being taken up is from like, the app store repositories and stuff.
I was originally going to try something like that and figured I could just make a small partition on my ssd and save most of the apps and stuff on my NAS. Looks like I'll have to figure out booting from the NAS after all.
If your NAS can handle virtual machines, that might be easier, and then set up your client device as a thin client. Check this video out. This guy's whole channel is awesome.
Well a virtual machine would use the ram and cpu assigned to it from the NAS correct? My workstation is a lot more powerful by an order of magnitude. I’ve gotten fedora installed and booting from my NAS now. Took a few hours but I got it set up! Now the problem is, I have a 2.5g port on my motherboard, but I use a tb to 10g nic from qnap to transfer between my nas and workstation. For some reason I can’t boot from the 10g card so that’s what I’m researching now. Although I think if the iscsi connection is initiated through the 10g card that should be ok even though it would be nice to load the OS from 10g as well.