My Homelab

My homelab is more than just a test bench — it’s a functioning infrastructure built for experimentation, collaboration, and skill development. It blends enterprise concepts with consumer-grade efficiency, anchored by a mix of virtualization, routing, domain services, and collaborative endpoints.

Every component here has a role — and every system is part of a broader plan to simulate real-world IT environments.


Network Core

The “Turbo Router” – MikroTik RouterOS 7 on Dell OptiPlex 3040 SFF

A repurposed small-form-factor desktop running MikroTik RouterOS 7 as a high-performance software router — with no hardware modifications required.

  • Specs: Intel Core i5-6500, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD, Dual Intel Gigabit NICs
  • Use Case: Handles core routing, firewall/NAT, DHCP, and WireGuard tunnels
  • Why It Matters: Far more capable than consumer routers, this setup supports advanced traffic shaping, secure remote access to a colleague in Florida, and VPN connectivity to external VPS infrastructure — all on stock hardware, without any cooling or case modifications.

Upstream Connectivity – Symmetric Gigabit Fiber (ALLO Communications)

  • Connection: 1 Gbps up / 1 Gbps down via fiber
  • Terminated At: Calix GigaPoint 1100W Optical Network Terminal (ONT)
  • Why It Matters: High-speed, low-latency connectivity allows me to remotely collaborate, self-host services for internal testing, and move large data sets between nodes quickly — all without bottlenecks.

WiFi & Switching

  • WiFi: Netgear WAX610 (WiFi 6), PoE powered by a TP-Link injector
  • Switch: 16-port Gigabit Ethernet switch with PoE
  • Why It Matters: Clean wired backbone with managed power delivery, plus fast, reliable wireless access throughout the environment.

Core Compute & Virtualization

Virtualization Server – ESXi 8 on Threadripper

My primary virtual host, running VMware ESXi 8 and managing essential infrastructure services.

  • Specs: Ryzen Threadripper 1900X, 128GB RAM, 275GB SATA M.2 boot SSD, 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD (datastore), GeForce GT 710 (console GPU)
  • Board/Chassis: MSI X399 Gaming Pro Carbon AC, Corsair 4000D Airflow (white), Noctua 140mm cooler
  • Networking: Onboard NIC for management, Intel Gigabit CT bridged to VMs
  • Current Workloads:
    • 2x Windows Server 2022 domain controllers
    • Future roles: To be determined
  • Why It Matters: A proper hypervisor lets me test isolated environments, domain-bound configurations, and simulate enterprise network topologies.

Workstations

Linux Workstation 1 – Manjaro (Collaborative Node)

A high-performance AMD-based workstation used for remote collaboration and Linux-focused tasks.

  • Specs: Ryzen 9 7900X, 64GB RAM, 512GB + 1TB NVMe SSDs, Radeon RX6600
  • Chassis/Board: Corsair 5000D Airflow (black), ASUS TUF Gaming B650-PLUS WiFi
  • Software: Manjaro KDE edition, SSSD + realmd for AD integration
  • Use Case: Linux dev/test box; used collaboratively with a colleague (via TeamViewer from Florida)
  • Why It Matters: Cross-platform testing and remote teamwork on a Linux-native OS within the same domain context.

Windows Workstation 2 – Windows 11 (Creative & Gaming Node)

Balanced between creative workflows and lightweight virtualization.

  • Specs: Intel i7-10700, 64GB RAM, 512GB + 1TB NVMe SSDs, 4TB HDD, RTX 3050
  • Chassis/Board: Corsair 4000D Airflow (black), MSI Z490-A PRO
  • Use Case: Adobe Creative Cloud, light gaming, and VMs via VMware Workstation
  • Why It Matters: Production workstation that integrates with domain services but stays flexible for multimedia and virtualization work.

Portable Node – HP Pavilion Laptop (Field Use)

  • Specs: Ryzen 7 8840U, 8GB RAM, 512GB NVMe SSD
  • Use Case: Offsite work at libraries or remote visits; also domain-joined
  • Why It Matters: Portability without sacrificing connectivity to the rest of the infrastructure.

Storage & Printing

NAS – Synology DS923+

  • Disks: 4x8TB Seagate IronWolf SATA drives
  • Use Case: Redundant file storage, shared backups, domain joined
  • Why It Matters: Centralized storage that supports future file shares, snapshots, and VM backups.

Printer – Brother HL-L2305W

  • Connected via WiFi for local document printing
  • Reliable, no-nonsense laser printing from any domain-joined machine

Why This Lab Exists

This setup reflects my ongoing mission: to understand, test, and replicate real-world IT infrastructure. Whether I’m troubleshooting SSSD integration on Linux, joining workstations to AD, or fine-tuning MikroTik firewall rules, this lab gives me a safe, powerful environment to experiment, learn, and solve real problems.

It’s a personal training ground — and it’s constantly evolving.