A practical guide to weekly Proxmox VE maintenance across multiple sites, including ZFS health monitoring, backup validation, memory optimization, and the scripts I use to keep everything running.
Posts for: #Self-Hosted
Step-by-Step: Install and Configure Pi-hole with the Proxmox Community Script
Step-by-Step: Install and Configure Pi-hole with the Proxmox Community Script
This guide covers a full technical setup for Pi-hole on Proxmox using the Community Scripts installer.
It includes:
- creating the Pi-hole LXC
- assigning a static IP
- verifying DNS is working
- configuring your router, ISP modem, or firewall DHCP server to hand out Pi-hole as DNS
- fallback options when your ISP equipment does not allow custom DNS
- post-install Pi-hole configuration
- basic validation and troubleshooting
What this guide assumes
You have:
Part 2: Deploy Nginx Proxy Manager on Proxmox + Cloudflare
Part 2: Set Up Nginx Proxy Manager on Proxmox with Cloudflare DNS & pfSense
In Part 2 of this series, we’re setting up Nginx Proxy Manager (NPM) inside Proxmox so we can start exposing our local services with clean HTTPS URLs and valid SSL certificates.
This is where the home lab starts feeling real.
Instead of accessing Home Assistant with something like:
http://192.168.1.20:8123
…we’ll be able to use:
https://ha.domain.com
And because we’re using Cloudflare DNS validation, we can issue a wildcard certificate for our domain and keep everything secure and polished.
Why Proxmox Is One of the Best Hypervisors You Can Run in a Home Lab
Why Proxmox Is One of the Best Hypervisors You Can Run in a Home Lab
There’s something incredibly satisfying about owning your infrastructure.
Not renting it.
Not trusting it to some mysterious black box.
Actually owning it.
That’s the spirit behind home labs, and it’s exactly why Proxmox VE has become one of the most powerful hypervisors available to builders, tinkerers, and serious self-hosters.
It’s fast.
It’s powerful.
It’s ridiculously flexible.