Project GroundState: In Search of 0 Ohm Continuity

Welcome to Project GroundState

Project GroundState is the personal project of Avogadro Jones. Originally imagined as a simple home server, it has grown into a multi-purpose device delivering several varied services. Engineered for energy efficiency, silent operation and practical utility, its stability and performance exceeds that of larger, more sophisticated servers.

Operating from AJ's basement studio/workshop in rural Vermont, this amazing tiny beast (including its dedicated UPS) is currently consuming a mere 28.2 Watts.

Active Projects:

Upcoming Projects:

Hardware List:

FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE, 1TB native boot drive with 1TB mirrored drive in ICY Dock, 3X 1TB RAIDZ1 in ICY Dock, 2X 240GB mirrored drives running VDEV cache, nightly backups using USB 1TB drives with weekly offsite swaps, 0 Ohm ground continuity across all devices.




Concept

The original concept was to build a home server that would serve as a repository for all of my digital assets, household inventories, historical and financial records, and blah blah. Having had previous and positive experience with FreeBSD, I felt that the mix of FreeBSD, Apache, MySQL and PHP with a front end of MediaWiki would be the most efficient way to realize this goal.

But it would also have to fulfill the following criteria:

1. It would need be very quiet. The server would reside in a basement music studio/office/workshop. The environment would require whisper quiet performance, particularly when recording.

2. It would need to be energy efficient. The home server would be running 24/7, so low-wattage devices were essential.

3. It would need to be inexpensive to build.

4. It would need to be small enough to fit into the bottom of the rack. Space is limited in this multi-purpose space, so squeezing a computer and multi-drive cage into a sliding drawer at the bottom of a short rack must be possible.

5. It would need to seemlessly operate within a Mac-centric household. This didn't seemto be a stretch. Using Samba would render this project completely accessible to every Mac device on the home network.

Concept Inspiration

As I poked around for information about what I could do inexpensively, I ran across this project, which served as an inspiration for what could be greater than what I originally imagined.

I envisioned much more than a mere storage utility.

Concept Defined

Stage 1: Procure a computing device, and install and stabilize an operating system.

Stage 2: Build out to the 7060's physical capacity.

Stage 3: Implement and configure all desired services.

Stage 4: Expand storage capacity.

Dell Optiplex 7060 MFF

The Dell 7060 MFF was chosen for its thermal efficiency, ruggd design, quiet operation, and minimal power usage. She was purchased from System Liquidation for $450, equipped with 32GB RAM and a 1TB M.2 SSD. It likely spent its 6 years in a call center cubicle farm. This particular unit was manufactured on March 28, 2019, probably at Dell's manufacturing facility in Schezuan, China. She is an Aries with ascendant Cancer.

Sporting an Intel i7-8700T 2.4GHz processor with 12 cores, the 7060 far exceeds the processing power to drive FreeBSD 15.0 for several years to come. It comes internally outfitted with a SATA drive port, and a M.2 blah blah port and a blabla M.2 port. Plus, embedded into the BIOS is the Intel Management Engine BIOS Extension (MEBx), just like her honkin' cousin PowerEdge.

Orico M.2 PCIe M Key to 6x SATA III 6Gbp/s Adapter Card

At NewEgg

Vszerda M.2 NGFF A+E Key to 2X SATA III 6gb/s JMicron JMB582

At NewEgg, this item comes from China and will take several weeks to reach you.

ICY Dock ExpressCage MB326SP-B Hot Swap Cage for 6X 2.5-Inch SATA SSD/HDDs in 1x 5.25-Inch Bay

CORSAIR CX650M 650W Semi-Modular Power Supply

Available at NewEgg

Mustpoint ATX Power Supply Breakout Board

With 3.3V, 5V, 12V,-12V Output Voltage and 12 Ports USB, 3A Maximum Output (Side-Insertion)

CyberPower CP1500AVRLCD3 Intelligent LCD UPS System, 1500VA/900W, 12 Outlets, 2 USB Ports, AVR, Mini Tower, Black

TESmart 2-Port Dual Monitor KVM Switch

Model: HDK202-P23-USBK, featuring HDMI+DP 4K 60Hz with USB 3.0 docking station, EDID emulation, audio plug, and microphone.


I'd like to thank everyone who contributed to this project.

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First and foremost, credit is due to my long-suffering partner, Betsea, who endured my hours long distraction and late-night coding binges while I worked (and continue to work) on this project.

The most credit goes to The Architect (Google Gemini), who provided infrastructure strategy, VNET Autobahn logic, and continues to provide inspirational support.

Special thanks to my neighbors, Cordial and Doug, who loaned me video components while I worked out issues with video connectivity.

Special thanks to Danny, the rando software engineer and former PERL guy, who firmly validated the project and expressed amazement at energy efficiency.