Posts Tagged ‘docker’

Part 7: DIY UNRAID NAS “BY THE POWER OF UNRAID” THE SCRET REVEALED

Saturday, December 6th, 2025

By The Power Of UnRAID – The Secret Reveal Of ESXi And Windows 11 VMs

For the last few episodes of Hancock’s VMware Half Hour, we have been quietly building something a little different.
On the surface it looked like a simple DIY UNRAID NAS project and a couple of Windows 11 P2V demonstrations.
In reality, everything was running inside virtual machines on an UnRAID host.

In Part 7 of the DIY UNRAID NAS series, we finally pull back the curtain and reveal what has really been powering the lab:
UnRAID running nested ESXi and Windows 11 VMs, complete with PCI passthrough.
This post walks through the idea behind the episode, how it ties back to earlier parts, and why I keep saying,
“By the power of UnRAID.”

Recap: Parts 6, 100 and 101

If you have been following along you will have seen:

  • Part 6 – Installing and testing Samsung 990 PRO NVMe drives in the Intel NUC based NAS.
  • Part 100 – Performing P2V migrations of Windows 11 systems.
  • Part 101 – Continuing the Windows 11 P2V work and refining the process.

In those episodes the star of the show appeared to be a physical Windows 11 machine and a separate ESXi host called ESXi052.
In Part 7 we reveal that this was deliberately misleading. Both the Windows 11 system and the ESXi host were in fact virtual machines.

The Secret: Everything Was A Virtual Machine

Part 7 opens by jumping back to those previous episodes and then revealing the twist:

  • The “physical” Windows 11 machine you saw on screen was actually a Windows 11 VM.
  • The ESXi host ESXi052 that we used for P2V work was also a VM.
  • The same VM was used in Part 6 when we installed and tested the NVMe drives.

In other words, the entire recent run of content has been driven by virtual machines on UnRAID.
The NVMe upgrades, the Windows 11 P2Vs, and the ESXi demonstrations were all happening inside VMs, not on bare metal.

Windows 11 With PCI Passthrough

One of the key enabling features in this setup is PCI passthrough on UnRAID.
By passing through hardware devices such as NVMe controllers or GPUs directly into a Windows 11 VM,
we can test and demonstrate “bare metal like” performance while still keeping everything virtual.

In the video we show Windows 11 running with PCI passthrough on UnRAID, giving the VM direct access to the hardware.
This is ideal for lab work, testing, and for scenarios where you want to push a homelab system without dedicating separate physical machines.

Nested ESXi 8.0 On UnRAID

The next part of the reveal is nested virtualization.
UnRAID is hosting a VMware vSphere Hypervisor ESXi 8.0 VM which in turn can run its own VMs.
This gives an incredibly flexible environment:

  • UnRAID manages the storage, cache, parity and core virtual machine scheduling.
  • ESXi runs nested on top for VMware specific testing and lab work.
  • Windows 11 runs as another VM on the same UnRAID host, with PCI passthrough as needed.

With this approach a single Intel NUC based NAS can simulate a much larger lab
while still being compact and power efficient.

By The Power Of UnRAID

To celebrate the reveal I created a fun meme inspired by the classic “By the power of Grayskull” scene.
In our version, “By the power of UnRAID” raises ESXi and Windows 11 high above the NUC,
showing that UnRAID is the platform empowering the whole setup.

Whether you are running nested ESXi, Windows 11 with PCI passthrough, or a mixture of containers and VMs,
UnRAID makes it straightforward to combine storage flexibility with powerful virtualization features.

The Power Of UnRAID In The Homelab

The big takeaway from Part 7 is simple:

  • A single UnRAID host can consolidate multiple roles: NAS, hypervisor, and workstation.
  • You can experiment with ESXi 8.0, Windows 11, and PCI passthrough without building a large rack of servers.
  • By keeping everything virtual you gain snapshots, flexibility, and the ability to rebuild or clone systems quickly.

For homelab enthusiasts, students, and anyone who wants to learn VMware or Windows 11 in depth,
this approach offers a lot of power in a very small footprint.

Watch The Episode

If you want to see the full walkthrough, including the moment the secret is revealed,
watch Part 7 of the DIY UNRAID NAS series on Hancock’s VMware Half Hour.
You will see exactly how the Windows 11 VM, the nested ESXi host, and UnRAID all fit together.

Conclusion

Part 7 closes the loop on a long running lab story.
What looked like separate physical systems were really virtual machines,
carefully layered on top of an UnRAID powered NAS.
By the power of UnRAID, we have been able to demonstrate NVMe upgrades, Windows 11 P2Vs, and ESXi 8.0 testing
all on a single compact platform.

If you are planning a new homelab or want to refresh an existing one,
consider what UnRAID plus nested ESXi and Windows 11 VMs could do for you.

These Arrived Today: The ComputeBlade – A New Era in Compact Computing

Thursday, December 5th, 2024

After much anticipation, The ComputeBlade has finally arrived! This innovative piece of hardware has been making waves in the compact computing and homelab community since its inception as a Kickstarter project, which closed in February 2023. While the Kickstarter campaign was highly successful, the journey to delivery has been anything but smooth.

The ComputeBlade Journey

For those unfamiliar, the ComputeBlade is an ambitious project by Uptime Lab designed to bring powerful, modular computing to a compact blade-style chassis. It offers support for Raspberry Pi Compute Modules (CM4) and similar SBCs, providing a platform for homelab enthusiasts, developers, and small-scale edge computing setups.

However, the project has faced several setbacks that delayed delivery for many backers:

  1. Russian Screws: Supply chain disruptions included sourcing specific screws, which became problematic due to geopolitical tensions.
  2. PoE (Power over Ethernet) Issues: The team encountered complications ensuring consistent and safe PoE functionality.
  3. Certification Challenges: Meeting various regulatory standards across regions added another layer of complexity.

Despite these hurdles, I opted to purchase my ComputeBlades retail, as Kickstarter backers have yet to fully receive their units.

For those interested in the Kickstarter campaign details, you can check it out here.

First Impressions

The retail packaging was sleek, compact, and felt premium. The ComputeBlade itself is a marvel of design, seamlessly blending form and function. Its modularity and expandability immediately stand out, with features such as:

  • Support for Raspberry Pi CM4: Making it a natural fit for virtualization, containerization, and other development projects.
  • Hot-Swappable Design: Simplifies maintenance and upgrades.
  • Integrated Networking: Includes options for advanced network setups, perfect for a homelab.

What’s Next?

Now that the ComputeBlade has arrived, I’m eager to put it through its paces. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be:

  1. Testing Homelab Applications: From running lightweight virtual machines to hosting containers using Docker or Kubernetes.
  2. Evaluating Networking Features: Especially the PoE capabilities and how it handles edge computing scenarios.
  3. Sharing Configurations: I’ll document how I integrate it into my existing homelab setup.

Closing Thoughts

While the journey of the ComputeBlade from Kickstarter to retail has been rocky, the product itself seems poised to live up to its promise. If you’ve been waiting for a scalable and compact compute platform, the ComputeBlade might just be the solution you’ve been looking for.

Stay tuned for my follow-up posts where I dive deeper into its performance and practical applications. If you’re also experimenting with the ComputeBlade, feel free to share your experiences in the comments or reach out via social media.