Fun with Home Media Servers

I am trying to get back into blogging more, and recently I have been doing more with my home media server, so I thought it might be interesting to talk about some of the cool things I have done with that.  This leads to my home lab series I have been wanting to do, but this is kind of the introduction, that lead me to the home lab idea.

As a disclaimer, I do not condone any illegal activities.  I am writing about using a media server for digital content I have purchased or created.  I am not going to write about the implementation of a home media server, lifehacker.com, and a number of other sites have some exceptional walkthroughs on that topic, this is focused more on the design, and ancillary applications.  As always, this is for my personal interest, which often leads to discussions with friends and customers as well as exploring new technologies and learning new skills around coding or integration.

The Research

So this all started when I was talking to a coworker about how he was watching movies on his iPad.  He seemed to have quite a bit of content.  To this point I had been purchasing off iTunes, and downloading on my iPad and streaming on my Apple TV.  We had been using Netflix and occasionally Hulu+, but from a home media perspective when we wanted to watch something not available digitally we were using DVD/Blu-Ray or similar.  I experimented with DLNA, and various other solutions, but the endpoint was always clunky and not user friendly for my family.

I was pretty skeptical about this, I had experimented with ripping DVD’s I had purchased previously, and it had not gone very well.  I went and started researching Plex and XMBC.  While I found both solutions quite impressive, the polished user friendly appearance of Plex won me over, mostly because my family doesn’t care how cool it is, they want a netflix style interface and I wanted it to give me enough functionality to add features like photos, home movies, music, TV Series, and Movies.

The Hardware

I am an unapologetic Apple Fanboy.  Ok that may be a bit of an exaggeration, but I do love all things Apple for the most part since my first iPhone and my first MacBook Pro.  Most of our devices at home are Apple, so it made sense to go with a Mac Mini 2012 model with 16GB of Ram.  I opted for the extra ram for caching, I have found that I have very few buffering issues even when running multiple streams.  I did find that running over wireless tends to be a bit difficult, so I ended up using the 1GBe Nic.

For the storage I debated heavily on purchasing a NAS, and I was pretty close to picking up a Synology, but when I looked at the cost versus what I would use it for I changed my mind.  Since I use VSAN in my home lab, it was tough to justify the added cost of a NAS.  I thought a 4TB hard drive would be good.  I selected a WD My Cloud 4TB drive from Best Buy with USB 3.0.  This performed exceptionally well, so I bought another, and then a friend gave me a 4TB Toshiba 4TB USB 3.0 drive.  Recently I ordered a Toshiba 5TB USB 3.0 drive.  Now this is quite a lot of space, but I will explain more about that in a later section.  I opted not to use a software raid on the drives, selecting exFAT for for the file system for maximum compatibility between OS X, Linux, and Windows.

A late addition, which will become clear later was a Raspberry Pi B+.  This is used for monitoring and 3rd party plugins which I continue to experiment with.

Endpoints

Of course all this work would be no good if we had no way to watch.  The initial tests were done with a web browser.  Being a chrome user, I was impressed with the performance and the lack of plugins required to play.  It even worked well on my old Chromebook.

As we have two Apple TV’s, again, this was critical.  A friend told me about the Plex Connect project on GitHub.  A quick search and I was installing and configuring.  The basic premise is it forwards one of the apple TV Apps, in my case Trailers, to my Plex Server.  There are frequent updates and it is very simple, looking much like Netflix which served my family well.

I tested the XBOX 360 interface which worked well enough, but honestly it wasn’t as good as the Apple TV interface.  I also tested the Chromecast for a while, but that ended up in my travel bag since we have Apple TV’s on the TV’s that are using Plex.  Using the Chromecast in hotels has been exceptional, and enabled me to enjoy my home media while traveling using the Hotel Wifi.

3rd Party app integration

So as a geek, I decided just having the Plex server stood up was not quite enough.  I wanted to get some statistics on who was watching what on my Plex Server, and see what media was popular.  I found the PlexWatch and PlexWatchWeb projects on Git Hub, which were compelling.  I tried installing them on my Mac Mini thinking why not.  Going through the install it appeared I would need to install several pre-requisites, including MacPorts to get it to work.  Now I love my Mac, but I am not a fan of having to do such unnatural things to get software installed.

I loaded up Raspian on a Raspberry Pi B+ and did the install with no issues.  Pulling up the web interface I was impressed, it was skinned to look like Plex, with some very powerful data.  Now I am able to track my children’s viewing, trust but verify, and also look at statistics to determine what I might want to purchase next, or what types of movies are interesting.

That got me thinking about having more of a unified interface of my plex server.  I found the Marachino project for XMBC which had been ported for Plex.  I have to admit, it’s use is minimal, but a pretty dashboard does make it interesting.  I plan to look at the code behind it, the widget interface is compelling, and could prove to have many uses.

One final note on the Raspberry Pi, I did have some thoughts that I might need to access the media directly, not through the Plex interface.  Initially I thought NFS would be the easiest since it was linux and OS X, but I found that NFS doesn’t work with exFAT, or at least not easily.  I started to look at other options, when I realized the Mac can nativly share via SMB.  I configured the SMB shares and tested, but realized I didn’t need them.  I suspect this will come up in the future though, and remains in the back of my mind as something I will explore again.

So that’s it, my home media setup.  I do have a Roku3 on the way since we just added Sling TV to our cord cutting efforts.  That should be interesting, but I don’t suspect it will materially change things.  My next project will be a home lab, I plan to start with the design.  I hope to make it interesting, compelling, but mostly give some insight into the design process, and document my steps and the lessons learned through the design phases.

Fun with Home Media Servers

VMware certification framework, long walks on the beach, teddy bears…

I am not a VMware administrator. I know this may come as a surprise to some of you, but I occasionally have to look things up in the docs, or hunt in the GUI for where some alert may be burried. I spend a fair amount of time in the labs, honing my skills, but it is generally for the purpose of understanding more about the products I represent, and being able to speak intelligently about them. I have been a VCP-DV since 2010, but I have worked on VMware ESX since 2006. I consulted on and wrote a great deal of documentation and many designs prior to becoming a VCP. I have the utmost respect for the certification, knowing how challanging it was for me, and how I continue to struggle with the exam itself, largely because I need to be better disciplined about sitting down and studying for it, and because I am not dealing with it as an administrator.

That being said, I am not a fan of the current certification process for VMware. I have brought this up to the education services team as well as those in the community, and we have seen some changes, but I think we need to see more. Looking at other vendors, EMC or HP for example, certifications are geared at career paths. As a consultant I obtained the EMC Technical Architect certificaiton on the VNX products. It was challanging, and required three exams, but it was very focused on design with some interface and hands on knowledge required, but for the most part, it was around design principals which are specific to the product with some general design principals. HP’s storage architecture certification was similar, very focused on good design and solid product knowledge.

The main thing that differentiated these from the VMware certification process was the seperation of an architect track from the implimentation and engineering tracks. It is important for a architect to be able to understand the admin and engineering functions, VMware’s entry point with a very specific administration exam is counter intuitive. Continuing on with the new VCIX certification, formerly VCAP, requiring an implimentaiton exam again seems to be a bit off.

In my opinion, VMware Education should look at seperating out the tracks, and changing some of the course work to reflect this. By forcing everyone up a single path the value of the lower certifications are diluted, as it becomes a core requirement for many companies. That being said, I think that there should be some cross over one each exam and in each course. We need to drive more people to a higher level. I will also say that the addition of the Network Virtualization track to the others is refreshing, I am excited to see that we are growing the education and certification tracks, but there needs to be more clarity and better paths to get more advanced certifications.

One final thought I would leave you with, certifications are not the end all be all, much like education. I hold a BS and an MBA. The first thing I learned when I finished those is that my learning had just begun. As IT professionals it is incumbent upon us to continuously learn, grow, and improve. Versioning certifications is a necessary evil to make sure we are keeping up with our learning, but it falls to each of us to make sure we are pushing ourselves to learn, to seek out mentors, and to grow our own career.

VMware certification framework, long walks on the beach, teddy bears…

If you always do what you’ve always done…

If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got. These words of wisdom come from Henry Ford, someone who was all about disruption.

Looking at the tech industry, I sometimes think we are becoming more deeply divided than ever. When I started, it was very divided between developers and infrastructure. Developers wanted admin access to everything, for better or for worse, and infrastructure fought to keep developers from getting access to anything. Within infrastructure, we became siloed, typically separating critical infrastructure into something similar to storage, servers, and networking. Of course this varies, and smaller companies generally merged these out of necessity. This has created significant stagnation for many in the IT industry, both personally and as a group.

Within IT we can no longer afford to be siloed. I have talked about this in the past, but I can’t say this enough. We need to start creating disruption within our own teams. Cross functional teams are no longer just a good idea, they are the future of IT. Moving to the software defined datacenter, the policy driven datacenter, requires that a team be made up of all resources required to complete a project or support an application.

As we continue down the path of further automation and application driven infrastructure it is time to disrupt our teams, learn broader skill sets, and move to an agile architecture, engineering, administration, and support model. That or we can keep doing what we have always done, and keep sending our users to the public cloud since it is easier to get things done.

If you always do what you’ve always done…

The times they are a changin

Disclaimer: I am a VMware employee. This is my opinion, and has been my opinion for some time prior to joining the company. Anything I write on this blog may not be reflective of VMware’s strategy or their products.

With this weeks announcements from VMware, there has been a great deal of confusion on what made it into the release. So as not to add to it, I wanted to focus more on something you likely missed if you weren’t watching closely. As I said in the disclaimer, this is not a VMware specific post, but they do seem to be in the lead here.

For many years I was big on building management infrastructure. It was an easy gig as a consultant, it scales and it is fairly similar from environment to environment. Looking back, it is a little funny to think about how hardware vendors did this. First they sell you servers, then they sell you more servers to manage the servers they sold you, plus some software to monitor. When we built out virtual environments we did the same thing. It was great, we did less physical servers, but the concept was the same.

If you pay close attention to the trends with the larger cloud providers, we are seeing a big push toward hybrid cloud. Now this is not remarkable unless we look closer at management. The biggest value to hybrid cloud, used to be that we could burst workloads to the cloud. As more businesses move to some form of hybird cloud, it seems that the larger value is not being locked into on premise cloud management software.

At VMworld 2014, as well as during the launch this week, VMware touted their vCloud Air product. Whether you like the product or not, the thing that caught my eye is the outside model of management. Rather than standing up a management system inside the datacenter, simply lease the appropriate management systems and software. Don’t like your provider, great get another. Again I want to point out, I am using VMware as my example here, but there are others doing the same thing, just not on the same scale yet.

While this is not going to be right for everyone, we need to start rethinking how we manage our environments.  The times they are a changin.

The times they are a changin

I am NOT a developer…and I am ok with that

One of the perks of my job is I get to meet some really smart and interesting people. I am grateful that many of them keep in touch and challenge me to think differently. For years now I have had conversations with some of these people around our careers and the future of our industry. What follows are some thoughts from those conversations.

Over the two decades I have served many roles in IT. I have supported mainframe, linux, and windows systems, I have been a storage engineer, a DBA, an IT Architect, a technology consultant, and for a couple years in college, I tried my hand at software development. Those lessons were invaluable, and I am very thankful I was given those opportunities.

Looking at the landscape of IT, we are constantly asked to do more with less. The role of the IT Operator is becoming less and less relevant in favor of IT Administrators. There seems to be a push, as automation and management software becomes more efficient, to again up level those administrator functions, move them closer to the end user, eliminate more of the middle. With OpenStack, developers want, and often are getting more access to infrastructure, albeit virtual infrastructure.

Considering the Google and Facebook models, it becomes apparent that while we are not going to see the end of the IT Administrator/Engineer any time soon, it is a good time to increase our skills. I am not a developer, and I have no intention of changing that. I understand code, and I can write well enough for a few utility apps, but it is not my passion. As I look at the IT landscape though, the future of our profession, in my opinion, belongs to developers, and those who understand code well enough to talk to developers with some level of intelligence about platforms, and infrastructure in terms that matter to them.

I have no crystal ball, but I have been in the industry long enough to say for certain that software is the future. Darwin said, “It is not the strong who survive but the adaptable”. It is up to us to adapt, we are writing the future of our industry, it is time to join the movement and be a part of something bigger. That said, I am not a developer and I am ok with that.

I am NOT a developer…and I am ok with that

Communities are a messy thing

A couple months ago, I wrote a post about VMUG being community event, not a vendor fair. That sparked some discussion, but not the desired outcome of more community involvement. Long before I was a VMware employee, I was a member of the VMUG. Before that I was a member of the technical community. I write posts like this, show up to VMUG events, put this out on twitter, not because I am a VMware employee, not just because I think we have really cool technology, but because I believe the tech community is the reason for us being here, it is a part of us, and it is what I care about.

One of the greatest values in the community is comparing notes, asking questions, learning from each other. My challenge is to create micro community gatherings. Gatherings of similar companies. We are trying to create a healthcare community meetup, basically an opportunity for healthcare providers to discuss what works, or just hang out and meet their peers. I would also like to see other similar groups started, and I would love to come hang out and learn from all of you. It doesn’t have to be limited to companies who do the same thing as you, but similar sized companies are a great source of information.

Please come to the VMUG events, they are a great time, and I enjoy meeting those of you in my local area, but don’t let it end there. Small meetups are a great way to interact, after all, the IT community isn’t so large, and we all have something to contribute.

Communities are a messy thing

VMware vSphere: Design Workshop [V5.5] in Seattle!

Just a quick note, we were able to secure a VMware vSphere design workshop in Kirkland, WA, January 20th – 22nd.  This is an interactive course on design best practices, generally geared at VMware, but the concepts translate well to IT Architecture in general.  This is a recommended course for the VCAP-DCD exam, so register here if you are interested.

As always contact me if you have questions and I can get you in touch with the right people if there are other questions.

VMware vSphere: Design Workshop [V5.5] in Seattle!

VMware NSX: Install, Configure, Manage [V6.0]

Last week I completed the VMware NSX: Install, Configure, Manage [V6.0] course, so I wanted to share my thoughts on the training.  This is not an official VMware perspective, but my own personal thoughts on the class, the venue, and the instructors.

Venue:

I have taken a number of technical trainings both live in person, live online, and on demand recorded.  I have to say, the live online is my favorite for this type of trainings to attend since I can be in my own home office, and work on my own equipment which is always nice.  This time I was able to interact with a number of customers and fellow VMware employees not just in the U.S. but also in South America which was exciting.   The interaction was priceless, although I was a little outgunned.  I took the course to get myself up to speed on not just NSX but also on more advanced networking concepts, more on that later, but it turned out almost half the class were CCIE or close to that level.  Coming from a storage and virtualization background this was a little intimidating, but it gave us lots of good discussions and questions.

The labs were great, there were a few hiccups, but it seems like the lab team has really gone all out to fix the bugs, and this was one of the better lab environments I have seen for an online training.  It helped to demystify the product, much more so than simply going through the hands on labs, http://hol.vmware.com, which are great, but not always enough to get you to the point of being comfortable working on the product.

Instructors:

I won’t call out the instructors by name, but they were great.  A little cheesy sometimes as instructors tend to be, but very knowledgable.  I have noticed technical instructors can be hit or miss, but this time our instructors made it interesting.  One big bonus was the reviews.  Every segment we had to go back over what we had discussed, and they pushed us pretty hard to interact.  Not easy to do online, but they handled it well.

Content:

Not having a networking background, I wasn’t sure what to expect here.  I was not 100% sold on the NSX concept.  It was cool, but I didn’t have enough data to make an informed decision.  Going through the course really showed the value of software defined networking.  My take is that there is no desire to replace hardware networking and firewall vendors, just augment them.  There are some use cases that make sense, distributed firewalls, giving the networking team more insight into the virtual network, and even another perimeter to prevent attacks, but overall it was pretty clear, this is not going to replace the physical infrastructure.

Overall, this was a great course, and I recommend it even if you’re not interested in the certification.  The feedback from the CCIE levels in the class was that it was very helpful, and I think everyone was able to take something away.

VMware NSX: Install, Configure, Manage [V6.0]

VCP-DCV and VCP-NV: AKA What I did on winter vacation.

Just kidding, but it makes for a good title.  Seriously though I am taking the VMware NSX: Install, Configure, Manage [V6.0] course this week.  As usual I am taking it live online.  I am always a skeptic, but this course has been good.  I have to admit, I cheated and read most of Networking for VMware Administrators, an exceptional read, which helped since my networking background is pretty light.  I will post a final opinion this weekend, but so far the course is far better than I expected.  I am planning to write the VCP-NV exam mostly because I think it is an important technology, and the cert forces me to study, plus it lends credibility in some circles.

Since I have so much free time, I have also decided to take the VMware Certified Professional 5 – Data Center Virtualization (VCP5-DCV) Delta exam which was re-released here.  From what I can tell, this appears to be the same VCP550 exam, which seems strange for a delta exam, but it is online which saves me a trip.  I am mostly taking it so I can maintain my streak, and to prove to myself I can pass it again.  I am going through the blueprint at length and reading everything I can find.  I will put up some thoughts once I complete it, but I suspect it will be similar to previous ones.

One final thought, if your doing the delta exam to get it done soon, it is only available until March 10, 2015.  Best of luck and if I can help study let me know.

VCP-DCV and VCP-NV: AKA What I did on winter vacation.

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

It occurs to me one of the most underutilized resources at VMware is our Online Hands On Labs, https://communities.vmware.com/community/vmtn/resources/how.  Anyone who has been to VMworld should be familiar with the hands on labs, a few years ago the team at VMware decided to make this publicly available online at no charge.  So that being said, I wanted to dig into the labs a little, and talk about some uses, and some of my personal favorites.

Use cases

Cert Prep

Often I get asked about how to pass a VMware exam.  I always suggest hands on experience.  In my opinion, the classes, while valuable, do not prepare you for the test in any way.  In order to be successful you need actual stick time on the system.  In the early days many of stood up labs either with salvaged equipment, or more recently with Mac Mini’s and Intel NUC boxes.  This is still a viable option, but not cost effective for everyone.  This is a perfect way for anyone who wants to get some hands on time with the product, and get comfortable with what you are working on.

Product Knowledge

When I started working on VMware products there were 3 products, Workstation, GSX, and ESX.  It was pretty easy to be good with everything VMware did.  Today, things have changed, both the acquisitions, and organic growth.  Thankfully, the general concepts are similar, but the company has grown.  That being said, so have most of our jobs.  We are expected to get deeper on more products both on the SE side here at VMware but even more so on the IT admin/engineer side.  Having a full lab to walk through and understand is immensely valuable.

Personal Growth

One of my goals is to read one non-fiction book a month.  I try to exceed that, but somehow I am lucky to get through the one.  I find though, most of these books, technical or not, inspire me to want to go deeper into the technology I am talking about.  The more time I spend digging into the labs the more curious I get, and the more questions I take to VMUG members, product teams, or anyone who is interested in discussion.  The best way to get better is to keep pushing yourself and to keep learning.

Personal Favorites

HOL-SDC-1401 – Cloud Management with vRealize Operations

I have found this one to be incredibly helpful since it goes over the newer features in vRealize Operations, formerly vCOPs.  There are significant changes coming, and this tool is proving to be incredibly helpful for a number of users I have spoken with recently.

HOL-SDC-1403 – VMware NSX Introduction

Having very little networking experience outside of architecture, this has been a life saver.  I have decided to work on my VCP-NV, so this lab has been a lifesaver.  Not only have I learned about NSX, but it has helped me to dig deeper into vSphere networking.

HOL-SDC-1408 – VMware Virtual SAN 101

I have been working with VSAN since the early Beta.  I am a huge fan, coming from a storage background, although I am always cautious with the use cases.  Using the Lab helped me to become more successful with my demonstrations, and with my conversations.

I do want to try more of the labs, there are so many, and they are quite well done.  One final tip, I use multiple monitors when I am in my home office, or my iPad when I am not.  I prefer to put the lab in full screen and use the second screen for the lab guide.  It makes things so much easier.

I encourage you to use these labs, not because I work here, but because I think that knowledge is power.  Get familiar with the products, challenge your self, your peers, your VMware sales teams, or just grow professionally.  There are so many valuable tools out there, but there is nothing like hands on experience.  It is your career, use the resources available to you and get better at what you do.

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb