Building a from-scratch IP-KVM/Pikvm board. Tips?
from kellenoffdagrid@lemmy.sdf.org to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 23:41
https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/18371323

I have a spare SBC (Pine A64 LTS) that I currently have no other use for, and recently I got the idea of turning it into an IP-KVM. However, the software support for this board is a little middling, and the board’s been somewhat overlooked by the community. That leaves me with no ready-made solutions for turning this board into a little PiKVM-style device, so I wanted to ask around and see what people more knowledgeable in this realm had to say so that I can approach building this, uh, less stupid-ly. The main issue I’ve had is just the overwhelming amount of information relating to building a KVM setup like this, so I figured I’d ask what kind of software/packages are necessary or if anyone has any tips on resources I might have missed.

Here’s what I’m hoping to accomplish:

Here’s some basic info about my setup:

Hopefully this is enough relevant information, let me know if there’s anything else I should add. Any advice is appreciated, thanks!

#selfhosted

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MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world on 18 Jun 01:55 next collapse

It’s a coincidence, I was thinking about a PiKVM myself, although with much more modest hardware (a Raxda/Banana Pi Zero at best - I wonder if these can actually hold up). I’m not very familiar with PiKVM setup; do I need to compile the repository from source on whatever I run on these machines? Is there a minimum requirement for specs?

minnix@lemux.minnix.dev on 18 Jun 03:02 collapse

I’m not sure how soon you need this, but if you can wait sipeed has a $20 kvm with ATX control that should be out soon lunar.computer/…/sipeed-announces-new-20-risc-v-k…

vividspecter@lemm.ee on 18 Jun 04:35 next collapse

Pretty cool especially since it’s RISC-V. I’d have some concerns about the software and driver side of things, though (and the performance).

MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world on 18 Jun 05:17 collapse

Now that’s amazing