# Home Lab Architecture ## Current-state sketch ```mermaid flowchart TD U[Claudio devices\nMacBook Pro M4\niPad Air M3\niPhone 15 Pro] RA[Remote access layer\nTailscale / ZeroTier / Pangolin / Cloudflare] VPS[Netcup VPS\nweb apps + remote proxy] NAS[Synology DS218+\nDrive / Photos / Jellyfin / Plex] PNAS[Parents' Synology NAS\nfuture off-site backup target] DELL[Old Dell laptop\nDebian\nHome Assistant + Restic backup server] PMX[MacBook Pro 2017 Intel\nProxmox\nOpenClaw / Ollama / Grafana / Pangolin-Newt] PI[Raspberry Pi 3\nspare / test] FUT[Future storage ideas\nold disks / possible CEPH later] U --> RA RA --> VPS RA --> NAS RA --> DELL RA --> PMX RA --> PI NAS -. future backup .-> PNAS DELL -. backup orchestration .-> PNAS FUT -. future .-> PMX FUT -. future .-> NAS ``` ## Desired operating model ```mermaid flowchart LR Users[Claudio / family / friends] Access[Unified remote access + identity] Prod[Production environment\nreliable, documented, backed up] Test[Testing environment\nexperimentation / breakable] Backup[Backups + restore validation] Docs[Documentation\nObsidian second brain] Users --> Access Access --> Prod Access --> Test Prod --> Backup Test --> Backup Prod --> Docs Test --> Docs ``` ## Recommended interpretation The current setup already has enough moving parts that the main risk is architectural drift, not lack of hardware. The next step should be simplification and boundary-setting, not adding many more apps. A good target is to define one production lane, one testing lane, and one backup strategy before larger migrations. ## Near-term planning questions - What exactly counts as production today? - Which host should be the primary app host? - Which remote-access path should become the default? - What is the restore story for each critical service? - Which current services should stay on Synology for now?