Proxmox homelab rack with clustered virtualization nodes

Homelab Builder

Proxmox Homelab Setup

Build the lab shape first: single-node PVE, HA clusters, Ceph, TrueNAS, and Proxmox Backup Server prompts.

OpenFactory helps plan Proxmox homelab setup by generating bootable preparation labs around the topology: PVE nodes, storage nodes, backup targets, service VMs, networking assumptions, and validation checks.

Pick the right Proxmox path

A good Proxmox homelab grows in layers. Start with one node and useful services, add backups, then move into HA and shared storage once the basics are boring. OpenFactory's prompts mirror that progression so each design can be reviewed before you touch production hardware.

What OpenFactory validates

  • Topology: node count, witness pattern, aliases, and service roles.
  • Storage intent: local disks, NFS wiring, Ceph targets, or PBS datastore.
  • Service ports and APIs expected to respond after boot.
  • Runbook gaps that remain operator responsibility on real hardware.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best first Proxmox homelab setup?

A single-node Proxmox VE host with one network service and one VM workload is the best first setup. It teaches storage, networking, backups, and VM lifecycle without requiring quorum or shared storage.

When should a homelab use a 3-node Proxmox cluster?

Use a 3-node cluster when you need quorum, HA practice, or shared operational patterns. It is more complex than a single node, so backups and network design should be in place first.

How does OpenFactory help with Proxmox?

OpenFactory does not replace Proxmox VE. It helps generate bootable lab images and prompt-based preparation stacks around Proxmox patterns so you can test topology, config files, service ports, and validation checks before carrying the design into real hardware.

Build the image instead of hand-assembling it

Use OpenFactory to turn the same requirements into a bootable, testable Linux system.

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