You are correct. That was an oversight.

Of all the items on that page I could probably afford the screwdriver and the 
heatsinks.

I would like to keep the budget under $500 not including the hard drive(s) I 
already have drives. Less is better. 
--
Steven Mainor

On August 7, 2019 1:52:15 AM EDT, Richard Hector <rich...@walnut.gen.nz> wrote:
>On 7/08/19 5:29 PM, Steven Mainor wrote:
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> I'm looking for advice on how to build a home server with a primary
>focus on 
>> security. I plan to run nextcloud and a mail server that will serve 3
>to 5 
>> people at most.
>> 
>> My requirements are:
>> 
>> A server setup that can be run with completely open source software
>and 
>> doesn't require any binaries to boot. I don't trust anything closed
>source for 
>> this particular project.
>> 
>> A gigabit ethernet port.
>> 
>> A USB3.0 port or SATA connector to attach storage to.
>> 
>> Enough processor power and ram to run nextcloud and the mail server
>from an 
>> encrypted hard drive (LUKS) efficiently with moderate throughput
>saving and 
>> reading files from nextcloud.
>> 
>> I would just build something x86 based but the amd/intel Platform
>Security 
>> Processor/IME stuff makes me nervous.
>> 
>> So far I have been looking at single board computers like the ones
>listed 
>> here: https://wiki.debian.org/CheapServerBoxHardware#OSHW
>> 
>> I like the OLinuXino A20 LIME2 but I am not sure the processor will
>be enough 
>> to handle the overhead from an encrypted hard drive. I also don't
>like that it 
>> is only 32-bit since that will limit the file size nextcloud can
>handle as I 
>> understand it.
>> 
>> Is there anything similar to the OLinuXino A20 LIME2 but more
>powerful or is 
>> there a better option I haven't read about yet?
>
>You haven't mentioned a budget, but strong emphasis on security and
>openness ...
>
>https://www.raptorcs.com/TALOSII/ ?
>
>Richard

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