Pi 5 Projects

Raspberry Pi 5 projects built for people who want real capability out of a single board computer. Covers local AI inference with Ollama, Kubernetes clusters with k3s, Pi-hole and AdGuard DNS, home automation hubs, self-hosted media servers, and the thermal and storage choices that matter when you actually run workloads 24/7. The Pi 5 is powerful enough to replace kit that used to cost hundreds of pounds. Every guide documents the full build: parts list, image flash, OS hardening, service deployment, backups, and the failure modes we have hit. If you want to learn infrastructure skills on hardware you can hold in one hand, this is your starting point.

Gitea on Raspberry Pi 5: Self-Hosted Git for Your Homelab Infrastructure

Gitea: Own Your Code, Track Your Infrastructure You have spent the last nine guides building something real. Docker containers, monitoring, automation workflows, reverse proxies, maybe even a Kubernetes cluster. Your Pi is running production services. Configuration files are scattered across directories. Compose files tuned through trial and error. Environment variables that took three attempts to

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n8n on Raspberry Pi 5: Visual Workflow Automation for Your Homelab

n8n: Connect Everything With Visual Workflow Automation You have got a collection of services running on your Pi. Docker containers doing their thing. Uptime Kuma watching them. Ollama summarising text. Pi-hole filtering DNS. Each one works. None of them talk to each other. That is the difference between having containers and having infrastructure. Infrastructure is

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Uptime Kuma on Raspberry Pi 5: Self-Hosted Monitoring That Builds SRE Skills

Uptime Kuma: Know When Things Break Before Anyone Tells You Here’s a question that changed how I think about my homelab: if Pi-hole goes down at 2am, how would you know? Not how would you fix it — how would you even know it happened? You’d wake up, your family would complain that the internet

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Ollama on Raspberry Pi 5: Run Local AI Models for Data Sovereignty and Career Growth

Ollama on Raspberry Pi 5: Run Local AI Models on Your Own Hardware Let me set expectations immediately: a Raspberry Pi 5 is not going to replace ChatGPT. It’s not going to run Llama 3 70B. It’s not going to generate images or do real-time voice transcription at any useful speed. What it will do

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Home Assistant on Raspberry Pi 5: Event-Driven Architecture That Gets You Hired

Home Assistant on Raspberry Pi 5: Event-Driven Architecture That Gets You Hired I’m going to let you in on a secret: the career reason to run Home Assistant has almost nothing to do with home automation. Home Assistant is an event-driven platform with a REST API, a WebSocket API, hundreds of integrations, a state management

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Nginx Proxy Manager on Raspberry Pi 5: Reverse Proxy Setup Guide with SSL

Nginx Proxy Manager on Raspberry Pi 5: Proper URLs and SSL for Your Homelab You’ve got Docker running. Portainer’s giving you visibility. Pi-hole’s cleaning up your network. And you’re accessing everything by typing IP addresses and port numbers into a browser like it’s 2003. http://192.168.1.100:8080 for Pi-hole. https://192.168.1.100:9443 for Portainer. Whatever port your next service

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Pi-hole on Raspberry Pi 5: DNS Ad Blocking Setup Guide with Docker

Pi-hole on Raspberry Pi 5: Network-Wide Ad Blocking and DNS You Control Of all the projects in this series, Pi-hole delivers the fastest return on investment. Not in some abstract career-value sense — in the “my partner just thanked me for making the internet less annoying” sense. Within ten minutes of pointing your router at

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Portainer on Raspberry Pi 5: See What Your Containers Are Actually Doing

Portainer on Raspberry Pi 5: See What Your Containers Are Actually Doing There is a moment in every homelab journey where you realise you have lost track of what is running. You SSH in, type docker ps, and stare at a wall of truncated container names, port mappings, and status fields that tell you technically

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