Records, communication, and security are all important parts of prepping. A robust computer network can work of all of those things. We’ve talked about the other sections of the prepping pyramid, but haven’t spent a lot of time on how we can use information technology to strengthen the other sections of the pyramid.

You may or may not remember that I changed my home network to an Omada system back in February. The Wifi coverage is excellent, but now there are other issues that I would like to take care of.
- I wasn’t happy with how crowded and sloppy the onQ panel that contains everything is. It looks like a bowl of spaghetti and even though I have the largest panel made, it’s still crowded.
- I am using Ring Cameras for surveillance, but I am not happy with them, for reasons that will be covered in a future post.
- I have a Terramaster NAS with four 4TB NvMe SSDs in it, but I can’t get those SSDs any more because they now cost 5 times more than they once did.
- There is a second setup in the bedroom I use as an office. It has an Omada switch, and it runs my office equipment. The issue is the UPS there just died, and I want everything consolidated, so I am moving that into the main server.
So I have decided to make a few changes. We are keeping the Omada system, but I am making a few upgrades.
- I am mounting a 12U server cabinet on the wall of the utility closet in the house. This will make things cleaner and easier to manage.
- I will be putting an 8 bay HDD rack in the cabinet. It will be used as both a NDVR and as a NAS device.
- Three rooms in the house are device dense: the living room, the master bedroom, and the office. I am going to clean up the architecture a bit to make things faster and more resilient.
So how are we doing this? Well, in the racks, there will be:
- A rackmount UPS. I just need enough storage to ridge the second or two it takes my powerwalls to take over when the power fails.
- Power distribution
- An Omada controller
- An Omada gateway
- A 24 port keystone patch panel
- An Omada 16 port managed POE switch
- an 8 bay rackmount HDD rack.
- A shelf where the modem will be, along with my current NAS (until the HDD rack is installed)
- There will be 4 remaining U for future additions
Records
Records are important. Having copies of things like financial records, professional licenses, certifications, and other important documents will allow you to rebuild your life in the aftermath of a large disaster. Ask the residents whose lives were destroyed in Hurricane Katrina how important those records were in doing that. Having a robust set of electronic records with copies of every important document, all in a RAID, is a great step towards that goal. I am thinking of at least 12TB of RAID storage space for important files. I need it, because I scan every document, bill, and receipt that comes into this house.
Security
One or two of the HDD bays will be reserved for surveillance hard drives. I am looking at 20TB or more of storage space for the camera system. Once the weather gets cooler, I am planning on running Ethernet cables in the attic for a PTZ camera, two outdoor wide view cameras, a doorbell camera, and one or two covering other areas of the property, all in 4k. So, a total of 5-6 cameras that will record 24/7. That takes up more storage space than my documents and files.
That’s the hardware. I will also have it organized into several VLANs for network security. There will be a VLAN for:
- One for infrastructure. This will allow APs to be on their own VLAN, as well as controllers and those sorts of things.
- IOT devices, so I can limit how much they will spy on the rest of the house. They will only access each other and the Internet.
- Entertainment devices like televisions and SONOS speakers. Internet only
- A Guest VLAN that will only have access to a printer and the Internet
- Then phones belonging to my wife and I that will have full access.
I will decide more on rules later, but that is the idea in my head for now.
Implementation
First step is to get all of the hardware installed and move the network that already exists into the server cabinet. Then I will setup VLANs. After that, we will install the HDD rack and move the NAS files there. I have another HDD based NAS that I can use as a backup file server.

