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ADR-001 — Architecture overview
Context
This document describes the overall architecture of the homelab infrastructure and the boundaries of what this Ansible monorepo manages.
Infrastructure
- Hypervisor: Proxmox cluster (2+ nodes)
- Guest OS: Debian 13 (all managed hosts)
- Scale: 2–5 VMs, small fleet — treated as individuals, not cattle
- Control node:
ubongo— a dedicated always-on physical x86-64 machine outside the cluster. Ansible runs from here. It cannot be created by the Terraform it hosts, so it is provisioned manually (see ADR-015 anddocs/runbooks/new-host.md).
What this repo manages
| Layer | Managed by | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| VM existence | Terraform (terraform/) |
Clones the cloud-init template; ubongo (control node) is a physical box outside the cluster, the one manual exception (see ADR-009/ADR-015) |
| Internal DNS records | Ansible dns role |
Internal zone rendered from inventory (see ADR-007/009) |
| OS baseline | Ansible base role |
Users, SSH, firewall, updates, audit |
| Docker runtime | Ansible docker_host role |
Engine, daemon config, log driver |
| Service deployment | Ansible per-service roles | Compose rendered from templates |
| Secrets | Ansible Vault | Encrypted vault.yml files in repo |
The Terraform↔Ansible boundary and handoff are defined in ADR-009. This table describes the intended design — see STATUS.md for what is actually built.
Host groups
all
├── control # ubongo — physical control node outside the cluster; baseline config only, runs no services
├── docker_hosts # VMs running Docker services (most hosts)
└── proxmox_hosts # Proxmox nodes themselves (limited management scope)
The control group holds the single manually-provisioned control node; it is
managed for baseline config (SSH, firewall, updates) but never runs the
docker_host role. Proxmox nodes are managed only for basic baseline tasks (SSH).
Proxmox configuration itself (storage, clustering, networking)
is out of scope.
Service interaction model
Services run as Docker containers on one or more docker_hosts. Where services
need to interact, they do so via:
- Docker networks (same host)
- Internal DNS / hostname resolution (cross-host)
- Explicitly defined published ports (external access)
All Compose files are rendered by Ansible from Jinja2 templates. No hand-edited Compose files exist on hosts — they are always regenerated on deploy.
Decision
This architecture prioritises:
- Simplicity: few moving parts, no orchestration layer (no Kubernetes, no Swarm)
- Reproducibility: any host can be rebuilt from scratch via Ansible
- Legibility: a human reading the repo can understand what runs where