July 8th, 2024

Sipeed/NanoKVM: NanoKVM: Affordable, Multifunctional, Nano RISC-V IP-KVM

The GitHub URL offers details on NanoKVM, an IP-KVM product on LicheeRV Nano. It covers product info, specs, hardware platform, and community links. For further details, feel free to inquire.

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Sipeed/NanoKVM: NanoKVM: Affordable, Multifunctional, Nano RISC-V IP-KVM

The GitHub URL provided contains information about NanoKVM, an IP-KVM product built on the LicheeRV Nano platform. The content includes details about the product, technical specifications, hardware platform, and links to the community. If you require more information or specific details from this source, please don't hesitate to ask.

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Link Icon 15 comments
By @otterpro - 6 months
Closed source binary firmware? No thanks. I probably would not deploy it for a server with sensitive data, but if it was really really cheap, it might be ok for air-gapped system for testing servers, but other than that, I'm not sure.
By @vanburen - 6 months
By @zamadatix - 6 months
IP KVM is the best use I've found for a Pi so it's good to see other options. Price wise it looks like I can get 10 of the nanoKVM full for the price of a single PiKVM v4 plus. My only complaint on the hardware is maybe that went a bit too cheap and now I need to make sure wherever I plug it in supports 100 Mbps (tricky on some 2.5G+ switches or 1G+ Ethernet adapters. Always fixable, just a nuisance).

Edit: and it looks like the image for this is not open source.

By @synchrone - 6 months
By @alargemoose - 6 months
I’ve only had a couple of times where it would have been nice to have some kind of out of band management for my homelab. So the value of this kind of hardware was pretty low to me personally. Which is why I couldn’t justify pikvm/tinypilot $300+. But for ~$50 with shipping, I couldn’t hit order on this fast enough!
By @msbroadf - 6 months
I recently built an simpler kvm/ip using a few pi pico's and ms2130 chips. https://www.modularkvmip.com doesnt matter what server you use. Its not opensource but its just usb device passthrough at the core.
By @rickydroll - 6 months
why hdmi and not DisplayPort? Every machine in the past couple of generations of my small lab, used DisplayPort. I went through four or five different HDMI-to-DisplayPort adapters before I found one that mostly (but not always) worked with PiKVM.
By @craftkiller - 6 months
Does this work without a functioning network? I just spent the weekend debugging an issue on my router, which involved unplugging my router and setting it up in my room for the monitor, and then running a lengthy ethernet cable to the modem.

I'd much rather be able to attach something like this, have it spin up its own wifi or ethernet network (that understandably wouldn't have internet access) and then connect from my laptop. The other solution I was considering is a portable monitor (one of those hand-held tablet-sized ones) which absolutely would work without a network but the NanoKVM seems less wasteful in terms of future e-waste generated.

By @jjoergensen - 6 months
VAT should be added for EU. This would make importing less of a headache.
By @spants - 6 months
Looks great! The one issue i have is my Proxmox server runs OPNsense and all my hosted apps. It has an APC UPS. Some of the apps gracefully close down when UPS is low and power is lost. If UPS power fails completely, then PC is obviously off. Is there a foolproof way that the server will restart when UPS receives power again?. I see a "restart on power loss" in BIOS but is this the proper way to do it?
By @thrownawaysz - 6 months
Sorry I don't get this at all. I have 2 PCs running headless on Proxmox, I can control them remote through any browser. What's the difference here? What's the point of the HDMI connection if it's through IP?
By @kosolam - 6 months
How would one use such a device?
By @netcrash - 6 months
This is cute and I want couple of them! Any plans for crowdsupply.com?