I’m looking at various single board computers ( think raspberry pi) to host a server on. Namely for hosting media, an email, and perhaps a web site/fediverse instance/blog/forum on.

I’m under an assumption that a SBC and some hard drives could handle this on the hardware side. Am I totally off the mark? And what kind of os and other soft wear should I consider using?

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  • ono@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    You’re not off the mark. It’s a great idea for a low traffic server that doesn’t guzzle electricity.

    I suggest an SBC with 4GB RAM (or more) and 4 cores, though you could probably get by with a bit less. If you use a Raspberry Pi, make it version 4. If you’re going to use mechanical hard drives (good value for bulk storage) consider a board with native SATA or PCIe for lower interrupt overhead and better SMART access than a USB bridge would provide.

    Debian is a great server OS. There are derivative distributions (e.g. Armbian & Raspbian) for boards that aren’t supported by mainline Debian.

    Software will depend on your needs as a user and your preferences/experience as an admin. If you end up wanting something like Docker, you might want to try Podman instead, as it’s less resource-hungry.

    Also, check out the self-hosting forums. You’re likely to find more people doing the same sort of thing.

  • worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    There are small form factor PCs that you can get used and they will have more power, IO, better compatibility, and be cheaper than a raspberry pi.

    There are YouTube videos about it and they are not much bigger than the size of a pi.

    Their initial cost might be more, but if you get a case and sd card and micro-hdmi adapter you can totally get a better system.

  • Finkler@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    With the price of a lot of the SBC’s you will probably be better of going for something like as dell 3050 with a gen7 or above in it. I picked up a gen7 dell 3050 with 4Gb and a 500Gb disk for £50. Threw in a 1tb nvme a 120gb ssd and a spare 500GB ssd I had. Installed Debian with KDE , then i set up the drive shares via sftp, installed Docker and setup the various docker containers such as freshrss, kodi, Firefox ,Pi-Hole etc.

    What ever route you go have fun starting you journey in the world of self hosting.

  • Wulpo@lemmy.letthewookiee.win
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    1 year ago

    I run a full blown home server rather than a raspi server so take my opinion with a grain of salt. But Ive heard of alot of people say yes thats possible. But i can imagine it overloading very quickly though. Not the same, but the VPS im running my lemmy instance from couldnt handle the matrix server i was testing with bots and other integrations (2 vcores, 2gb ram). You could get away pretty well an i3 or i5 if power consumption isnt a massive concern, doesnt even need to be new hardware either. You might even find a second hand machine for as much as a raspi as well.

    Being a desktop CPU, you will have more available power should you outgrow your current needs from an SBC/raspi.

    An additional advantage is if you are hosting your own videos, you can use quicksync on 8th gen intels (and onwards) without needing a gpu, and you can transcode multiple streams at once.

  • cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    An Orange Pi 5 Plus would work well for a small web server and some storage.
    It’s got an 8 core CPU, 16GB of RAM, dual 2.5G ethernet, an M.2 slot for an NVMe SSD, and 2 USB 3 ports.