Hello, friend.
I’ve been lurking here a long time, and haven’t yet found the need to post a question that wasn’t answered by searching. But it seems I need to post something to get cred that lets me take advantage of certain offers, so I’ll just introduce myself.
I’m a software developer working out of my home near Sacramento, California. I’ve been hacking Unix and Linux for several decades (anyone remember DEC’s Ultrix?). For a long time I maintained a colocated server for mail, web, and storage that evolved to be just for myself, family, and close friends. After the hardware and software became very antiquated and unmaintainable, I transitioned to a new server (acquired surplus at low cost) that I run at home connected to Comcast Business Internet service. Specs:
- HP ProLiant DL160 Gen8
- Dual Xeon E5-2609 (8 real cores, no HT)
- 144 GiB DRAM
- 2 TB NVMe SSD (on a PCIe card)
- Four 3.5″ drive bays (currently with 12 TB but expanding)
It’s been a challenge making everything work well, such as needing to install an SD card as a boot drive because the pre-UEFI firmware couldn’t boot the NVMe SSD, and getting Comcast to populate my IPv4 and IPv6 DNS PTR records. Notable software includes Fedora 40 Linux, Postfix, Dovecot, and SpamAssassin for mail, Apache, and Home Assistant.
Since I no longer have an off-site backup server, my current challenge is to try to snag a cheap storage VPS plan from a promotion here, or maybe set up a cooperative arrangement with someone having similar needs.
I’m curious to hear others’ thoughts on serving from home versus colocation, VPS, or bare metal rental. I see pros:
- Fixed-cost hardware upgrades (e.g. I could easily have 80 TB of storage)
- LAN-speed and no-cost local access to data and other services
Cons:
- Less reliability from long power and Internet outages (but I don’t need five 9s)
- Environmental impacts: space, power, cooling, noise
- Internet provider support may be less motivated to please
- The aforementioned off-site backup problem
I’ve long since given up thinking that making some money hosting others’ websites or mail is a good idea, since it tends to obligate me to some level of support and reliability. If I give it away, these things are justifiably best-effort.
Comments
Please not another basement host. Summer is near but really no. If you use it for yourself and your family it should be fine but not if you sell it to somebody. Compared to those super cheap and widely available solutions hosted in a professional environment, the only advantage I see with your potential offer is that you have a residential ip address but this likely attracks buyers you don't want to have in your house.
If you give it away you have the full desaster prepared. Already look for another internet provider and probably order a bigger post box. Unless you setup a proxy/tunnel or whatever, your internet connection will be maxed out in several ways around the clock (I'm not talking about bandwidth only. As mentioned, you don't want to know what people blast into the internet from your basement).
Pro Homeserver
Pro Cloud
Pro Colocation
The biggest problem with hosting servers at home is the very limited internet speed and DDoS protection.
If the wrong kid gets mad at you, he will DDoS you for weeks.
The risk is likely much lower when you don't sell hosting and don't deal with abusers, but I would recommend hosting your money sites and primary email accounts in data centers.
I have an old Dell R710II with 2xCPU, 48GB RAM, 5x2TB SAS-2 HDD and 1 Gbit internet at home. I've had it for a few years and it's still fine for testing, learning, backup and so on, but there are simply too many drawbacks for production use, so I decided not to upgrade or replace it.
>
Hello if you like we possible give you
3 TB HDD Raid 60
(5 GB SSD For boot/Operating System)
40 MB/s I/O
3.3K IOps
1 vCPU e5-2630 v4 or better
1 Dedicated IPv4
VNC Access
Control panel for automaticaly reinstall acces
1 GBps port speed shared @ 20 TB Bandwidth per month
Port 25 block permanently
1 GB DDr4 ECC RAM
Full KVM Virtualisation
Full Root Access
Multiple 32/64 bit OS
Romania Location
Orastie City
Linux or Windows
Seedbox Allow
Allow plex or others
Public torrents Allow
ADULT Websites Allow
Web 3.0 / Free Speech Allow
IGNORE DMCA , ALL REPORTS INGORED
38.69$/year
Regards,
Calin
https://lowend-deals.xbit.win/#storage (some links are aff)
I would suggest Crunchbits and GreenCloud, both are prem.
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For backup storage here's probably the best deal you can get (ref).
That's 2 TB plan, but there are other plans available, both larger and smaller - check the links on the left.
Should be a rational purchase, since you say you have a single SSD in your server. Doubly so if it is a consumer, not an enterprise/server model.
And the cost will be at least 10-20 times less than your Comcast Business plan.
☰ Probably the best Black Friday storage offers — AMD EPYC VDSes with NVMe slices (ref) from 250GB to 4TB and 500GB–10TB SAN disk. / Big HDD storage VPSes (ref) from $2.42/month per TB. / Storage dedis and hybrid VPS (SSD + HDD) are there as well.
What are examples of offers here that require a posting history in order to take advantage thereof?
Pretty much any giveaway, service transfer, etc...
Ultrix was one of my first. I much preferred it to VMS.
Probiotics
Antibiotics
Wahaat?!?!
Websites have ads, I have ad-blocker.
Thanks all for your comments and offers. I think I need to clarify a few things:
I appreciate the posted storage hosting offers, but I’m holding out for better. I’ve seen them, just have to grab when the timing is right.
When I was in college, the Engineering and Computer Science department had two VAXen (as they were affectionately known). The one running clunky old VMS was the workhorse for supporting classes and administrative needs. The other one ran Ultrix, and supported only a few specialized classes. The sysadmins, having been trained only on VMS, were frightened of and totally clueless about Unix, and had a somewhat adversarial relationship with the students such as myself who understood it and helped them administer it, often behind their backs. Things got better when our group got our own little MicroVAX running Ultrix, the only one of ten or so not running MicroVMS.