Will this be overkill or otherwise not recommended for someone who is new and just starting to learn?

My goal is to have something I can grow into, but initially I’d like to host a few VMs, game servers, and a have place to store content. I’d also like to host a PLEX server in the future as well but might buy a separate piece of hardware for it specifically down the road. Thanks in advance for taking the time to help a newbie!

  • Fibbs@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    go for it, get a rack with wheels, 20 odd Kilos is a pain in the ass to move about in that form factor.

    it’ll only be noisy on start up.

  • kvitravn4354@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    All depends on what you’re looking to host. For some perspective I run a valheim server, home assistant, jellyfin media server and a handful of other applications on a 2011 mac mini i7 8 core cpu with 2 ssds using sofware raid 1 on debian. I had the ssd’s lying around and picked up the mac mini from a job site recycling a bunch of equipment but it’s quiet efficient for my use case. I have an old 2 bay qnap connected to that “server” using NFS so that adds 6TB for my Jellyfin server to store media on.

  • KillerGnomeNH@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Despite what other people are saying, the noise on these depends on your bios settings. If you set everything for high performance, it’s going to be loud. I’d start off with the energy saving settings until you decide you need more power. With mine set to energy saving, because it’s honestly more power than I need right now with 16 cores; 32 threads; 176 GB RAM and (4) 6 TB hard drives for storage (not including boot drives), the server is actually very quiet. It’s quieter than my PowerConnect 6248P POE switch. I’d say it’s a great server for starting off with if you can get a good deal on it. I run VMWaee ESXI with multiple virtual machines, TrueNAS; pfSense; Plex; VMWare VCSA and a couple of others for just playing around with different operating systems when I need to. Even with power saving settings, I have no performance issues with anything I do as a home server. Now, in a production environment, data center, corporate server running critical tasks, I would never choose power saving settings. But for most people, it’s not likely you will need the full performance of something like this in a home environment. And, if you start using more of the processor, or have it in a room that’s not air conditioned on a warm day, it will automatically increase fan speed as needed anyway. Not that I recommend a room without temperature and humidity control of some kind, but it can handle it to an extent when not in a live production environment.

  • lucky644@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Unless you get your power for free (or a free rack server), you’d be better off just building a tower to start with more modern, power efficient parts.

    Also, you didn’t mention if you had a rack, if you don’t, definitely avoid rack mount servers for now.

  • Elpardua@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Do you have a workload planned for that? Like everyone told you here, it’s a powerful beast but you need to feed it. If you’re planning to run a plex container and a file share, it’s an overkill. Get a power efficient optiplex, or hp prodesk/elitedesk, or Lenovo Thinkcentre. Put all the ram you can, a fast SSD and a big HDD for storage, you’ll be more than content, and without the guilt of killing 5 whales each time you read a pr0n file.

  • HereToAskTechQs@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Savemyserver is having a black friday sale today. I just bought a 730xd off there for 280$ and a ram upgrade to 128GB for 100$ so newer hardware with comparable memory and a better upgrade path for almost the same price. I’d recommend checking them out.

    • MassPatriot@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      Is that sale still going on or was it one day?

      Pricing out a 730xd on their site now starts at $680.

  • pzanardi@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I asked the same and was met with a lot of “do it in a laptop first”. Ended up buying a r730 for $350.

    Also everyone saying this thing would be an aircraft in terms of noise and heat. Its running quieter than my main pc or a regular ceiling fan. The fans stay around 5% unless you’re booting it. (Look up idrac fan control). Its uses more power than a laptop, though. Averages at 73w. I’m very happy with it. Running LXCs under proxmox with jellyfin, arrs, pihole, truenas, tailscale/cloudflare and some other random VMs for fun.

  • Pvt-Snafu@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Well, R720 is quite old. I would look into R730/R630 options. Or ideally, use some hardware that you already have. An old laptop with Proxmox might very well be a start.