Alectro91 Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 Hi guys, I am thinking about hosting my own server, and have found a great website where you can configure your own computer/server to be made. I have chosen a few things, and the following came out: http://www.mediafire.com/?ycjpd1o59im56ka I was thinking about running a tekkit server, OS: Windows 7 Home Premium OnTime: 24/7 Ram dedicated to the server: 6GB Maximum player count: 25/30 Will this work, no lag? Or does anyone have any suggestions (for about the same pricing)? Note: I am not looking to rent a server, I want to buy one! No monthly payments for me, just one big sum! I want hardware, no software! Quote
nicko6113 Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 is this going to be running out of a house? im not a fan of the price on that server. its alot for not that much. i bought a dell poweredge 2950 last year for about 300. 2 dual core xeons at 2.4 ghz. 3 73 gb 10k sas drives and 4gb of ram. which i updated to 12gb for about $40 on ebay. i would shop around alittle more try to get the best hardware for the lowest price. Quote
paulcall Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 Your computer is not the only thing you should worry about. Can you tell us the speed of your internet? Quote
MYCRAFTisbest Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 paul is correct ur internet must also be fast Quote
Expozay Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 So far so good, it all depends on your connection and processing power as well. You may be able to buy a 100Mbit port for your home computer, but it's also of what the upload speed is. Which would be somewhere around 2-5mbit. Your best choice is to purchase a VPS or Dedicated server from a hosting company. Quote
chausser Posted August 13, 2012 Posted August 13, 2012 Personally I run my server from my house with a 3.8 i7 Quad core 16 gigs of ram and 256 SSD. But i also have Fiber to the house with a 90/90Mbps connection. im not sure that 2-5 would really cut it for lag free. When my server is full(50 players) there is next to no lag. Quote
chausser Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 its fiber, 90Mbps MegaBits not megabytes. Cable may be capped at 10Mbps up but fiber isnt and i love it Still dont believe check out http://residential.veracitynetworks.com/Pricing-Provo/provo-fiber-network.html zip 84601 - Fiber elite Quote
Quesenek Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 90Mps up? I highly doubt that kiddo. It actually isn't out of the ordinary with fiber. Mine is ~50MBPs down and ~50MBPs up and my ISP offers plans all the way up to 1000MBPs down and up. Quote
Expozay Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 Just found out from a few friends in the U.S that alot get the same up as they get down. I don't doubt you as much anymore.. Here in Canada, great down, not great up > : l Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 What's important to ask yourself is, do you have enough expertise to support it yourself if something goes wrong, and do you know how to set up networks properly, and safely? Another thing is cooling, and dust management a system that's running 24/7 is going to build up plenty of heat, and dust so having a good cooling system in place is essential in my opinion. Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 I thank you all for your quick reactions and your comments with concerns. I have hosted a server from my computer before, but since the ram is not that good, it didn't work that well. I have gained more and more experience with computers and servers after taking them all apart, putting them back in to place, upgrading the fans, making a well-fantilated room, and researching on the internet. Of course, I should have mentioned my internet speed: Down: 40Mb/s Up: 4Mb/s Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 Having hosted a server earlier, did anyone report any lag? With that I mean rubber banding teleporting etc. Some people like to refer to frame rate issues as lag too for some inexplicable reason =(. If the number of people won't go way up from the last server you hosted, and the response times were fine I guess you should be cool. If in doubt host a FPS evening with 30 people and see how that goes. Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 On my old pc, I have hosted a vanilla mc server, and there was, every once in a while, lag on the server. There were, at that time, about 10 people on. Just some days ago, I have hosted a tekkit server on my laptop (MacBook Pro), with 20 people. No lag. Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 I reckon you're fine then, but to be sure, wait until someone less sleep deprived tells you you're fine :) Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 I believe you just fine. But I have just chatted with some dell service guy, who is telling me that the dell poweredge 2950 is no longer made, and then shows me a page of servers from 600 to 6000 euro. Well, they got rid of the cheap one, and got expensive ones in the place. Anyone know any good server manufacturers I can take a look at? Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 You could build one yourself, it's not that different from a normal pc in the end. It's cheaper as well, but doesn't come with service though. Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 I have no problem with building it myself, IF I can find a good tutorial on youtube :P Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 Youtube videos can help, but in the end it's you building the thing, not the guy showcasing the components he bought because of his opinion of them. Get a good and sturdy case with a good airflow, and openings for water cooling. If you're unfamiliar with water cooling get pre-made closed circuit CPU coolers these don't require any fiddling. Personally I'm a big fan of the s2011 hexcores from intel, but I have the budget for those. Consider what CPU you want before you get your motherboard. Memory is pretty damned cheap nowadays so no real reason to skimp out. A good PSU is very important, try to get one with detachable cables as they can mess up your airflows. Get two good harddrives with enough drive cache, and turning speed to keep up with the rest of your system, a SSD can be great but expensive too. Mirror the drives in raid, it's inefficient storage wise but if one falls the other can back it up. Other than the expectations you have for your hardware building a server is no different from building a home pc. It only becomes somewhat of a challenge when you're working with really high end kit. Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 The problem i have with water cooling is: What if it brakes. Then you drown your computer/server! Quote
Duckimus Maximus Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 That's true, but that can be said for anything. Choosing water over air to me is an easy pick because I pipe my own systems, and I trust my own work. I have heard good things about the closed circuit ones I mentioned earlier, but I can't give you any guarantees in the end. Quote
karl2002 Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 Wouldnt it make more sense to pay monthly for a dedicated server or a vps with a 1gb line? that way you can be sure there will be no lag what so ever You have to bear in mind that when hosting a server from your own home then if your doing heavy downloading that will effect the server quite majorly. Personally i would always stick with dedicated servers or vps's for hosting servers. Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 As I have said be4: No monthly payments! I want hardware, not some internet software! Quote
karl2002 Posted August 14, 2012 Posted August 14, 2012 so? you completly missed the point as in how heavy do you use your connection that it will effect the server... Quote
Alectro91 Posted August 14, 2012 Author Posted August 14, 2012 I know, I have read your post. But the fact still is that I know what I want, and that is not a monthly payment. Quote
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