[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I suggest a Hypervisor on the hardware always. Promox, ESXi or Xen. Then run your large OS’s as VM’s on top, you won’t regret it.

[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I suggest a Hypervisor on the hardware always. Promox, ESXi or Xen. Then run your large OS’s as VM’s on top, you won’t regret it.

[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I am about 25 years into the journey of doing IT more than just using a computer as a computer.

Early memories are having the side of my PC case open with IDE hard drives sticking out the side so that I had more storage.

[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Yes, it’s free. ESXi is part of the vSphere stack.

Get installing and get self hosting :)

[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

ESXi is my go to hypervisor but I think proxmox is more popular here & /r/homelab.

Either way, yes 100% you should put a hypervisor on it.

If you are not going to do hardware RAID on the server then one small SSD for the OS I suggest then another high quality SSD (2.5 or Nvme via a PCIE adapter) for VM storage primary storage then a HDD if you want storage on the server also.

I often have a VM with 2 virtual disks assgined, one on the SSD and one on the HDD.

Why did you remove the text of the post hah?

[-] lev400@alien.top 3 points 1 year ago

Welcome to the club !!

No your not tripping. These are solid VM machines with loads of options on how you populate them with storage.

[-] lev400@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Oh my this was their active sever in 2023 ? What OS was it running ? I played with these or Compaq G3 long long ago.

lev400

joined 1 year ago