I recently purchased a NAS and was considering installing an instance on it. but being that this would be on my home network, i’ll probably cap it at like 50 users or something. I found one post where someone was saying that the RAM and CPU usage was pretty low, but what about network usage. My NAS also runs Plex and i’d hate for my max 30Mbps to be overrun by the lemmy instance.

Anybody got the data on whether or not it would be viable?

  • arcrust@lemmy.mlOP
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    1 year ago

    Very fair point. I’m still very new to the world of servers and figured this would be a great time to start learning. I’ll start looking into VPS. Thanks!

    • honk@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I really don’t want to discourage you from trying it out.

      But if you are really just getting into it you should maybe try something a little bit less messy. Lemmy is a young project gaining a lot of traction and it’s easy to get caught in the crossfire lol.

      Maybe you wanna try something a little bit more stable and predictable first and then work your way up. you know…hosting a game server or a teamspeak for your friends. Maybe get into docker and deploy something with that first. Get familiar with port forwarding and firewall rules. Especially getting to know the docker network stuff. That took me some time lol. Maybe a personal nextcloud before you go and host a (semi-) publoc social media instance. people might get angry if you screw up.

      But 100% get into self hosting shit. It’s a lot of fun and there is A LOT to learn.

      • arcrust@lemmy.mlOP
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, no problem. I just recently purchased my NAS (two days ago). The original intention was just doing some cloud backups, plex, and a home surveillance system. So I’m just looking for other things to use it for and thought that Lemmy might be a good thing to try out.

        I haven’t used docker at all yet, so I’ll look into it. I use linux and have done a lot of distro hopping, so I’m pretty tech literate, although I don’t know coding very well. So lots to learn and implement. Plex is the only thing I’ve really done any port forwarding on, and I’m sure I didnt do it “right”.