I am getting the following pc and would like to also run a server. Power consumption is no issue as I pay a fixed amount rent, no utilities/electricity on top. I am also able to fully control port forwarding (no CGNAT). I am wondering if this will cause harm to the PC, if so how much harm?
Lenovo Legion Tower 5
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900 (3.70 GHz up to 5.40 GHz)
GPU: RTX 4070 Ti 12GB GDDR6X
Ram: 32 GB DDR5-5200MHz (UDIMM) - (2 x 16 GB)
SSD: 1 TB SSD M.2 2280 PCIe Gen4 Performance TLC
I would want to keep it on all the time since I would like to install like moonlight to stream games, and possibly also remotely access it to run machine learning algorithms. Along with that, I want it to host maybe a plex or some kind of media (at least file sharing) server so most of the time there is going to be hardly any usage. I was also thinking of kasm for certain apps which don’t run on my rasp pi’s (due to ARM)
What do you guys think?
Hmm but have you thought about power consumption? $$$
Sell it and buy a better suited pc? Or just sell the GPU ^^
Why not - I used to add my previous gaming machines to my homelab multiple times. The only problems are cheap mainboards. Lenovos Legion Rebuilds I don’t know enough about to say if their hardware is ok for that - their workstations would better be suited, I gues. But usually I’d say: why not. Just remeber to have regular backups in place, just in case
Welcome to r/homelab
I’d up the RAM to 64GB and run the extra stuff in Hyper-V that way it’s easy to keep your gaming OS clean and prioritize services.
I do this. Gaming on Windows on NVME, When I want to lab I boot esxi from usb. Have second SSD for the esxi data store.
There are things that real server hardware does fasger/better, but there is no reason why old gaming hardware can’t be a fileserver, router, firewall, gateway, etc… It’ll do Just Fine ™ at it for home use.