this post was submitted on 09 Jan 2025
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I should have clarified I don’t mean for the day, I mean for a week plus.

Edit: I left them on for a month. Bad thing about being encrypted is I had to have someone login.

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[–] just_another_person@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago (1 children)
  1. Never put network connectivity on server-class hardware. Low-power devices exist for this reason. Use them.
  2. If you need to access your information remotely when you're away and it's running on server-class hardware. Don't. It's a needless waste of power.
  3. If you're talking about accessing your porn collection when you're on vacation. Don't. Enjoy your vacation.
[–] corroded@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago

I suppose it depends on your use case, but I would disagree with points 1 and 2. Network connectivity has an effect on your entire network and is absolutely crucial. Pfsense/OPNSense, DNS, etc should always be on server-class hardware. I run these as VM, but I would argue that best practice is to have them on their own bare-metal server-class hardware. File storage is also incredibly important, and even with backups, I don't want my NAS going down. It also runs on server class-hardware.

The two items you mentioned are the two items I would be least comfortable running on consumer-grade hardware.