Investing in a server with mass storage would “pay for itself” in less than a year, compared to what I’m currently renting (I’m low key scared to look up the prices of DDR5 RAM and NVMe drives though). Since I plan to maintain TankieTube “forever”, it seems like the best option.

I’m so ready to ditch BackBlaze because their timeout errors are causing ~90% of the current problems with the website (external storage move failures and buffering problems). mario-finger

I have plenty of experience assembling computers and the thought of building a server is really fun, but I’ve never used colocation before.

Questions/Thoughts/Concerns:


  1. Do datacenters let you walk inside to maintain your own server? There is a datacenter in my home city, which would be convenient, but using it would effectively soft-doxx my location. Right now “Burgerland” is as specific as I publicly reveal.

  1. If I ship the server to a more remote location, how would I replace failed drives? Is that a commonly provided service? Would using a datacenter within ~2 hours driving distance be the best compromise between accessibility and location obfuscation?

  1. Is paying with Monero an option? Is it a good idea? Could I mail replacement drives directly to the datacenter without revealing my home return address?

It looks like I’ll need NVMe drives in something called the U.2 form factor (instead of M.2) in order to enable hot swapping. TIL.

  • EdlritchEconomics [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    9 days ago

    First few questions have been answered adequately already, and I can’t answer the third, but regarding uptime vs. distance; consider using more than one machine. Depending on your budget it might be worth it to have a couple or more lower-spec machines behind a load balancing / failover proxy. That would give you a fair bit of leeway to get out to the location while maintaining uptime. Also you can use one to troubleshoot the other remotely.