McAdams Posted July 29, 2020 Report Share Posted July 29, 2020 (edited) I rolled a docker container of 3.3.5 and have been testing it on various systems. I've been running a small private server for a few weeks (mostly for my wife and I), and I migrated the database to my docker instance so we could play on my test systems. I found that Linode's smallest node (1G ram, 1 core) is too small to even start the server on, but the next highest one (2G ram, 1 core) is perfectly adequate to run on, though @ 61% memory use. Not sure how it scales above 2 people, but that's worth watching if you want to open your server up to others. If you want to run a server at home, I spun an instance up on a tiny AMD T48E, thats a 2 core 1.4 GHz CPU with integrated "GPU" that comes bolted onto a mini-ITX board. I'm running Ubuntu 20.04 server edition, and 16 gigs of RAM (couldn't find less, sorry), and it's barely breaking a sweat. So all in all, you can get away with running TrinityCore on _really_ low spec hardware if you're aiming for a small server. Just some FYI if anyone's interested. Edited July 29, 2020 by McAdams Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crow Posted July 30, 2020 Report Share Posted July 30, 2020 Most people who have a larger user base just run a Virtual Computer hosted in a cloud like service such as AWS or one of the many VPS style video game server hosting websites. Still very cool info. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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