F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Choose a Linux distribution tailored for Teamspeak server and remote management.

Choose a Linux distribution tailored for Teamspeak server and remote management.

Choose a Linux distribution tailored for Teamspeak server and remote management.

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SmartBoysFart
Member
211
08-25-2016, 02:27 AM
#1
Hello everyone. I'm planning to build a Teamspeak server using some old hardware I have. The setup should work with 5-6 slots, a P4 processor at 2.8GHz without a GPU, and 512MB of RAM. My main concerns are powering it up from a USB stick, controlling it from my Windows 10 PC, and ensuring it boots automatically so the server runs even during a power outage. I’m not very familiar with Linux, so any advice would be greatly appreciated. Anyone have ideas?
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SmartBoysFart
08-25-2016, 02:27 AM #1

Hello everyone. I'm planning to build a Teamspeak server using some old hardware I have. The setup should work with 5-6 slots, a P4 processor at 2.8GHz without a GPU, and 512MB of RAM. My main concerns are powering it up from a USB stick, controlling it from my Windows 10 PC, and ensuring it boots automatically so the server runs even during a power outage. I’m not very familiar with Linux, so any advice would be greatly appreciated. Anyone have ideas?

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_Ronaldo_7
Junior Member
1
08-26-2016, 08:19 AM
#2
A lightweight Ubuntu variant like Lubuntu is ideal for beginners. Ensure persistence settings are activated so your data remains on the USB after restarting: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LiveUsbPendrivePersistent
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_Ronaldo_7
08-26-2016, 08:19 AM #2

A lightweight Ubuntu variant like Lubuntu is ideal for beginners. Ensure persistence settings are activated so your data remains on the USB after restarting: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LiveUsbPendrivePersistent

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Fred_Da_Walrus
Junior Member
46
08-26-2016, 09:21 AM
#3
The hardware seems capable, though the P4 will make it feel like a single powerful server. Keeping the CPU cool won’t be easy either. If your mainboard lacks SATA ports, you can purchase various IDE SSDs or even cheaper IDE-to-CF cards or SD card adapters. Using a USB drive works well for booting, and you can control your server remotely via SSH, which is standard in most Linux distributions. It doesn’t provide a graphical interface, but there are many VNC options for both Windows and Linux if you need a visual desktop. Still, it’s worth checking if the Teamspeak server includes a web-based configuration tool.
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Fred_Da_Walrus
08-26-2016, 09:21 AM #3

The hardware seems capable, though the P4 will make it feel like a single powerful server. Keeping the CPU cool won’t be easy either. If your mainboard lacks SATA ports, you can purchase various IDE SSDs or even cheaper IDE-to-CF cards or SD card adapters. Using a USB drive works well for booting, and you can control your server remotely via SSH, which is standard in most Linux distributions. It doesn’t provide a graphical interface, but there are many VNC options for both Windows and Linux if you need a visual desktop. Still, it’s worth checking if the Teamspeak server includes a web-based configuration tool.

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Komodo88
Senior Member
749
08-26-2016, 05:29 PM
#4
Lubuntu is a solid option but suggests at least 512MB of RAM for basic applications like LibreOffice. Running a team chat server might then be more challenging. The best approach is to test it yourself. If it feels too heavy, consider a lighter distribution like a minimal Linux version. I set this up about ten years ago, but I’m unsure if newer team chat servers will work well. My system needs around 8MB, which is a bit less than what’s recommended.
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Komodo88
08-26-2016, 05:29 PM #4

Lubuntu is a solid option but suggests at least 512MB of RAM for basic applications like LibreOffice. Running a team chat server might then be more challenging. The best approach is to test it yourself. If it feels too heavy, consider a lighter distribution like a minimal Linux version. I set this up about ten years ago, but I’m unsure if newer team chat servers will work well. My system needs around 8MB, which is a bit less than what’s recommended.