Operating a Minecraft server on an outdated computer.
Operating a Minecraft server on an outdated computer.
It's improved, but try it as written first. It seems acceptable since your input suggests not everyone will be present at once, which should help. The game mainly faces challenges with large numbers of entities in one area or during exploration, which leads to new chunk generation.
Consider the resources needed for this task. You can easily rent a server that begins at $1-$2 and can grow as needed. With ten friends, rotate payments each month.
Notice the server is operational, yet we're experiencing performance drops. The "Can't keep up!" message appears roughly once to three times every ten minutes, consistently under three users. This suggests the issue isn't likely to resolve. CPU utilization stays around 60% and RAM usage is at 6GB out of 10 GB.
It seems this computer isn't working. Alright, it's time to consider other possibilities.
in that case, i recommend you getting an e3 xeon system, here's a quick guide: e3 1220 = 4c/4t xeons, close but is generally lower clocked compared to an i5 (Sandy bridge-Haswell) e3 1230 = 4c/8t xeons, close to an i7 but is also generally lower clocked (Sandy-Haswell) e3 1240 = 4c/8t xeons, very close to an i7 (Sandy-Haswell), and is either clocked slightly below or exactly the same to an i7 with the same architecture (depends on the specific cpu) e3 1270 = 4c/8t xeons, either higher clocked compared to an i7 from the same generation, or is the same e3 12x5 = Xeons with iGPUs e3 12xxL = Lower power Xeons Versions V1 = Sandy bridge cpu (2nd gen, LGA 1155) V2 = Ivy Bridge cpu (3rd gen, LGA 1155) V3 = Haswell Cpu (4th gen, LGA 1150)
I recommend opting for a free platform such as minehut, though running it on your PC may present challenges.