suodrazah

joined 1 year ago

Ah that sucks, can you setup a tenancy in a different location?

[–] suodrazah@lemmy.nine-hells.net 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

That's true for x86, but the Ampere free tier allows up to 24GB.

[–] suodrazah@lemmy.nine-hells.net 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Free because you can roll into a paid service easily, it's a trap really. But if you can stay within the free limits then it's gold.

Lots of users. Depends on storage requirements, 200GB could be limiting if you want to host media.

[–] suodrazah@lemmy.nine-hells.net 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (8 children)

4 ARM64 cores, 24GB of RAM and 200GB of storage, and some other resources and older x86, for the low low price of free. 10TB outgoing limit, no incoming limit as far as I know. You can setup one or many VPS using the resources.

https://www.oracle.com/cloud/free/

I have a a full media stack running on one - Plex, Tautulli, Sonarr, Radarr, NZBGet, Qbittorrent, Jackett among other services like Portainer, YTDL, Traefik. I've seen 8+ streams with 4 or 5 720p transcodes, the CPU is pegged but it keeps up.

For storage I use a combo of services. Rclone, mounting a remote google drive to /mnt/remote. Cloudplow, takes stuff from /mnt/local folder and directly uploads to the remote drive via gdrive API using the same rclone config. And mergerfs, takes the /mnt/remote and /mnt/local folders and combines them into a /mnt/merged folder. The /mnt/merged folder is the main folder for media, downloads, etc. Any writes are first stored in /mnt/local.

I describe that setup to demonstrate the capacity of a free service, of course much less complex for a seedbox.

[–] suodrazah@lemmy.nine-hells.net 4 points 1 year ago (10 children)

Put Oracle Free Tier to work...