Linux Format

IT’S A VIRTUAL SERVERWORLD

The future is in the cloud, they say. But whose cloud? Google? Microsoft? AWS? Why not your own? There was once a time when people ran their own servers from home – under the stairs, in the back bedroom or from a lovingly kitted out homelab in the stripped-down carcass of the garage, meaning the vintage BMW restoration project is left to moulder on the drive.

A server is a simple beast at heart. It’s a computer (usually running Linux), with an internet connection, which receives requests for resources such as pages and serves them back to the machine that made the original request. Server. It’s in the name, innit.

But servers serve far more than web pages these days. There are progressive web apps, content management systems, databases and a whole host (geddit?) of other toys you may want to play with.

Some of these demand serious investment in terms of time, hardware, power consumption, and if you or your partner are light sleepers, noise becomes an issue, too. In fact a properly specced home server with adequate cooling often sounds like a jet taking off – so it’s time to take your server virtually off the premises.

What is a VPS?

If you’re determined to run your server away from home in order to avoid unnecessary concerns about power bills, antisocial noise, and so on, there are a few options available:

Rent out a dedicated private server in someone

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Linux Format

Linux Format1 min read
Mobile Control
Remmina doesn’t have a mobile app version. As it is a client that supports a number of open protocols, you could install another remote access app on your mobile device to take over when you’re on the move. Moonlight is available as a mobile app. The
Linux Format2 min read
Installation Options
Moonlight has an extensive set of supported platforms, reflecting its gaming origins. It can be installed on all the major desktop platforms, and there are homebrew ports for the major consoles and some handhelds, along with single-board computers su
Linux Format1 min read
Jellyfish Devs Say Help Others
Most Linux users are familiar with the meme depicting an elaborate machine representing all modern digital infrastructure. The machine is propped up by a tiny component labelled, “A project some random person in Nebraska has been tirelessly maintaini

Related Books & Audiobooks