*BSD News Article 81677


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From: nw@hydaspes.if.org (nathan wagner)
Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
Subject: Re: minimum system config?
Date: 25 Oct 1996 23:57:34 -0000
Organization: IF Group
Lines: 47
Message-ID: <54rk5e$bec@hydaspes.if.org>
References: <3270F930.7D55@eccosys.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: hydaspes.if.org
Xref: euryale.cc.adfa.oz.au comp.os.linux.hardware:54624 comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc:30064

In article <3270F930.7D55@eccosys.com>, David Moles  <deivu@eccosys.com> wrote:
>Okay. I'm thinking of building an x86 'NIX box to act as an
>apartment mail server and not much else. What's the cheapest
>thing I can get away with? Assume that I can borrow a monitor
>and keyboard from another box when necessary. What are the
>absolute minumum hardware requirements? What would be the
>next step or two up from that?

Well, minimum?  Ok.

16 MHz 386 CPU + motherboard
ide interface card
20 MB Hard Drive
2 MB memory
A serial port.

You will probably also need a video card so that the bios will boot the
machine, and you will need to borrow a keyboard for booting (that could be
pulled out after the boot; i suppose you could pull out the video card after
boot too, but i wouldn't recommend it).  You will also need to borrow
something to install with, probably a floppy, though i suppose you could put
the hard drive on another machine, install linux there, then move the drive.


That should do you for.  Use the serial port to connect to whatever you
are serving mail to.   What are you serving mail to anyway?  Other linux
boxes?  If so, why not just use one of those?

A step up?  Are you scrounging for equipment, or just wanting to go cheap?

I'd say get some more memory (4 megs to start), and maybe some more disk,
depending on how much mail you are expecting to have to store. Keyboards are
cheap too, mine was $10 at a used computer store.

Then you could get a real network card, rather than using the serial port.

As a practical minimal email server for a low traffic situation, i'd
say get 8 MB memory, a 386 or 486 box (you won't need much cpu for what you
are doing, so the processor doesn't matter too much), and a network card.
Disks are pretty cheap, you may even be able to find someone who will give
you one, depending on who you know (there are lots of homeless 40 MB ide
drives out there, if you know where to look).

nw
-- 
nathan wagner
nw@hydaspes.if.org