The GHz is almost irrelevant, for example the old intel xeon 3.80GHz is absolute garbage and will defiantly be unable to run a FTB server of any kind above 10TPS
This chart is what you want to use for minecraft server CPUs https://www.cpubenchmark.net/singleThread.html the best ones are the E3 and i7, the best being the i7 4790k. However even a 2.5GHz E3 would be better than most E5 and all E7 CPUs for minecraft.
idk about those E7s though, haven't seen a single FTB server run on one yet lolI'm assuming you mean the Pentium 4 based Xeons when you say the 3.8ghz old ones. In which case, I definitely agree...
However, high end Xeon E5s and E7s would most certainly still be better for Minecraft if they are equal to or higher clocked then the E3(this is all assuming the same generation.) E5s and E7s, besides having more cores, also have more L1/L2 cache and slight architectural differences from the E3s.
Here's a die shot of a Haswell based E5.
And here's a die shot of a Haswell based Core chip(which is what the E3s use.)
It has 4 cores a 4th pack should be no issue, the E3 1245, 1270v2+, E5 16xx series, i7 4770 and i7 4790k are the best performing servers I've seen. I use the 4790k, it runs FTB infinity evolved on windows 10 with 6% CPU usage with about 20 plugins and 6 players. SSDs of course.I can tell you from personal experience my server is a beast. I can run 3 modded heavy packs on it at the same time. So I will say yes the xeon processors can handle modded minecraft. BTW: I'm currently running infinity evolved, regrowth & a custom pack (about 175 mods).
- 32 GB RAM
- 3.4 GHz quad core intel Xeon E3 1245v2 CPU
- 2x 120 GB SSD in raid 0
Well you have 8 logical cores, however if you run 4 servers all cores will be at max utilization for the most part. If the servers only use like 30% of a core each you can probably get off with 6 servers.Due to the hyper threading the OS sees 8 processors. But, I haven't had a need to go beyond three packs yet. The server runs Ubuntu and runs lean (no GUI, database, or web interfaces). Everything is command line and SFTP to maintain the server.
Trying to build myself a good home server for gaming for $500 or less. Just having trouble figuring out what all I'm gonna have on in it.
Also trying to make sure it is easy to upgrade too.
I could put together a parts list for you. Are you just planning on hosting game servers on this thing, or do you want to do actual gaming on the thing? If the latter, what games/resolution/graphics settings? If the former, how many servers? And do you need a lot of storage?
I plan on using this for server hosting only. Server rack is an option also. I would like to have 8+ drive bays. easy expansion. I can store all my modded worlds on the server. I won't run every single modded world at the same time though. I will have at least 2 servers running at any given time: One is the main mod pack I'm currently playing and one is a test world for said modpack.
Well I actually already have a headless linux server. Just upgrading from https://ca.pcpartpicker.com/product/YV7CmG/intel-cpu-bx80662g4400 because the server lags whenever we load new chunks. Im going with a https://ca.pcpartpicker.com/product/tdmxFT/intel-cpu-bx80662i76700k now anyways. But thanksIt would work. What OS are you planing on for the server? If Windows, I would recommend something else that has more more cores to handle the OS. Using Linux that would be a great choice. Especially if you go headless on the server (command line interface via SSH only).
I wish I realized that before I built it. Would the HD cause any lag?I like it. The only thing I might want to change is the HD. I think an SSD would be a better choice. Unless you have need for 1TB of storage.