Nvreformat Posted September 25, 2016 Share Posted September 25, 2016 So, that's it, being able to host a server on the Raspberry Pi. A few years ago, (to be precise, in 2013) this was suggested (Link here) and it was discarded because the RPi wasn't very fast at the time, which is fair. However, this year a new model of it was released and it is (as they say) x10 faster than the one from 2013. Obviously, you're not going to put 100 people in there, but for a development server it's a pretty nice box. Thanks. 1 Link to comment
Noki Posted September 30, 2016 Share Posted September 30, 2016 (edited) You can always work around this by using an x86 emulator. I've heard performance is a bit of a hit and miss with these, but they're older forum posts and artciels (> 1 year old). If it's only development servers with a few players on, you should be fine for the most part. Nevertheless, it's worth a shot. Check out QEMU too. Seems to be the only decent free one. Also: - http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/215864/running-x86-binaries-on-armv7 - https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=111858 - https://eltechs.com/ (paid) Edited September 30, 2016 by Noki 1 Link to comment
FernandoMTA Posted February 13, 2023 Share Posted February 13, 2023 Bumping this old topic because it shows in top Google results for MTA ARM server. It's currently possible by using arm and arm64 MTA:SA server builds: https://nightly.mtasa.com/ 1 Link to comment
Recommended Posts