How many drives and what sizes (2.5" or 3.5") did you manage to fit in the 3050? As far as I remember you can only properly mount a single 3.5" HDD in there?
I went with a Dell Optiplex 3050 SFF, 16gb DDR4, i5-7500. Currently have one 240GB SSD, and one 4tb WD hard drive (no redundancy so I'm rolling the dice) Installed Ubuntu Server 20.04 and running CasaOS. Setup a network share and copied my movies over to it. Installed Jellyfin and its working flawlessly. This is my backup media server, but it works like a champ! (And I run it off my small 350 watt solar panel setup, with a small 600 watt pure sine wave interter)
wrf it is impossible nowadays you don't have old laptop - this is the best home server, compact, quiet, power efficient, with built-in ups. Just attach das and that's it
my file server run on i5 4460 , i orignaly buy the mb with celeron , in 2015 buy at the time a mb that had 6 sata , 2pci 2pciexpress 4ram slots to acomodate my needs , , and upgre the cpu when i was able to get one for 50eu , put it on old server case , was using a quad port nic , and after got a 10gb nic , still works well for my needs , file server and plex , was runing tonido server , but it no longer work , nextcloud is to comlicate to install , probably gone get a wdmycloud , for that need ,
Why would anyone want their video server to transcode video in real time? Just put on formats that typically work on all devices like h264 and h265 and be done with it.
That HP EliteDesk 800 G3 has to be the best small form factor PC. In addition to all the things you said it also has some PCIe Lanes that can be used for adding NVME slots. If you actually get your hands on one you could make a nasty little NAS. That would be an incredible project for the channel. 2x 3.5 drives (pick your capacity for backups) 1x NVME drive (for the OS) 2x NVME adapters for the PCIe slot (primary NAS storage, ZFS mirror optional)
You can even chop off the 2.5" mount and put a third 3.5" drive there, with a bit of DIY skills. I have a G4, which is very similar, and I have 3 HDDs and 3 SSD in mine, plus a dedicated GPU and dedicated 10Gbps card.
From both my research and experience so far, it's been worth the difference to at least get something with an 8th gen intel cpu. This in when the UHD630 igpu was introduced to replace the HD630 and is a transcoding powerhouse. Also, this is when i7 cpu's started coming with 2 additional cores making them 6 cores and 12 total threads(great for additional unraid things). A good example of a model with 8th gen would be something like the HP Prodesk 400 G5.
Also worth looking into would be laptops of those generations. Screen and keyboard condition does not matter and sometimes you can get an Nvidia GPU and low power consumption to boot
You can find x265 readily online (in decent compression as well)...the lower processors can decode it for streaming but can't encode without full brute force CPU compiling. Most players can also decode as well...saving bandwidth
Some low end 8th Gen is the sweet spot for someone trying to run Jellyfin with hardware encoding 4k hdr... Actually... That was the whole reason for me to switch from a RaspberryPi to a full desktop i5 8400... It has been running great tho!
Great video! This is why I keep old laptops around-recently repurposed an old work laptop (Intel i5-6200 CPU) for a 1080p Jellyfin server. The caveat with laptops is as you allude to-no internal storage space. Been thinking about migrating my server to something like this, though, as it would be much better (and give me an excuse to buy and setup another machine). Thanks for the inspiration!
No big storage inside, but you can use an external USB drive. That's what I do, with a small USB 2 connection. It's enough. My server is a Core 2 T5800 with 4 Go ram, it's more than enough :) No transcoding, but I don't need it.
Buddy.. you have one of the most intereseting channels on youtube. I really really really like your content and the way you approach hardware and projects. Keep it up, buddy :)
I just bought a HP 800 G5 SFF w/ i5-9500 on Ebay which I was changing out my EMBY/Gaming server. Upgraded the RAM to 32GB. Actually a great PC. The 3 drive bays and 2 M.2 is very compact. Even has 2 PCI-E x16 (one at x4 i believe) and 2 at x1.
i don't understand why transcoding is required. what are you watching on that can't decode (or whatever) on it's own? or do i not understand what transcoding is.
This is awesome, im currently going through a similar route as you took in this video, after watching your mini pc video i bought a used hp elitedesk 800 g3 sff for like 80 bucks, i wanted to make the ultimate home server on the cheap, including game streaming. i was amazed by the specs for the price: i5-8500 6 cores 16gb RAM 1TB ssd 2x 3.5 HDD slots 2x M.2 NVME slots (also supports sata m.2) and 4 pcie slots i ended up bying 16gb of ram for 20 bucks bumping it to 32gbs and $100 in total for the pc (not including hard drives) unfortuantely i found out you cant boot through the nvme drives no matter what you do, but they are recognized and can be passed to vms. i also ran into a hickup with the gpu i bought, i ended up getting a tesla p4 gpu which is enterprise but the machine is having issues recognizing it, ill have to continue to test. but i love everything in this video. im thinking of making a video about my results when its all set and done. love the content.
Have bought the mini version ans have the exact same problem, ssd nvme not recognized by proxmox at installtion, the fix was to disable a Intel feature on bios
I tried jellyfin. It would not work like at all. Not sure why. It would not let me even log in. And the android app would not connect either. Plex was super simple and worked no problem.
For reshaping metal like that, I’d highly recommend knipex plier wrenches. They can be steep, but sometimes easy to find depending on your local 2nd hand market. There’s also some equivalent wrenches from Irwin and Lennox that are cheaper new.
they do not compare to Knipex. i have 4 or 5 sets of their pliers, and their plier wrenches are superb. honestly i'd probably pay twice what they cost, and they're not exactly cheap. @@KameraShy
I have a HP ProDesk 400 G6 as my main docker host. This is an USFF machine with a i5-10500T and 16GB RAM. I run several containers on it, including Plex. Plex is also using the iGPU for transcoding. Pretty nifty little machine. Got that for €100 from a friend. Can't seem to find that deal anywhere else though.
Such convenient timing, our old Synology NAS died in the shop yesterday and I planned on replacing it on Monday. I think I'll just go this route and repurpose an old PC.
Those Intel Chipsets support Hardware Raid, I would've used that instead of a software raid solution. You have to switch the SATA Mode in BIOS from AHCI to RAID, then at startup you can access the option rom for the raid controller.
Built my first sever pc running unraid for plex and makemkv after your 4K HDR jellyfin server video. Used some hard drives I had on hand and went for some really cheap parts. 16GB 3200MHz memory, 500GB 980 nvme for cache, 10TB iron wolf, H510M-E asus board with an intel 10100T i picked up for £30 from CeX. Case and PSU was a £13 used office pc unit from local pc repair store and dropped in the LG drive from your video, flashed to read 4K blu rays. Have ripped my entire 1080p and 4K HDR blu ray collection to it, direct play across my house with no issue on gigabit LAN. Thanks for the videos!
it is possible I have seen some attempts on XDA forum's. but dealing with battery puffing up is a pain. I have not seen a easy to modify battery less mods for any phones. as most don't even boot without a battery.
No one answered for 6 months. Asking us now. How many people can watch same video at a time on jellyfin running on i7 6th gen with 4gb graphic card HP system?
Do you know if the SATA controller on those pcs support SATA-PM protocol? Is so, it could support the QNAP Dual 2.5” SATA SSD to 3.5” SATA adapter in order to get 2 JBOD drives a single SATA port. And maybe even use StarTech M.2 to 2.5" adapters to get 4 JBOD M.2 drives into a single 3.5" bay on a single SATA port.
why transcoding? if you are streaming in home, just do direct play. if outside, then yes. but in home? leave the cpu and gpu, let them rest. why use 200w when watching a movie on your tv, when you can direct play and use like 40w. it adds up if watching regularly.
Don’t know where 200w and 40w came from. I posted the power consumption in the video, which was 30W while transcoding. Also, plenty of people do exactly what you mentioned. Stop applying your use case/preference to everyone else.
@@HardwareHaven yeah, saw that right after i left my comment, lol. ok, so its 30w. frankly, not a big difference from 30w. sure. but, still. i get it that you wanted to explain how to set up transcoding, and thats fine. have good one.
Wow! Small world... I actually bought that same ProDesk 600 G3 with the Pentium G4560 from that same ebay seller. Mine fortunately came in better physical shape than yours did. I dropped a 6TB HDD into it and use it as a backup drive on my network. You're right that it sips power! For my Plex server I have an i3-8100 running Linux Mint that I've been using for quite a while.
It’s because I HATE Emby… Nah lol I just haven’t had time to mess around with it. I should probably mention it, but I just don’t think about it. I also don’t get as many people asking for content on it.
Tip, in case you already have some storage solution in place (in my case: Synology NAS): I bought a Beelink Mini S12 Pro for €100 to be a dedicated Jellyfin machine and it was by far the best decision! Super low energy consumption for amazing transcoding performance. That Intel N100 CPU is great! Highly recommend you check it out!
The more stuff you stack on the software side the more needlessly complex your setup and troubleshooting will become. IMO TrueNAS is great for this kind of build, it functions as a hypervisor and has a Jellyfin plugin ready to deploy in the app catalog. Unfortunately to make it work though you'd need to get a slimline optical drive to 2.5 bay adapter though. Edit: Oops, I didn't notice the SSD on the board, that'll work fine as a boot drive for TrueNAS to. Either way adding a 3rd drive would allow for a RAID 5 and gain you some wright speed improvements and more space while still allowing for 1 drive failure!
Why do you need Proxmox or Docker for a box that you’re only using as a Jellyfin server?? Throw some kind of Linux on it and be done. What am I missing?
tl;dr: If you're used to having an old PC with a couple of disks just serving video, you're probably fine. There are severe limitations if you want to serve main storage to another device (compute node for a home lab or your main workstation). I've got a couple of the 800 G3's. First off... transcoding. Is this something that's actually time critical? If not, its probably something you can let the server chug along with and once its done, you're fine. Be aware of your use-cases. Speaking of usecases: If this thing is a main file server, you may well want to go faster, so you can centralise all your storage onto it. 3 small disks are better than two large mirrored for capacity and speed reasons... but they won't fit... unless you go for 2.5" inside the 3.5" bays, in which case you might start thinking of SSDs. If you're thinking of SSDs, you need a faster network to make use of them. 10G is fine with a single drive or stripped SATA SSDs, but then you start running into "not enough PCIE lane" issues. I made the mistake of thinking the 800G3 had 2x16 slots... one of those x16 slots is only wired for x4 - good for a single nvme disk. I ended up going for a very power inefficient older xeon, because it has 2 x16 slots and one x8 slot straight to the CPU. One x16 for an old server NIC (recommend 25G max, or the cables get expensive), and the other can be used for one of those expensive SSD carrier cards with a built-in PCIE switch (because bifurcation is a new and rare thing). Beware of motherboards with lots of SATA ports bottlenecked by the chipset if you want SATA SSDs, but SATA spinning rust for high-capacity/low bandwidth video are fine. Also, USB drives are (apparently) not recommended for truenas as drive identification can be uncertain (which sounds horrible). I know motherboards with dual x16 PCIE slots have fallen out of favour as crossfire and SLI died, but we now need them back for storage and high-speed networking - I'd like to do iscsi from SSDs just as fast as a local drive :)
I have an HP Elitebook 850 G1 with an Intel core i5-4300U 16 GB DDR3 RAM and an AMD Radeon HD 8730M, and an ASUS P9X79 Deluxe with 44 GB DDR3 RAM and two NVidia Quadro M4000. Is this good enough? I don’t have the space and money for a new computer to use as a media server
Powerful hardware is never necessary for fun little home projects. My home server is a tiny Dell Micro with a laptop based 4th Gen I5 running 4 cores 4 threads @ 2.0GHz. 1TB SSD inside, 16GB Ram + 4 drive bay on USB3 with loads of storage. It's in the barely used Basement Living Room, running Windows 10, connected to an old 60" plasma TV and it runs the following jobs. TV Computer for netflix, prime video and whatever else. Runs VMWare with an Ubuntu vm configured as my plex server. Run another VM with FreePBX for my phone system Runs UrBackup service keeping backups of all my home computers. My Upstairs TV PC is actually an Elitebook G3 with an I7-6700, 32GB Ram, 500GB NVME. I added it an Nvidia Geforce 1050Ti 4GB. But no server usage on this one. It's all TV, Emulators and light couch videogames such as Streets of Rage4, heroes of might and magic 2/3, and to my surprise it runs Jedi Fallen Order on 4k with medium settings respectably well.
Nice video! I'm still, slowly, working on replacing my i7 4790K NAS with a N100 based system. As it's idle power-consumption is only 4.5w. Ideally I'd swap spinny 3.5" drives for ssd's as they're more power efficient. But I already have the other system so I've been slacking a bit.
I did this six months ago and its working fine, I just have problems with transcoding to a Roku TV (tone mapping, some codecs, subtitles in ASS format not working), I will look into moving JellyFin from docker to an OS install, or to get a 20dll 4k .onn tv box for that TV.
I use Plex to host my movies and music online. I also use it for live over the air tv with a Hauppauge usb turner. I use Plex also so that I can watch my My movies and listen to my music away from home. Also able to watch my over-the-air live TV away from home. I don't like having to pay $5 per month with Plex. Can I do all of that with Jellyfin without having to pay for a monthly subscription?
great vid........i have thought about something similar to replace using plex on a shield pro (server) and shield (client).......honestly they are incredibly reliable and upscaling is def not a prob.......i would prefer something open source but honestly none of what i have seen is as polished or as reliable as plex and an argone40 pi nas
My Jellyfin server is an old laptop with a Core 2 T5800 2 GHz and 4 Go ram, running Linux Debian, with an external USB drive :) Of course, no transcoding with the integrated Intel video card. but I don't need it. If you don't need transcoding, about any computer can run Jellyfin.
I watched your video and boom just like that I found one for £20, now I feel on top of the world. It's like I can also see my self not paying those subs anymore in the future
Thank you for this video. I just got a Zima board and adding jellyfin to the other Dri entry group got my trans-coding working! I'm so new to all this but chugging along.
In my use case I need to have this connected to the network. Then I'll have my tv jellyfin client connect over the network. Do you know how it performs over the network. Would your hardware recs change?
I use my Mac Mini M1 as a Plex and Jellyfin server as well as being my photo video computer. With an external drive it works great as a media server. It is really low power and also great to rip your DVDs and Blu-rays, getting around 300 frames per second for encoding DVDs and 60 for Blu-rays. They are getting pretty cheap now they have been replaced with the M2 version.
@@sudarshan6530 seems fine so far, I have enabled hardware acceleration and watched quite a lot of films in different ways such as mobile phone/tablet/fire trv stick/browser and all have worked great. Also watched a mix of h264 and h265 source files with no problems. Hope yours works out well.
Could you explain this a little more for a noob? If I have a h265 10-bit HDR movie on my NAS or desktop but no Jellyfin app on my TV what do I need? Reading the comments it seems like I need a FireStick or something connected to the TV that will run the Jellyfin app. I know my NAS cannot transcode this file but the TV will if I put it on a USB stick and plug it into the TV. Could I still run Jellyfin in this direction mode so somehow the TV is doing the transcoding? Sorry, may be a stupid question but just trying to figure this out. Does the computer running Jellyfin need to be directly connected to the TV to use direct or can this happen over Ethernet?
I already got an older Synology DS716+II NAS with INTEL Celeron N3160 running Plex on docker. It's not great for transcoding but by my streams are direct. I'm looking to get Lenovo ThinkCentre M910q Mini PC Intel i3-7100T and make it dedicated Plex server with media mounted from NAS. Alternativly I might get Lenovo ThinkCentre M720q Tiny PC - i5-8400T and make it a Proxmox server with Plex and other services running under docker.
And what should "CasaOS doesn't support raid" mean? Isn't casa just some container manager on top of any linux os? Is it that hard to config raid using 1 config file and couple of commands? Is it THAT critical to have this functionality in fancy web ui?
You're correct, and I have setup RAID with it, but I imagine someone setting up CasaOS is wanting a simple solution. I also had some weird issues with how CasaOS recognized the mount point for the array, so I just went the route I went. Not saying it was the best option.
@@HardwareHaven yes, probably you're right speaking about newcomers, I think casaos will add this feature in the future, afterall it is still relatively new project. Thank for the video!
@@severgun Poor choice of words, sure. I should've said that they still haven't implemented support for managing raid within the UI. Get off your high horse dude, lol
@@rafisburganov Last I checked one of the developers either said they're working on it or plan to. It would be great to have that as an option to recommend to family/friends
I have a similar system, but with an i5 7500 in it. I upgraded it to 24 gigs of ram to be able to run docker while running windows server. I even got a quadro p620 for video transcoding an video output, so now it works as a server/htpc.
I’m running a Xeon W-2123 with 32GB RAM and Nvidia Quadro P4000 on a Windows 10 system with Plex.. Performance with transcoding is just to sad. Sometimes it tooks minutes to Watch an movie on the webapp. Or it stutters (Yes , i’ve Plex pass and HW encoding enabled)
I just bought a HP Elitedesk 800 G3 with a i5 7500 today before finding this video for the exact same use case for 135 Euro with Shipping from the UK to Sweden without the Shipping it would have just cost me 80 Euro but in Sweden they go for more than my price with the shipping if you want one with a 7th gen cpu here the cheapest i found was 170 Euro. And I also scored a 14 TB Iron wolf 150 Euro that a kid had used to store his 4K videos for 2 Years so haven't had a rough life and many use hours. So in total my NAS that will run Jellyfin have cost me 285 Euro.
Nooooooooooo, i needed one or two more of these for myself to finish the cluster :D But as it's too late now, i can wholeheartedly support you getting one, got two at the moment and i love them so far
Proxmox is not a bad choice, but seems like over kill if you are only using this server for Jellyfin. If all you are using the hardware for I would install a basic OS, I like Debian, but anything would do. Then I would toss Jellyfin in Docker.
I got a DELL Optiplex 5070 USFF PC With i5-9500T /8Gb RAM (No disk) for $96.00. There's no much room for hard disks, just m.2 and 2.5" HDD, but it has USB-C and I'll put an ORICO 5 BAY with RAID though that, and maybe a 4 bay disk tower as a backup. 35W CPU, but enough power for transcoding and a lot more
I don't have anything that supports 4k, and size is one of my concerns. So I ordered a 600 G3 mini with an i5 6500T lol. Have a 2TB M.2 SSD, just need to decide on boot media and I'll be watching for a cheap 2TB 2.5" drive for a raid 1 backup. If I want 4k transcoding in the future, all it takes is a CPU upgrade.
A couple of months ago I moved our Plex server from its old home to one of these machines as a dedicated Plex server, running an i5-6500 and a bare-metal Ubuntu server install. It was a refurb system off eBay with an NVMe drive and a 500 GB HDD, which got replaced with the 8 TB media HDD from the old server. All I really had to do was install Plex, copy its directory over, and mount the HDD in the same filesystem location and it fired right up. We don't have any 4k media but it handles transcoding Blu-ray rips to my phone quite well. I also installed Jellyfin to try it out and while it works well enough, the version of WebOS on the LG TV in the living room is unfortunately too old for the Jellyfin app to run. Also unfortunately, the Blu-ray slimline drive from my 800 G1 SFF Proxmox server doesn't fit the bay in the G3 - the drive's too tall, believe it or not.
It's been to hard for me to understand all the issues 'cause I'm a 'bit' far from all there servers/streaming))) So... what are basic steps (os, vm, etc. step-by-step) and good choices to get Jellyfin machine on 'naked' HP 400 G5 with two mirrored hdds?))
If you're able to afford it, I would check out UnRAID. It's probably the simplest and easiest OS to use for NAS and hosting VMs and containers. Outside of that, you could try out Open Media Vault, as there are some decent tutorials on there. You could also just install Debian and setup aa RAID mirror yourself, but that involves a bit of cmd line. There's also TrueNAS, but I'm not as big of a fan of running containers with that because it uses Kubernetes by default which is a bit overkill imo.
i'm attempting the same exercise for frigate. I need at least a 10th gen processor to get QuickSync. I also am looking for a dual NIC setup to isolate the video onto its own network.
I'm looking at making a new NAS box, mainly for Plex and Frigate, using an Erying motherboard (with mobile i7-11600H (well, an ES that's similarly speced) CPU on board, which has 2 Tiger Lake media engines), a RackSource 2u 12-bay rackmount case for storage, a low-profile SAS HBA (like a LSI 9305-16i) in the x16 slot, and a Coral TPU for the E-key slot so it can also run Frigate as an NVR.
I chose an RPi5 4gb, NVMe hat w/SSD and have had zero issues running jellyfin and qbittorrent simultaneously, non-stop. I can watch anything while jellyfin is transcoding and have not suffered any playback issues. Just works, but...I have several hundred dollars tied up in it, as well. I probably could have gotten a better mini pc for the same money, but not so sure I could have found one to equal the low power consumption of the Pi
thanks for the video. So compared to an off-the-shelf NAS solution this saves around a 100€ (considering the cheapest 2bay QNAP NAS at the moment in my area goes for 180€)... But you bring up good points regarding the HW Transcoding, hadn't thought of those. Decisions, decisions...
Yeah I got a i5 8400 with a cheap MB (4 sata ports). Installed TrueNAS... And voilá... The 8400 runs great. Handling 4k HDR amazingly. The only problems I encountered were on the clients side. Server-wise... Its running great. Running a ssd for OS and cache and HDD for storage, 16gb ram... about 20w idle... Not bad
Don't forget to add ZRAM to the PROXMOX OS...it really helps Very cool...I have a few of those cheapo computers I build for my mother in law and such...these work great for PROXMOX builds and a few virtual machines...make sure you use SSD's or the performance of the virtual machines can be a bit sluggish! Keep em coming!!!!
My mom got a new PC so I got her old Dell with an i5-8400. She couldn't use it anymore because Windows 11 became practically unusable on it's single HDD. I threw in 32GB of RAM and it works great for hosting MC servers, DVD ripping, encoding, and hosting Jellyfin. It just takes some patience to get it all set up. I only have a single, 1TB HDD. It is the only drive in the PC so it it fails I lose everything, but I mostly store DVD rips anyway, so I can always spend a week recollecting them from the source after getting a new drive.
You've done got me hooked on these. Bought one last week, for jellyfin (went to Emby with it though). Just bought a M01-F1033WB with a 10th gen i3, that I'm thinking the power supply doesn't work. Should have it by Friday.
I wish this was affordable in Europe. For 60-90€ you get 4th Gen i5, 90€+ 6th gen. Can't find 7th gen, but 8th Gen systems, but those are like 150-200€+.
I got this off of am for $132 ... HP Prodesk 600 G3 Micro Computer Mini PC (Intel Quad Core i5-7500T 2.7Ghz, 16GB DDR4 Ram, 512GB SSD, 4K Support, DP, USB 3.0, USB-C) Win 10 Pro (Renewed). It came with a DP to HDMI adapter. I am using my WD My Book 3TD external drive to store videos. I installed Jellyfin.
you don't even need transcoding. Use Jellyfin desktop and Android with HW decoding setting and forget about web ui. Can direct stream 120 MBps bitrate videos from RPi4 transcoding is waste of energy
How's this working out for you? I got the 800 G3 based on your recommendation in this video. I got it as a barebones kit for $49 and even bough a HP Blu-ray drive so I can start building my own Plex collection. I got the G4560 and 32GB of memory. I got a 2 TB SSD am just waiting on the money to buy me a couple of 14 TB HDDs to use for storage. My thought process was I could set up TrueNAS and install Plex, automatic-ripping-machine, & Tdarr via Docker. Goal is to make this a bare metal ripping machine for setting up my Plex collection and testing everything. Then later on when I have the money to set up a NAS I'll move the finished files over to that for a true Plex setup.
I bought a month ago dell optiplex small form factor with skylake i5 processor so I can toy around in proxmox. It has only two 2.5" hdd spaces but otherwise I'm quite happy with it. Power consumption on idle is only 15W.
No kidding. Just checked it out and shipping on ebay pretty much doubles the cost of everything. $60 for the PC and $50 for shipping just 1 province over. Absolutely insane.
Any idea on what the overhead is on running your media library off of your nas? If I'm able to pull data at 100mb/s over the network, I know I'm not reaching the throughput of some spinning rust, but I'd have to back up the media library anyways, right?
I just bought one of these systems 3 days ago so I'm glad I got it before your video came out and the price is went up 😂 Great 2 bay NAS 7700 16GB 500GB NVMe for $145 can't beat it
bookmarking this for later.... Using my last gaming pc: i9-9900k, added Radeon 6650XT, 32GB DDR4 3200MHZ with 3tb SSD and 8 TB HDD for all my movies. Looking for something cheaper as I dont wanna keep those components running 24/7
You mean I don't need a 4090 and a 13900K for 4K transcoding?
We do "need" pointlessly hefty hardware, but you should feel dirty for running things on anything other than Pi.
LoL, nice one Jeff 😂
No, a 4090 connected to a pi cluster would do the job too 😂 when can I expect that content? 😊
Hey, i needed that 3070TI to stream in twitch for an average of 0.3 specs
Obviously you need a threadripper if you want 265
Because of you I bought a new server yesterday! It's an Optiplex 3050 with an i5 7500 and 32GB of ram. Thanks for your videos!
That's awesome! Congrats!
How many drives and what sizes (2.5" or 3.5") did you manage to fit in the 3050? As far as I remember you can only properly mount a single 3.5" HDD in there?
@@G-Foxy. yep thats right. Just one 3.5" drive but I have a m2 PCIE 1TB SSD for OS and one 2TB Sata SSD for data like movies, shows, nextcloud etc.
Bro hows this for jf
Dell optiplex i5 with 7500t
@@ydiadi_ if it has room for the drives you want, it should be great
I went with a Dell Optiplex 3050 SFF, 16gb DDR4, i5-7500. Currently have one 240GB SSD, and one 4tb WD hard drive (no redundancy so I'm rolling the dice) Installed Ubuntu Server 20.04 and running CasaOS. Setup a network share and copied my movies over to it. Installed Jellyfin and its working flawlessly. This is my backup media server, but it works like a champ! (And I run it off my small 350 watt solar panel setup, with a small 600 watt pure sine wave interter)
wrf it is impossible nowadays you don't have old laptop - this is the best home server, compact, quiet, power efficient, with built-in ups. Just attach das and that's it
Yeah, but a solid DAS can cost as much as this entire PC
@@HardwareHaven valid point, agreed. But ups on the other hand is also supercritical part of server
my file server run on i5 4460 , i orignaly buy the mb with celeron , in 2015 buy at the time a mb that had 6 sata , 2pci 2pciexpress 4ram slots to acomodate my needs , , and upgre the cpu when i was able to get one for 50eu , put it on old server case , was using a quad port nic , and after got a 10gb nic , still works well for my needs , file server and plex , was runing tonido server , but it no longer work , nextcloud is to comlicate to install , probably gone get a wdmycloud , for that need ,
Why would anyone want their video server to transcode video in real time? Just put on formats that typically work on all devices like h264 and h265 and be done with it.
How the hell are ssds that cheap in the US? Theres not a single 2 Tb sata ssd under 100€ around here
Challenge to find a better Jellyfin server accepted! Will start by buying new kitchen sink to mount hardware in
Hahahaha you and the kitchen sink
That HP EliteDesk 800 G3 has to be the best small form factor PC. In addition to all the things you said it also has some PCIe Lanes that can be used for adding NVME slots. If you actually get your hands on one you could make a nasty little NAS. That would be an incredible project for the channel.
2x 3.5 drives (pick your capacity for backups)
1x NVME drive (for the OS)
2x NVME adapters for the PCIe slot (primary NAS storage, ZFS mirror optional)
I wish it wasn't as proprietary (I forgot to mention that in the video), but other than that, it's awesome! Need to get my hands on one
You can even chop off the 2.5" mount and put a third 3.5" drive there, with a bit of DIY skills. I have a G4, which is very similar, and I have 3 HDDs and 3 SSD in mine, plus a dedicated GPU and dedicated 10Gbps card.
From both my research and experience so far, it's been worth the difference to at least get something with an 8th gen intel cpu. This in when the UHD630 igpu was introduced to replace the HD630 and is a transcoding powerhouse. Also, this is when i7 cpu's started coming with 2 additional cores making them 6 cores and 12 total threads(great for additional unraid things). A good example of a model with 8th gen would be something like the HP Prodesk 400 G5.
Also worth looking into would be laptops of those generations. Screen and keyboard condition does not matter and sometimes you can get an Nvidia GPU and low power consumption to boot
8th and 9th gen don't usually have hyperthreading except for i9.
You can find x265 readily online (in decent compression as well)...the lower processors can decode it for streaming but can't encode without full brute force CPU compiling. Most players can also decode as well...saving bandwidth
@@sethperry6616 the 8th gen i7 8700 is the one exception to what you said. It’s 6 core/12 thread.
Some low end 8th Gen is the sweet spot for someone trying to run Jellyfin with hardware encoding 4k hdr... Actually... That was the whole reason for me to switch from a RaspberryPi to a full desktop i5 8400... It has been running great tho!
I have the i5-7500 version of the system.... draws less than 17 watts idle.
I think the "ultimate budget Jellyfin server" is whatever old PC you have laying around
Great video! This is why I keep old laptops around-recently repurposed an old work laptop (Intel i5-6200 CPU) for a 1080p Jellyfin server. The caveat with laptops is as you allude to-no internal storage space. Been thinking about migrating my server to something like this, though, as it would be much better (and give me an excuse to buy and setup another machine). Thanks for the inspiration!
No big storage inside, but you can use an external USB drive.
That's what I do, with a small USB 2 connection. It's enough.
My server is a Core 2 T5800 with 4 Go ram, it's more than enough :)
No transcoding, but I don't need it.
I wish hardware prices in Europe were that cheap, hard to find a deal over here 🙁
I just buy on US ebay. Including VAT and shipping it is usually still cheaper than buying in the EU.
Buddy.. you have one of the most intereseting channels on youtube. I really really really like your content and the way you approach hardware and projects. Keep it up, buddy :)
I appreciate that, thanks!
I just bought a HP 800 G5 SFF w/ i5-9500 on Ebay which I was changing out my EMBY/Gaming server. Upgraded the RAM to 32GB. Actually a great PC. The 3 drive bays and 2 M.2 is very compact. Even has 2 PCI-E x16 (one at x4 i believe) and 2 at x1.
i don't understand why transcoding is required. what are you watching on that can't decode (or whatever) on it's own? or do i not understand what transcoding is.
This is awesome, im currently going through a similar route as you took in this video, after watching your mini pc video i bought a used hp elitedesk 800 g3 sff for like 80 bucks, i wanted to make the ultimate home server on the cheap, including game streaming. i was amazed by the specs for the price:
i5-8500 6 cores
16gb RAM
1TB ssd
2x 3.5 HDD slots
2x M.2 NVME slots (also supports sata m.2)
and 4 pcie slots
i ended up bying 16gb of ram for 20 bucks bumping it to 32gbs and $100 in total for the pc (not including hard drives) unfortuantely i found out you cant boot through the nvme drives no matter what you do, but they are recognized and can be passed to vms. i also ran into a hickup with the gpu i bought, i ended up getting a tesla p4 gpu which is enterprise but the machine is having issues recognizing it, ill have to continue to test. but i love everything in this video. im thinking of making a video about my results when its all set and done. love the content.
Have bought the mini version ans have the exact same problem, ssd nvme not recognized by proxmox at installtion, the fix was to disable a Intel feature on bios
@@moniika000 What feature did you have to disable? I’m looking at getting the exact same setup as @codefallacy.
I had to disable the "intel optane" option@@peonyattache
I tried jellyfin. It would not work like at all. Not sure why. It would not let me even log in. And the android app would not connect either. Plex was super simple and worked no problem.
Great video! For a future video idea it would be cool to see you do a security camera NVR setup
For reshaping metal like that, I’d highly recommend knipex plier wrenches. They can be steep, but sometimes easy to find depending on your local 2nd hand market. There’s also some equivalent wrenches from Irwin and Lennox that are cheaper new.
Thanks! I might look into that
Wiha also makes a nice one. They come in handy for everything, not just turning bolts.
@@HardwareHavenI 2nd that. Knipex " pliers wrenches" are the way to go. Worth the little bit of extra dough.
There's also a Horrible Fright Tools version. Icon is about half the price and is their professional top of the line brand.
they do not compare to Knipex. i have 4 or 5 sets of their pliers, and their plier wrenches are superb. honestly i'd probably pay twice what they cost, and they're not exactly cheap.
@@KameraShy
I have a HP ProDesk 400 G6 as my main docker host. This is an USFF machine with a i5-10500T and 16GB RAM. I run several containers on it, including Plex. Plex is also using the iGPU for transcoding. Pretty nifty little machine. Got that for €100 from a friend. Can't seem to find that deal anywhere else though.
Nice deal!
What if someone just wanted to play the movie first without backing it up how would it play the movie or how would it work
Such convenient timing, our old Synology NAS died in the shop yesterday and I planned on replacing it on Monday. I think I'll just go this route and repurpose an old PC.
Doesn't look like the hardware configuration you're recommending is actually available
Those Intel Chipsets support Hardware Raid, I would've used that instead of a software raid solution.
You have to switch the SATA Mode in BIOS from AHCI to RAID, then at startup you can access the option rom for the raid controller.
2 4tb ssds would have been optimal and since you can find them for under 150..... totally worth it.
Probably not a bad idea!
Built my first sever pc running unraid for plex and makemkv after your 4K HDR jellyfin server video. Used some hard drives I had on hand and went for some really cheap parts. 16GB 3200MHz memory, 500GB 980 nvme for cache, 10TB iron wolf, H510M-E asus board with an intel 10100T i picked up for £30 from CeX. Case and PSU was a £13 used office pc unit from local pc repair store and dropped in the LG drive from your video, flashed to read 4K blu rays. Have ripped my entire 1080p and 4K HDR blu ray collection to it, direct play across my house with no issue on gigabit LAN. Thanks for the videos!
That’s awesome to hear!
i wonder if you can make a home server with only a phone, it doesnt have to be new you could use a used phone
Possibly!
It would be awesome!
it is possible I have seen some attempts on XDA forum's. but dealing with battery puffing up is a pain. I have not seen a easy to modify battery less mods for any phones. as most don't even boot without a battery.
No one answered for 6 months. Asking us now. How many people can watch same video at a time on jellyfin running on i7 6th gen with 4gb graphic card HP system?
easily more thn 4/5 full hd transcoding streams and if direct play even more.
Better to have the system connected via Ethernet cable instead of WiFi at least the host that is running JellyFin.
Do you know if the SATA controller on those pcs support SATA-PM protocol? Is so, it could support the QNAP Dual 2.5” SATA SSD to 3.5” SATA adapter in order to get 2 JBOD drives a single SATA port. And maybe even use StarTech M.2 to 2.5" adapters to get 4 JBOD M.2 drives into a single 3.5" bay on a single SATA port.
why transcoding? if you are streaming in home, just do direct play. if outside, then yes. but in home? leave the cpu and gpu, let them rest. why use 200w when watching a movie on your tv, when you can direct play and use like 40w. it adds up if watching regularly.
Don’t know where 200w and 40w came from. I posted the power consumption in the video, which was 30W while transcoding.
Also, plenty of people do exactly what you mentioned. Stop applying your use case/preference to everyone else.
@@HardwareHaven yeah, saw that right after i left my comment, lol. ok, so its 30w. frankly, not a big difference from 30w. sure. but, still. i get it that you wanted to explain how to set up transcoding, and thats fine. have good one.
@@cordlesswire Well to be fair, 200W to 30W is a big difference, but oh well haha. Have a good one as well!
You sound like Michael Bolton in "Office Space", who said that he always screws up by missing some normally trivial little thing... LOL... ;-)
Wow! Small world... I actually bought that same ProDesk 600 G3 with the Pentium G4560 from that same ebay seller. Mine fortunately came in better physical shape than yours did. I dropped a 6TB HDD into it and use it as a backup drive on my network. You're right that it sips power! For my Plex server I have an i3-8100 running Linux Mint that I've been using for quite a while.
Why was proxmox a bad idea?
Funny, you always forget to mention Emby. Only Jellyfin and Plex.
It’s because I HATE Emby…
Nah lol I just haven’t had time to mess around with it. I should probably mention it, but I just don’t think about it. I also don’t get as many people asking for content on it.
Tip, in case you already have some storage solution in place (in my case: Synology NAS): I bought a Beelink Mini S12 Pro for €100 to be a dedicated Jellyfin machine and it was by far the best decision! Super low energy consumption for amazing transcoding performance. That Intel N100 CPU is great! Highly recommend you check it out!
Hey, I have a synology NAS. What’s your setup like? How did you connect your beelink to your nas?
love the beeinks
@@frankchau jellyfin running on the beelink as docker container with GPU pass-through and mounting the NAS shares via NFS, directly in the container.
The more stuff you stack on the software side the more needlessly complex your setup and troubleshooting will become. IMO TrueNAS is great for this kind of build, it functions as a hypervisor and has a Jellyfin plugin ready to deploy in the app catalog. Unfortunately to make it work though you'd need to get a slimline optical drive to 2.5 bay adapter though.
Edit: Oops, I didn't notice the SSD on the board, that'll work fine as a boot drive for TrueNAS to. Either way adding a 3rd drive would allow for a RAID 5 and gain you some wright speed improvements and more space while still allowing for 1 drive failure!
Why do you need Proxmox or Docker for a box that you’re only using as a Jellyfin server?? Throw some kind of Linux on it and be done. What am I missing?
tl;dr: If you're used to having an old PC with a couple of disks just serving video, you're probably fine. There are severe limitations if you want to serve main storage to another device (compute node for a home lab or your main workstation).
I've got a couple of the 800 G3's.
First off... transcoding. Is this something that's actually time critical? If not, its probably something you can let the server chug along with and once its done, you're fine. Be aware of your use-cases.
Speaking of usecases:
If this thing is a main file server, you may well want to go faster, so you can centralise all your storage onto it. 3 small disks are better than two large mirrored for capacity and speed reasons... but they won't fit... unless you go for 2.5" inside the 3.5" bays, in which case you might start thinking of SSDs.
If you're thinking of SSDs, you need a faster network to make use of them. 10G is fine with a single drive or stripped SATA SSDs, but then you start running into "not enough PCIE lane" issues. I made the mistake of thinking the 800G3 had 2x16 slots... one of those x16 slots is only wired for x4 - good for a single nvme disk.
I ended up going for a very power inefficient older xeon, because it has 2 x16 slots and one x8 slot straight to the CPU. One x16 for an old server NIC (recommend 25G max, or the cables get expensive), and the other can be used for one of those expensive SSD carrier cards with a built-in PCIE switch (because bifurcation is a new and rare thing).
Beware of motherboards with lots of SATA ports bottlenecked by the chipset if you want SATA SSDs, but SATA spinning rust for high-capacity/low bandwidth video are fine.
Also, USB drives are (apparently) not recommended for truenas as drive identification can be uncertain (which sounds horrible).
I know motherboards with dual x16 PCIE slots have fallen out of favour as crossfire and SLI died, but we now need them back for storage and high-speed networking - I'd like to do iscsi from SSDs just as fast as a local drive :)
I have an HP Elitebook 850 G1 with an Intel core i5-4300U 16 GB DDR3 RAM and an AMD Radeon HD 8730M, and an ASUS P9X79 Deluxe with 44 GB DDR3 RAM and two NVidia Quadro M4000. Is this good enough? I don’t have the space and money for a new computer to use as a media server
Powerful hardware is never necessary for fun little home projects. My home server is a tiny Dell Micro with a laptop based 4th Gen I5 running 4 cores 4 threads @ 2.0GHz. 1TB SSD inside, 16GB Ram + 4 drive bay on USB3 with loads of storage.
It's in the barely used Basement Living Room, running Windows 10, connected to an old 60" plasma TV and it runs the following jobs.
TV Computer for netflix, prime video and whatever else.
Runs VMWare with an Ubuntu vm configured as my plex server.
Run another VM with FreePBX for my phone system
Runs UrBackup service keeping backups of all my home computers.
My Upstairs TV PC is actually an Elitebook G3 with an I7-6700, 32GB Ram, 500GB NVME. I added it an Nvidia Geforce 1050Ti 4GB. But no server usage on this one. It's all TV, Emulators and light couch videogames such as Streets of Rage4, heroes of might and magic 2/3, and to my surprise it runs Jedi Fallen Order on 4k with medium settings respectably well.
Nice video!
I'm still, slowly, working on replacing my i7 4790K NAS with a N100 based system. As it's idle power-consumption is only 4.5w.
Ideally I'd swap spinny 3.5" drives for ssd's as they're more power efficient. But I already have the other system so I've been slacking a bit.
..and Jellyfin is... some kind of media server / media box type software, I take it...?
I did this six months ago and its working fine, I just have problems with transcoding to a Roku TV (tone mapping, some codecs, subtitles in ASS format not working), I will look into moving JellyFin from docker to an OS install, or to get a 20dll 4k .onn tv box for that TV.
I've done a jellyfin out of a raspberry pi 3, no transcoding only direct copy, works great and cost me only $30 for the rpi and $10 for the sd card.
I use Plex to host my movies and music online. I also use it for live over the air tv with a Hauppauge usb turner.
I use Plex also so that I can watch my My movies and listen to my music away from home. Also able to watch my over-the-air live TV away from home.
I don't like having to pay $5 per month with Plex. Can I do all of that with Jellyfin without having to pay for a monthly subscription?
great vid........i have thought about something similar to replace using plex on a shield pro (server) and shield (client).......honestly they are incredibly reliable and upscaling is def not a prob.......i would prefer something open source but honestly none of what i have seen is as polished or as reliable as plex and an argone40 pi nas
My Jellyfin server is an old laptop with a Core 2 T5800 2 GHz and 4 Go ram, running Linux Debian, with an external USB drive :)
Of course, no transcoding with the integrated Intel video card. but I don't need it.
If you don't need transcoding, about any computer can run Jellyfin.
True! Just ran it on a t620 that can barely run Lubuntu lol
Those HP's often fail with their custom PSU. Good luck replacing it with anything but their original PSU.
I hate that with passion.
Where is a link to the table you have showing at 3:12? That looks really handy to have.
I watched your video and boom just like that I found one for £20, now I feel on top of the world. It's like I can also see my self not paying those subs anymore in the future
Thank you for this video. I just got a Zima board and adding jellyfin to the other Dri entry group got my trans-coding working! I'm so new to all this but chugging along.
In my use case I need to have this connected to the network. Then I'll have my tv jellyfin client connect over the network. Do you know how it performs over the network. Would your hardware recs change?
I use my Mac Mini M1 as a Plex and Jellyfin server as well as being my photo video computer. With an external drive it works great as a media server. It is really low power and also great to rip your DVDs and Blu-rays, getting around 300 frames per second for encoding DVDs and 60 for Blu-rays. They are getting pretty cheap now they have been replaced with the M2 version.
How is transcoding performance? I am thinking to connect M1 mini to my Synology for jellyfin.
@@sudarshan6530 seems fine so far, I have enabled hardware acceleration and watched quite a lot of films in different ways such as mobile phone/tablet/fire trv stick/browser and all have worked great. Also watched a mix of h264 and h265 source files with no problems. Hope yours works out well.
Working on pretty much an identical server but with an i5 7500 right now :)
Just picked up one of these recently for $65. Great PC
I don't check it. Why transcode? I run my jellyfin for years without transcoding. Only direct streaming. It works perfect.
Could you explain this a little more for a noob? If I have a h265 10-bit HDR movie on my NAS or desktop but no Jellyfin app on my TV what do I need? Reading the comments it seems like I need a FireStick or something connected to the TV that will run the Jellyfin app. I know my NAS cannot transcode this file but the TV will if I put it on a USB stick and plug it into the TV. Could I still run Jellyfin in this direction mode so somehow the TV is doing the transcoding? Sorry, may be a stupid question but just trying to figure this out. Does the computer running Jellyfin need to be directly connected to the TV to use direct or can this happen over Ethernet?
I already got an older Synology DS716+II NAS with INTEL Celeron N3160 running Plex on docker. It's not great for transcoding but by my streams are direct. I'm looking to get Lenovo ThinkCentre M910q Mini PC Intel i3-7100T and make it dedicated Plex server with media mounted from NAS. Alternativly I might get Lenovo ThinkCentre M720q Tiny PC - i5-8400T and make it a Proxmox server with Plex and other services running under docker.
And what should "CasaOS doesn't support raid" mean? Isn't casa just some container manager on top of any linux os? Is it that hard to config raid using 1 config file and couple of commands? Is it THAT critical to have this functionality in fancy web ui?
You're correct, and I have setup RAID with it, but I imagine someone setting up CasaOS is wanting a simple solution. I also had some weird issues with how CasaOS recognized the mount point for the array, so I just went the route I went. Not saying it was the best option.
@@HardwareHaven yes, probably you're right speaking about newcomers, I think casaos will add this feature in the future, afterall it is still relatively new project. Thank for the video!
When you know nothing about computers. No fancy button = does not support.
@@severgun Poor choice of words, sure. I should've said that they still haven't implemented support for managing raid within the UI. Get off your high horse dude, lol
@@rafisburganov Last I checked one of the developers either said they're working on it or plan to. It would be great to have that as an option to recommend to family/friends
I have a similar system, but with an i5 7500 in it. I upgraded it to 24 gigs of ram to be able to run docker while running windows server. I even got a quadro p620 for video transcoding an video output, so now it works as a server/htpc.
I’m running a Xeon W-2123 with 32GB RAM and Nvidia Quadro P4000 on a Windows 10 system with Plex.. Performance with transcoding is just to sad. Sometimes it tooks minutes to Watch an movie on the webapp. Or it stutters (Yes , i’ve Plex pass and HW encoding enabled)
Now decode in AV1
Why run in VM at all and not direct OS on drive? Ignore shipping in actual total cost?
Couldn't of gone with bios raid 1? Flits a fake raid but it something
Can this computer run llm? And can/do you have a video on this?
When I buy a used pc on ebay I prefer going with the HP workstations with intel xeon processors. Ive had better luck with those not being damaged.
I just bought a HP Elitedesk 800 G3 with a i5 7500 today before finding this video for the exact same use case for 135 Euro with Shipping from the UK to Sweden without the Shipping it would have just cost me 80 Euro but in Sweden they go for more than my price with the shipping if you want one with a 7th gen cpu here the cheapest i found was 170 Euro.
And I also scored a 14 TB Iron wolf 150 Euro that a kid had used to store his 4K videos for 2 Years so haven't had a rough life and many use hours. So in total my NAS that will run Jellyfin have cost me 285 Euro.
Nooooooooooo, i needed one or two more of these for myself to finish the cluster :D But as it's too late now, i can wholeheartedly support you getting one, got two at the moment and i love them so far
I hate when I am eyeing something to buy and a youtuber drops a video and the product is are either overpriced or out of stock.
Proxmox is not a bad choice, but seems like over kill if you are only using this server for Jellyfin. If all you are using the hardware for I would install a basic OS, I like Debian, but anything would do. Then I would toss Jellyfin in Docker.
Why are you on such a budget if you have thousands of dollars of movies? Ohhh
You know where he got the movies from the side guy who work in pizzahut .
you are not an idiot do not speak about yourself that way it manifests in other ways
I got a DELL Optiplex 5070 USFF PC With i5-9500T /8Gb RAM (No disk) for $96.00. There's no much room for hard disks, just m.2 and 2.5" HDD, but it has USB-C and I'll put an ORICO 5 BAY with RAID though that, and maybe a 4 bay disk tower as a backup. 35W CPU, but enough power for transcoding and a lot more
Can i use USB HDs for movie storage?
I have an SFF optiplex with 8700 (non-k) and I inserted a low profile 1650. Would it work?
I would honestly just give the iGPU on the 8700 a shot. It handles transcoding pretty well and draws a lot less power than the 1650 would 👍🏻
I don't have anything that supports 4k, and size is one of my concerns. So I ordered a 600 G3 mini with an i5 6500T lol. Have a 2TB M.2 SSD, just need to decide on boot media and I'll be watching for a cheap 2TB 2.5" drive for a raid 1 backup. If I want 4k transcoding in the future, all it takes is a CPU upgrade.
A couple of months ago I moved our Plex server from its old home to one of these machines as a dedicated Plex server, running an i5-6500 and a bare-metal Ubuntu server install. It was a refurb system off eBay with an NVMe drive and a 500 GB HDD, which got replaced with the 8 TB media HDD from the old server. All I really had to do was install Plex, copy its directory over, and mount the HDD in the same filesystem location and it fired right up. We don't have any 4k media but it handles transcoding Blu-ray rips to my phone quite well.
I also installed Jellyfin to try it out and while it works well enough, the version of WebOS on the LG TV in the living room is unfortunately too old for the Jellyfin app to run. Also unfortunately, the Blu-ray slimline drive from my 800 G1 SFF Proxmox server doesn't fit the bay in the G3 - the drive's too tall, believe it or not.
you can install jellyfin on a firetv stick, which is how my girlfriend watches stuff on the tv
It's been to hard for me to understand all the issues 'cause I'm a 'bit' far from all there servers/streaming)))
So... what are basic steps (os, vm, etc. step-by-step) and good choices to get Jellyfin machine on 'naked' HP 400 G5 with two mirrored hdds?))
If you're able to afford it, I would check out UnRAID. It's probably the simplest and easiest OS to use for NAS and hosting VMs and containers.
Outside of that, you could try out Open Media Vault, as there are some decent tutorials on there. You could also just install Debian and setup aa RAID mirror yourself, but that involves a bit of cmd line. There's also TrueNAS, but I'm not as big of a fan of running containers with that because it uses Kubernetes by default which is a bit overkill imo.
An old Dell laptop with a Core I5 and 8Gb of ram with an external USB hard drive runs my Jellyfin server just fine.
i'm attempting the same exercise for frigate. I need at least a 10th gen processor to get QuickSync. I also am looking for a dual NIC setup to isolate the video onto its own network.
I made a Plex server out of a Dell Optiplex 3020. I got the Optiplex for free from my work but they go for very cheap and are nice for a plex server.
This seems like a huge time sync just to watch a movie.
Me running jellyfin on a threadripper :(
I'm looking at making a new NAS box, mainly for Plex and Frigate, using an Erying motherboard (with mobile i7-11600H (well, an ES that's similarly speced) CPU on board, which has 2 Tiger Lake media engines), a RackSource 2u 12-bay rackmount case for storage, a low-profile SAS HBA (like a LSI 9305-16i) in the x16 slot, and a Coral TPU for the E-key slot so it can also run Frigate as an NVR.
I chose an RPi5 4gb, NVMe hat w/SSD and have had zero issues running jellyfin and qbittorrent simultaneously, non-stop. I can watch anything while jellyfin is transcoding and have not suffered any playback issues. Just works, but...I have several hundred dollars tied up in it, as well. I probably could have gotten a better mini pc for the same money, but not so sure I could have found one to equal the low power consumption of the Pi
thanks for the video. So compared to an off-the-shelf NAS solution this saves around a 100€ (considering the cheapest 2bay QNAP NAS at the moment in my area goes for 180€)... But you bring up good points regarding the HW Transcoding, hadn't thought of those. Decisions, decisions...
Yeah I got a i5 8400 with a cheap MB (4 sata ports). Installed TrueNAS... And voilá... The 8400 runs great. Handling 4k HDR amazingly. The only problems I encountered were on the clients side. Server-wise... Its running great. Running a ssd for OS and cache and HDD for storage, 16gb ram... about 20w idle... Not bad
Don't forget to add ZRAM to the PROXMOX OS...it really helps
Very cool...I have a few of those cheapo computers I build for my mother in law and such...these work great for PROXMOX builds and a few virtual machines...make sure you use SSD's or the performance of the virtual machines can be a bit sluggish!
Keep em coming!!!!
My mom got a new PC so I got her old Dell with an i5-8400. She couldn't use it anymore because Windows 11 became practically unusable on it's single HDD. I threw in 32GB of RAM and it works great for hosting MC servers, DVD ripping, encoding, and hosting Jellyfin. It just takes some patience to get it all set up. I only have a single, 1TB HDD. It is the only drive in the PC so it it fails I lose everything, but I mostly store DVD rips anyway, so I can always spend a week recollecting them from the source after getting a new drive.
i have been running jellyfin in my proxmox cluster, i was never able to get gpu hardware passthrough to work properly for the transcoding though
You've done got me hooked on these. Bought one last week, for jellyfin (went to Emby with it though). Just bought a M01-F1033WB with a 10th gen i3, that I'm thinking the power supply doesn't work. Should have it by Friday.
I wish this was affordable in Europe. For 60-90€ you get 4th Gen i5, 90€+ 6th gen. Can't find 7th gen, but 8th Gen systems, but those are like 150-200€+.
I got this off of am for $132 ... HP Prodesk 600 G3 Micro Computer Mini PC (Intel Quad Core i5-7500T 2.7Ghz, 16GB DDR4 Ram, 512GB SSD, 4K Support, DP, USB 3.0, USB-C) Win 10 Pro (Renewed). It came with a DP to HDMI adapter. I am using my WD My Book 3TD external drive to store videos. I installed Jellyfin.
you don't even need transcoding. Use Jellyfin desktop and Android with HW decoding setting and forget about web ui. Can direct stream 120 MBps bitrate videos from RPi4
transcoding is waste of energy
How's this working out for you? I got the 800 G3 based on your recommendation in this video. I got it as a barebones kit for $49 and even bough a HP Blu-ray drive so I can start building my own Plex collection. I got the G4560 and 32GB of memory. I got a 2 TB SSD am just waiting on the money to buy me a couple of 14 TB HDDs to use for storage. My thought process was I could set up TrueNAS and install Plex, automatic-ripping-machine, & Tdarr via Docker. Goal is to make this a bare metal ripping machine for setting up my Plex collection and testing everything. Then later on when I have the money to set up a NAS I'll move the finished files over to that for a true Plex setup.
I bought a month ago dell optiplex small form factor with skylake i5 processor so I can toy around in proxmox. It has only two 2.5" hdd spaces but otherwise I'm quite happy with it. Power consumption on idle is only 15W.
As a Canadian, I envy your ebay listing and shipping prices.
No kidding. Just checked it out and shipping on ebay pretty much doubles the cost of everything. $60 for the PC and $50 for shipping just 1 province over. Absolutely insane.
Any idea on what the overhead is on running your media library off of your nas? If I'm able to pull data at 100mb/s over the network, I know I'm not reaching the throughput of some spinning rust, but I'd have to back up the media library anyways, right?
I just bought one of these systems 3 days ago so I'm glad I got it before your video came out and the price is went up 😂
Great 2 bay NAS
7700 16GB 500GB NVMe for $145 can't beat it
bookmarking this for later.... Using my last gaming pc: i9-9900k, added Radeon 6650XT, 32GB DDR4 3200MHZ with 3tb SSD and 8 TB HDD for all my movies. Looking for something cheaper as I dont wanna keep those components running 24/7