GolemancerVekkB
“Shared network folder” in Jellyfin doesn’t do what you think it does. 😛 I agree it’s rather confusing. It’s just a convenient link to a Windows share which you can open from the Jellyfin app if you want to browse the files and they happen to also be shared as a Windows share. It’s NOT where Jellyfin takes the files from.
Jellyfin can only index files accessible to it locally. Share the files from TrueNAS to the machine or container running Jellyfin, then point Jellyfin to the directory where you mounted the share. I recommend NFS rather than Samba for this purpose.
What does “mediaserver” mean to you? Synology are good for storage but not so great for more CPU intensive stuff, plus of course they’re not freely upgradeable and you’re tied to their OS.
If you’re comfortable building your own PC you can install Unraid or TrueNAS which will give you an easy to use admin interface and the ability to use/upgrade with off-the-shelf components. /r/buildapc can probably help with that.
If you’re also comfortable with Linux you can design your own fine-grained approach to the OS and the apps on it, /r/selfhosted can probably help with that.
SSD’s are getting there in $$$/TB but have a bit more to go to catch up to HDDs.
Your approach of having multiple backup drives is sound. Having everything in one place means all eggs in one basket. Keep that in mind when you reorganize your data.
Same, except I also use Scrutiny to flag drives for my attention. It makes educated guesses for a pass/fail mark, using analysis of vendor-specific interpretations of SMART values, matched against the failure thresholds from the BackBlaze survey. It can tell you things like “the current value for the Command Timeout attribute for this drive falls into the 1-10% bracket of probability of failure according to BackBlaze”.
It helps me to plan ahead. If for example I have 3 drives that Scrutiny says “smell funny” it would be nice if I had 2-3 spares on hand rather than just 1. Or if two of those drives happen to be together in a 2-pair mirror perhaps I can swap one somewhere else.
(not OP) What’s an example of a good quality SATA power splitter? I have something like this.
I’ll just leave this here: https://github.com/jmbannon/ytdl-sub
It’s a tool that watches YouTube channels or playlists, downloads everything, and prepares them so they appear directly in players like Plex, Jellyfin, Kodi etc. Basically the equivalent of the *arr stack for YouTube.
NPM can also do URL proxying: you can reach sub.maindomain.com
at maindomain.com/whatever/
. Edit the proxy host definition for the main domain and look in the “custom locations” tab.
Alternatively, if you can control your browser’s settings, you can try using DNS over HTTPS which can let you bypass your company’s DNS. Try using https://dns.quad9.net/dns-query
for example as the DNS over HTTPS address (or whatever your browser can offer).
How much of that data would mean the end of the world if it were lost?
For some of that data (perhaps Jellyfin containers, those test VMs) you may not need RAID at all.