Currently I’m thinking again about setting up a home server. But I am unsure about the scaling. In the hope to get some input from experienced users I’m coming here.

Services that I intend on running:

  • TrueNAS SCALE
  • Jellyfin
  • *arr stack
  • Immich
  • Nextcloud
  • Bitwarden (maybe)

I’ve read the Jellyfin documentation which states i5-11500 (because the toolkit for 7-10th gen is deprecated, even though you could encode H.264/H.265) or newer for CPU based encoding or at least a GTX 1660. Because electricity is quite expensive here, I’d prefer CPU encoding. On the other side, office systems with 11th or newer gen are far more expensive. I’ve found a i5-6500, 16 GB RAM, GTX 1660 system for 180 Euro incl. shipping. There are a few 7th-9th gen systems with 16 GB RAM available that use on board graphics and are 80-120 Euro excl. shipping but I’m not sure if they suffice running the mentioned services and maybe a few more I don’t know about yet.

I have two WD Red and a WD Green lying around, I’d like to use. From what I’ve heard so far, it’s necessary to use a separate drive to run TrueNAS off of, which I’d need to buy separately.

Maybe you can give me some insights. Thanks.

  • HelloRoot@lemy.lol
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    5 days ago

    I feel like by “scaling” they mean upgradability. So either vertical (adding more drives, ram, cpu) or horizontal (adding more boxes that loadbalance an increase of multiple parallel tasks/users)

    • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Makes sense. Your 2nd definition is what I take from the term scaling. Let’s see if op comes back with any notes.

    • Senseless@feddit.orgOP
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      5 days ago

      More like would a i5-8500 or i3-9100 be sufficient to run the mentioned services and encode up to 4k, no HDR though.