Heya, does anyone have experiences with using a pi4 as a Jellyfin media server? I’d like to set it up like that. Do you think a regular external HDD would work as storage space? Will it be possible to have like 3 to 4 devices streaming at the same time?Recommendations for tutorials are highly appreciated!

  • Vida_E_Bela@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I used to have a RPi 4 as a Jellyfin Media Server. I never tried 3-4 simultaneous streaming, but I remember that, if no server transcoding was involved, it could deal with 2 simulteaneous streamings without problems. I used an external HDD also.

    On tutorials, Jellyfin’s webpage has a nice tutorial on the Debian installer page (https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/installation/linux). Also, the container version could be a good option.

    Watch out for folder permissions so Jellyfin can access your external HDD.

  • boo one@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I had a very simiar setup with an external 1TB HDD and migrated to an old pc recently.

    Apart from what others have said you might have trouble with RAM, if like like me you have a 1GB variant.

    Also iirc I had bottleneck with i/o, since both usb and ethernet shared the same i/o bus.

    And power, rpis are power hungry, I had to use the official power supply, my mobile bricks didnt cut it.

  • nodiet@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I don’t have any experience with the rp4, but I have used a similar SBC (the Odroid N2) for this. An external HDD works perfectly fine, no need to worry about that. Performance is also absolutely decent. If the 4 devices can direct stream the content you won’t have any issues. The only thing to worry about is transcoding. Ffmpeg on RP4 does support hardware acceleration (without it, you couldn’t even do a single transcode at reasonable speeds), but even with it I doubt you can do more than a single 1080p transcode at the same time.