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A lot of my files were shitty 480p versions of movies from the Napster days. Now they're all 1080p, with a few 720p exceptions (mainly tv series episodes). All in all 500 something files in total. Now just watching uTorrent slowly download them all. Hopefully my VPN keeps the eyes off of me...

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[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 17 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Sonarr/Radarr will do this for you automagically for most TV and Movies, never have to visit a dodgy torrent site again.

Started setting it up years ago and over time re-downloaded all those shitty yify rips with full fat bluray remuxes wherever available and the highest quality possible otherwise. Hit 100tb pretty quickly lol.

I have my rig set up to automatically upgrade to bluray remuxes when available, then once they are older than 1 month and over a certain filesize they get automatically compressed with a fairly slow, low crf H265-10bit encode with FileFlows to cut their size roughly in half while still being visually perfect on the normal TVs, all 4k content stays untouched for the main theatre.

[-] Greyfoxsolid@lemmy.world 4 points 11 months ago
[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

mostly unraid, some ZFS ontop for high priority storage, a couple of TB of SSDs on top of that for caching and ingest.

Just added it all up, its 110TB at the moment, with another 16tb to add in a couple of weeks.

[-] Greyfoxsolid@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago

How much did that setup cost you?

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 6 points 11 months ago

Not sure it's more than 10years of slow upgrades. Nothing compared to the true datahoarders out there

Too much probably.

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 11 months ago

If I was to rebuild it from scratch with new parts but equivalent performance and capacity it owuld only be a couple of grand honestly..

my AV distro gear on the other hand.. oof.. decent small car money, and a terrible investment.

[-] Scrollone@feddit.it 4 points 11 months ago

You're crazy and I envy your setup so much.

I'm just starting, with a mere 4 TB storage, but I want to learn how it works before investing more money

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 11 months ago

That's why unraid was (in my opinion) a good starting point, you can use whatever disks you have regardless of size and speed and pool them all together pretty easily. Stick jellyin or plex or both on it and you have a great starting server.

[-] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I'll support this

If your goal is to set up a media server, a few services, and a storage for non-essential files*, it is hard to beat unraid. Free is obviously better, but it has the best support for mismatched drive sizes and, arguably, the highest percentage of "usable" space. Try to wait for a sale (there are quite a few per year) but it is also a lifetime license so...

There are performance implications and I never trust any solution that can only survive two drive failures. Especially when recovery involves heavy reads and writes. Because drives tend to fail in groups and stressing a drive on its last legs is never a good idea.

*: Which, to be fair, should be how any locally stored file is treated. Unless you have it backed up off site in at least one location (preferably two), it is not backed up. Which is why my media collection is YOLO but my (encrypted) documents and personal photos go into a cloud storage bucket on a weekly basis.

[-] Scrollone@feddit.it 1 points 11 months ago

I was thinking of YOLOing my media collection too, but at the same time I'm scared of downloading lots of things and then losing everything and having to download everything from scratch again.

[-] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Yeah. For me, the vast majority of my media collection are rips of the blu-rays and DVDs I have in a box in the closet. So recovery is just annoying. There are a few somewhat obscure shows (or shows with massively generic or reused names) that I might never be able to find again but... whatever.

But I definitely have a few porn videos I found on DC++ ten (... twenty?) years ago that I have never been able to find again after accidentally deleting the "Special Textures" folder of my Unreal Tournament directory.

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 11 months ago

Unraid pro is expensive (compared to free DIY linux or Truenas for example) but it is extremely flexible and very easy to get started with.

Their free trial is very flexible though, and once set up and running most people will already be set and happy to pay for the licence.

[-] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Anyone not building a proper rackmount server is unlikely to need more than Unraid Plus. Which is 89 USD without a discount. Said discounts vary but are generally 20-30% or straight up 10 dollars, which gets plus down to 60-70 bucks. Unraid Pro I think is where you start getting into discussions of if this is a good decision, but we are looking at 90-110 for that.

Which is not nothing. But Plus undiscounted is about the price of a 4 TB drive. So if you can't afford a license you can't really afford to run a NAS with any degree of recoverability. At which point you are probably better mounting the drives as individual un-RAID'd drives and spreading files across a file system. Because, at that point, you can't recover from any failures anyway and this at least still guarantees access to your remaining files if one or more drives drop.

And if you are going big enough to need more than 12 drives in a single system (and I say this as someone who currently has 16 in his NAS...): That is when you should not be using unraid. Multiple physical servers set up as a ceph array and dealing with a lot of smaller zfs raids of varying sizes is the way to go but... you are losing a lot of storage to parity for something that likely isn't worth that level of redundancy. But you also start getting into a discussion of "what is my time worth" at that point because... Ceph is a mother fucker.

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 11 months ago

Well my main server is currently at 16 drives plus 2 SSDs, so 18 total counted for the licence, arranged as 12 drive unraid array and 4 drive ZFS, plus an appdata+vm disk and a general cache disk.

I'd like to go with Ceph eventually, because I think it's a solid platform, but multiple nodes and a heavier duty network backbone would be required to do that properly, also the extra disks required to protect a ZFS array of multiple Vdevs, which is safer and faster sure, but the costs are significantly higher than just buying an unraid licence.

[-] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 1 points 11 months ago

I mean, I am doing the same thing. Do as I say, not as I do, and all that jazz.

But the main issue is that, with that many drives, the failure point starts to become the server itself as opposed to just the storage.

[-] JackSkellington@lemmy.world 1 points 11 months ago

What is your general setup? Do you have a server with everything in docker running? On top of proxmox or OS? It then backups to unraid or do you only use the unraid for everything?

I’m on my way in setting up home server with storage for a few services but still in planning

[-] Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 11 months ago

Most of it just runs on my unraid box, bunch of Docker containers and a vm for a couple of windows apps I needed running. I also run a small secondary proxmox server with some home automation amd networking stuff that I wanted to stay online when the server is off-line for updates or maintenance.

this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2023
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