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    What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IT Discussion
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    • wirestyle22W
      wirestyle22
      last edited by wirestyle22

      I've never set up a Plex server to be played directly through HDMI but I know people do it.

      GreyG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • GreyG
        Grey
        last edited by

        PLEX all the things.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • GreyG
          Grey @wirestyle22
          last edited by

          @wirestyle22 said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

          I've never set up a Plex server to be played directly through HDMI but I know people do it.

          I use my Plex through a roku, but I know you can do it through raspberry pi, too.

          wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • wirestyle22W
            wirestyle22 @Grey
            last edited by

            @Grey said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

            @wirestyle22 said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

            I've never set up a Plex server to be played directly through HDMI but I know people do it.

            I use my Plex through a roku, but I know you can do it through raspberry pi, too.

            Yeah I'm using a Roku 3 personally.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch
              last edited by

              I don't care if I play things through Plex or Kodi.. but I need a good server side setup. Just a NAS and let Kodi connect direct?

              Setup Plex on a box and put the media local to it?

              Really need some thoughts on the whole infrastructure. not a plex vs kodo player debate.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • wirestyle22W
                wirestyle22
                last edited by

                I have a CentOS 7 VM running on XenServer with Plex installed. It can be a little bit of a pain to deal with the way CentOS handles the partitioning but in my experience runs much better than the windows variant.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • NashBrydgesN
                  NashBrydges
                  last edited by

                  I'm running Plex as a Ubuntu VM on Hyper-V. It stores no media. Simply network access to a Dell R510 where I keep the media. The Plex VM is running on a different host because I wanted to leverage the all SSD setup. The only data on the Plex VM is the library metadata. Everything else streams over the network. It's absolutely rock solid. Transcodes X265 and X264 rips effortlessly on as many as 4 simultaneous local clients as well as 2 to 3 remote clients for family. The local playback devices are all currently Roku 4s while the remote devices are Roku 3s and Smart TVs with built-in Plex.

                  wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • Deleted74295D
                    Deleted74295 Banned
                    last edited by Deleted74295

                    Umm, I have a stock branded one that came with the single bay Zyxel unit I bought. Seems alright.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • wirestyle22W
                      wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                      last edited by wirestyle22

                      @NashBrydges said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

                      The Plex VM is running on a different host because I wanted to leverage the all SSD setup

                      Meaning you wanted more "SSD HD Space" for storage of the media?

                      NashBrydgesN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • NashBrydgesN
                        NashBrydges @wirestyle22
                        last edited by

                        @wirestyle22 No, meaning I wanted all transcoding to happen on the SSDs. Had I installed the VM on the R510, I would have had the VM's vhdx on rotating platters in RAID6 so I didn't want that to get in the way of potentially resource intensive activity like transcoding. By placing the VM on the host with the SSD array, I'm leveraging that additional speed without worrying about transcoding running into some bottleneck.

                        wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • wirestyle22W
                          wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                          last edited by

                          @NashBrydges said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

                          @wirestyle22 No, meaning I wanted all transcoding to happen on the SSDs. Had I installed the VM on the R510, I would have had the VM's vhdx on rotating platters in RAID6 so I didn't want that to get in the way of potentially resource intensive activity like transcoding. By placing the VM on the host with the SSD array, I'm leveraging that additional speed without worrying about transcoding running into some bottleneck.

                          That's an interesting solution to that problem

                          NashBrydgesN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • NashBrydgesN
                            NashBrydges @wirestyle22
                            last edited by

                            @wirestyle22 I even tossed around the idea of setting up a ramdisk on that host and use the ramdisk mapped to the Ubuntu VM to handle transcoding. I knew I might run into problems based on the x265 transcoding and the number of concurrent clients. But so far, that hasn't been necessary.

                            By comparison, I had a similar setup but running on a windows VM and it wouldn't transcode anything beyond 2 streams without a 40GB ramdisk. It would stutter all over the place.

                            wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • wirestyle22W
                              wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                              last edited by

                              @NashBrydges said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

                              @wirestyle22 I even tossed around the idea of setting up a ramdisk on that host and use the ramdisk mapped to the Ubuntu VM to handle transcoding. I knew I might run into problems based on the x265 transcoding and the number of concurrent clients. But so far, that hasn't been necessary.

                              By comparison, I had a similar setup but running on a windows VM and it wouldn't transcode anything beyond 2 streams without a 40GB ramdisk. It would stutter all over the place.

                              What about SSD Caching?

                              NashBrydgesN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • NashBrydgesN
                                NashBrydges @wirestyle22
                                last edited by NashBrydges

                                @wirestyle22 The problem is that while transcoding, the CPU is working hard to stay ahead of the stream. So it wasn't a data access problem. Even the x265 encodes run around 35-45Mbps at most and that's easily accomplished just readin the data from the R510 as it's simply acting as network storage. But the Linux VM does the brunt of the work after that as it converts the media stream into a usable format for the player. For most setups, using standard disks would probably work fine. But throw in multiple x265 and x264 conversions and your VM will crap all over itself if it doesn't have fast media to write to...it won't be able to stay ahead of the playback streams.

                                Edit: fixed spelling

                                wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • wirestyle22W
                                  wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                                  last edited by

                                  @NashBrydges That's actually the reason I try to stick to native formats. No transcoding means very little overhead

                                  NashBrydgesN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • NashBrydgesN
                                    NashBrydges @wirestyle22
                                    last edited by

                                    @wirestyle22 That works well if you can control your playback devices. I didn't have that luxury. So transcoding is a necessity. Even if I want to stream to my laptop while on layover or at a hotel, transcode is necessary. I could store multiple versions of the files but I've already got many many TBs or mkv containers at x264 and x265. Don't have the space for all the potential versions that natively play on so many players.

                                    I have 4k TVs at home but my brother in law doesn't so if he is watching the same movie I am, it can play natively via Roku 4 for me but it can't for him.

                                    wirestyle22W 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • wirestyle22W
                                      wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                                      last edited by

                                      @NashBrydges said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

                                      @wirestyle22 That works well if you can control your playback devices. I didn't have that luxury. So transcoding is a necessity. Even if I want to stream to my laptop while on layover or at a hotel, transcode is necessary. I could store multiple versions of the files but I've already got many many TBs or mkv containers at x264 and x265. Don't have the space for all the potential versions that natively play on so many players.

                                      I have 4k TVs at home but my brother in law doesn't so if he is watching the same movie I am, it can play natively via Roku 4 for me but it can't for him.

                                      Basically what I did was just buy a Roku 3 for every person I wanted to share it with. Takes care of a christmas present and I get control 😄

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • wirestyle22W
                                        wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                                        last edited by

                                        @NashBrydges said in What's the current "standard" for a media server setup these days?:

                                        I have 4k TVs at home but my brother in law doesn't so if he is watching the same movie I am, it can play natively via Roku 4 for me but it can't for him.

                                        Yeah I don't yet but I can see where that would be frustrating

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • GreyG
                                          Grey
                                          last edited by

                                          I have an old 2950 in service running a 2008 server for my file access (primary file storage & print server) with a couple other VMs on the host. One of those other hosts is the Ubuntu Server 14.04 (if I recall correctly) with plex on there, using smb to mount all of my movies and other media. All of my media is on DAS, internal through the perc. As I stated above, I use a roku3 to watch everything. The only problems I have is that the 2950 is underpowered and if a tv show or movie isn't encoded in a ready-to-play format, then I need to prepare to watch that show by telling plex to transcode it for watching in advance. I'm planning to upgrade to a 510 or something as soon as I have a couple grand just doing nothing. Mostly, I just want more storage.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • guyinpvG
                                            guyinpv
                                            last edited by

                                            It seems Roku and Kodi are not really friends.
                                            For the sake of conversation, we should consider them as completely separate things, not links in a chain.

                                            Ideally it would be nice to watch anything from any source using a single interface. Right now we have our PS3 which we use for Netflix, Hulu, Youtube, and DLNA from Win10.

                                            If I got a Roku, then it would seem Kodi is not the best bet, Plex is where it's at.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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