Anything in the Jellyfin logs?
Anything in the Jellyfin logs?
You should consider opnsense instead of pfsense in any case.
What are you using for a drive controller?
Even the slowest SSD write speeds should be faster than an HDD, and those have been running systems perfectly fine for decades. I’ve never used enterprise SSDs (usually one little consumer SSD, or even USB, for boot/cache and a bunch of HDDs for storage) and I’ve never had a problem.
What kind of hardware are you using?
Why separate it? It’s part of the same stack. Radar downloads, Jellyfin plays.
Ebay. If you’re outside the US, you’ll probably be better off with a more local site.
I usually find the cheapest drives and buy multiple of those, but you should be able to assemble a RAID out of different disks, though you’ll be limited to the space of the smallest one in the mirror set.
Also make sure that your RAID systems supports this.
What exactly is not working? What is it doing/not doing, compared to what you are expecting it to do?
See if there’s a cooling profile option in the BIOS. Maybe also run the Dell diagnostics. Might be something wrong with the fan tachometer.
Worst case, assuming the PWM is working properly, you could use a third-party application to control the fan speed.
I don’t think OP has backups.
Having one, the other, or both depends on how sure you need to be about recovery, and whether you care about it being available until recovery.
Definitely upgrade the RAM. Also get at least two drives in RAID or ZFS or something so you can tolerate a failure. And keep backups too, if you can’t afford to lose data.
Just ping it?
Actual traffic might be slightly different, but honestly on a LAN you shouldn’t need to worry about latency. But you’re not going to be able to run iperf3 on that router in any case.
Use the -arr tools for organizing/renaming/tagging, and Plex or Jellyfin for playing. You don’t need to connect them to any downloader.
Huh. Kind of surprised it supports up to four drives, but if that’s what it says, there you go. Shouldn’t be any risk of drawing too much current through the wire. At most the board or PSU would shut down.
Also, if you are putting more drives in, see if the BIOS lets you enable staggered spin-up, so that they aren’t all peaking at the same time.
If that’s the stock part, seems like it would be within spec. You can check the manual or detailed spec doc to be sure.
Reconsider how much of that 8tb really needs to be backed up. Thousands of pictures of your cat aren’t really going to be missed, and your Linux ISOs can be redownloaded.
Right, a bit flip in ZFS cache shouldn’t cause that. But a bit flip in active memory could.
It certainly could. A bit-flip in a core part of the kernel could easily cause it to lock up, if an address is corrupted and it starts writing garbage over its code, or execution jumps to somewhere unexpected, or an instruction is changed from something reasonable to a halt.
Yes, most of those should trigger a blue screen or kernel panic, but that’s not guaranteed when you’re making completely random changes.
In memory?
primebuy looks like a ripoff of amazon, insight looks legit, but you’ll probably get what your order from either site