I’m working on learning about servers and such but it’s a lot to take in. I’m looking to get a 5tb hard drive and install it into a network attached storage tower. What else would be needed to make this work? Links provided are what I’m thinking

QNAP TS-233-US 2 Bay Affordable Desktop NAS with ARM Cortex-A55 Quad-core Processor and 2 GB DDR4 RAM (Diskless) https://a.co/d/725WsHM

Seagate Portable 5TB External Hard Drive HDD – USB 3.0 for PC, Mac, PS4, & Xbox - 1-Year Rescue Service (STGX5000400), Black https://a.co/d/fClqYLT

9 points
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To directly answer your question, what you need to run Jellyfin is a computer with sufficient CPU, RAM, storage, and networking. Many NASs can fill this role as can Single Board Computers (e.g. Raspberry Pi).

The QNAP you listed here doesn’t seem to have Jellyfin as an app, but it does have Plex. You can find this information on the manufacturer Website.

Hardware: https://www.qnap.com/en-us/product/ts-233

Apps: https://www.qnap.com/en-us/app_center/?os=qts&version=5.1.0~5.1.3&II=616

The type of hard drive required for this NAS is ‘internal’, what you have linked as your hdd is an external USB drive, it wouldn’t work the way you are intending. You need an internal SATA drive. Two would be ideal.

Internal SATA NAS drive: https://www.amazon.com/Seagate-IronWolf-Internal-Hard-Drive/dp/B084ZV4DXB/qid=1700590050

With a 4-core ARM cpu and 2GB of non-expandable RAM, I’m not convinced it would be a good Jellyfin experience. It could at first, maybe for one user at a time; but if you wanted to expand its capabilities (eg. have two streams at the same time), you might not be able to. YMMV

Rather than this QNAP unit, you could go with something that has expandable RAM and the Jellyfin app available to the OS. As mentioned in other comments, Synology is a well-known brand with lots of community support.

Hardware: Synology DS224 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C6927XPX/ref=twister_B0CLWLQCT6

Internal SATA NAS drive: https://www.amazon.com/Seagate-IronWolf-Internal-Hard-Drive/dp/B084ZV4DXB/qid=1700590050

Which very nearly doubles the price of the QNAP, but has expandable RAM up to 6GB.

If you’re willing to learn a little bit of Linux and CLI, for the price, you can’t beat a Raspberry Pi 8GB. It already has more RAM than either of those units can provide, is cheaper to boot, and would use the External HDD you selected. There was a shortage for a couple years with COVID, but with the release of the RPi 5, these are becoming available.

https://www.pishop.us/product/raspberry-pi-4-model-b-8gb/

There are MANY guides on setting up Jellyfin on Raspberry Pi, like this one: https://pimylifeup.com/raspberry-pi-jellyfin/

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4 points

Wow this was such a great learning experience. For what I’m trying to achieve it would seem the PI option would be best. Trying to keep it budget friendly and only need to stream to 1 device. I’ve also been trying to justify buying a PI for awhile. The plethora of guides will make it pretty easy to set up based off what you provided and a quick bit of research. I should be able to learn Linux and CLI enough to set it up as well. Thank you for all of this information!

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7 points

Hello ! First question would be : why buy an external drive if you are buying a NAS in the first place ?

Just in case: there are 2 slots available in the NAS you sent, meaning you could buy 2 internal drives for its storage.

On the hosting part, Jellyfin might be able to run judging by the specifications of the NAS. However, you have to take into account if the NAS operating system can run it (maybe there is an app store for it like Synology) and also media transcoding might be limited (to easily stream around your house 4K content for exemple)

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1 point

I honestly thought external drives were just plugged into the case and could be quickly popped out and used as an internal. Someone else provided a really indepth guide for me and this NAS isn’t capable of using jellyfin only plex so the plan is to go with PI and get that working

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1 point
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Some can be. Didn’t check to see if this was one of them. It’s called ‘Shucking’ and there is a niche for it. Personally I don’t think its worth it to go through all that work to research devices, go through all the effort to shuck it (and hope you’re lucky!) just to save a couple bucks. https://www.howtogeek.com/324769/how-to-get-premium-hard-drives-for-cheap-by-shucking-external-drives/

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2 points
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The only question I would say that decides what you get is, do you want files to be transcoded for clients or not.

If not, you can definitely use anything since you just stream directly. I use a Raspberry Pi 4, works perfectly with 3 users direct stream at home.

If you want to be able to supply transcoding you need to lookout for supported hardware, but I am the wrong person to talk about that, given I only use the Rpi4.

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1 point

May I ask what you did with your GPU vs ARM memory allocation?

I have 320M for GPU. Seems to work fine, but not sure what is ideal.

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1 point

Uh, to be honest I made no changes to anything memory-wise really. Its a rpi 4 with 8gb ram (I think?), so maybe if you have less ram on a rpi it might get problematic?

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