Hi, I am looking to make my first dedicated jellyfin server rather than running it on my desktop, but don’t know what gpu to get. I will have only a few users and want to avoid Nvidia because I will be on linux + foss drivers. Any recommendations?

  • JustEnoughDucks
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    1 year ago

    GPU choice, honestly, is easy as hell right now.

    If you have (or will soon have) kernel 6.2 or higher, get an Intel Arc A380.

    • 150€

    • great h.264 & h.265 performance, VMAF scored above 3090 in most cases, especially at lower bitrates. Tests were done at release and drivers have only improved

    • literally the cheapest AV1 encoder GPU available

    • open source drivers

    • less that 100W full load

    • small form factor

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    That depends on how you intend on importing your Jellyfin media–if you are able to transcode it to a format that Jellyfin can display natively, then you can even run multiple streams on a Raspberry Pi 4 with no issues (as long as your bandwidth can handle it) I am running Jellyfin in Docker on an old HP laptop with an AMD A10-9600P from 2016. Even with no GPU set up, the processor is able to transcode two simultaneous 1080P streams, although I’m intending on transcoding everything into a codec with native support soon

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    I run my Jellyfin on an HP sff PC and keep all my files are my big NAS. This lets me take advantage of Intel’s Quicksync for my transcoding which seems to be the easiest and best way to transcode. Also much more power efficient than running a standalone GPU.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I run Jellyfin off a RPi4 mounted behind my TV (I got it before the shortage), and also use a NAS with music folders mounted on the Pi

  • 𝙚𝙧𝙧𝙚
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    21 year ago

    I don’t have a GPU recommendation but have you assessed that you need a discrete GPU?

    I have a small mini PC running Ubuntu server with an i7 CPU that supports hardware acceleration for transcoding to HEVC and it does really well with the handful of people using it.

    Also, if most of your media is in something H264 (or something most of your clients are compatible with), you might not even need to worry about transcoding. If that is the case, even CPU usage will be very low afaik.

  • @OmarDontScare
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    11 year ago

    HP prodesk is all you need! You can probably do with a Raspberry, but if you want to have some room to play with, then pick something more powerful like an older desktop pc.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    11 year ago

    For clarification, I do need a discrete gpu as the cpu has no integrated graphics. It is an athelon 64 x2 from 2005. My media is encoded in a variety of codecs but I do have a 3060ti in my desktop I could use to transcode before uploading. I want to host 2+ tb on it and I think transcoding it all would take a while.

  • @8565
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    11 year ago

    I actually love my Nvidia GPU on my 9th gen I7 GTX 1660 super system. It runs Ubuntu without any issues