this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2024
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submitted 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Hopefully these kinds of posts are allowed in this community, but if not feel free to point me in the correct direction.

I currently have a Synology DS218+ (I believe, it's one of the 2-bay + models) that I've been using for several years now as a home server/NAS, but I think it's time to replace it with something new.

I'm debating building something from scratch and just throwing Linux on it. Despite having built my last 3 computers, I'm still pretty bad at understanding specs and planning out builds. I was hoping you fine folks would be able to help give me some suggestions.

The Synology is currently running (and I would expect to move these over to the new build) the following:

Plex
Tautulli
FreshRss
Mealie
Calibre
Stash

Having something purpose built for this means I'd probably explore also hosting my own music library, photo back up, pi-hole, vpn, etc.

Does anyone have suggestions of builds, or at least specific minimums I should ensure?

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (5 children)

I've become a big fan of mini PC's for home server use these days (with NAS systems for storage duties). Low power, low heat, low noise, and very affordable.

Beelink on Amazon makes a good selection of them. Always watch for sales. I have several of their machines and have been pleasantly surprised by all of them. The latest addition was one of their N95 systems with 8GB of memory. It hosts Jellyfin, Deluge, Wireguard (client and server), dns, forgejo, etc.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

I've actually heard of Beelink before, just didn't think about them for this.

I'm assuming I can have Plex running on the Beelink and just mount the drive on my Synology with all my files?

I've definitely been hitting a bit of a CPU bottleneck on the Synology recently. It looks like the Beelink's might use a newer version of the same Intel Celeron's. Passmark gives a mark of 4078 vs 1197 for the mini PC one, so I'm assuming it will be plenty better but I'm curious if you've noticed any issues with it.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 weeks ago

I recently added a used mini pc to my lab and it has a Ryzen 3550H, 16GB ram and 512GB nvme; it cost less than 100€ total, hits almost 8000 passmark. Just to give you an idea of what you can get on the used market, I wouldn't buy a new Celeron pc myself.

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