this post was submitted on 14 Oct 2023
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Selfhosted

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Is it a bad idea to use my desktop to self host?

What are the disadvantages?? Can they be overcome?

I use it primarily for programming, sometimes gaming and browsing.

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[–] cyclohexane@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So I already host a lot of stuff on a raspberry pi 4B. But when I tried to host Jellyfin, encoding was trouble on it, so I used my desktop to host Jellyfin as a quick solution, but using sshfs from the raspberry pi to access the media files. So now I wonder, is it worth it moving Jellyfin to something else? Is it worth it moving the media files to the desktop?

[–] atzanteol@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Is it performing well as is? sshfs isn't very high performance, but if it's working it's fine - nfs would likely perform better though. I run jellyfin in a vm with an nfs mount to my file server and it works fine. Interface is zippy and scanning doesn't take too long. I don't get GPU acceleration but the CPU on that system (10th gen i7 I think) is fast enough that I haven't had much trouble with transcoding (yet).

[–] cyclohexane@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's actually not bad, surprisingly. I have had issues sometimes, but they're network issues related to my router. I haven't had them in a while.

[–] atzanteol@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

If it's working - that's fine. Creating dependencies can make things more complex (you now need two systems running for one service to work) - but also isolating 'concerns' can be beneficial. Having a single "file server" lets me re-build other servers without worrying about losing important data for example. It separates system libraries and configuration from application data. And managing a file-server is pretty simple as the requirements are very basic (Ubuntu install with nfs-utils - and nothing else). It also lets me centralize backups as everything on the file server is backed-up automatically.

Things can be as simple or as complex as you want. I will re-iterate that keeping a "one server per service" mindset will pay off in the long-run. If you only have your desktop and a Pi then docker can help with keeping your services well isolated from each other (as well as from your desktop).