Server for Hardware Transcoding - Printable Version +- Jellyfin Forum (https://forum.jellyfin.org) +-- Forum: Off Topic (https://forum.jellyfin.org/f-off-topic) +--- Forum: Self-hosting & Homelabs (https://forum.jellyfin.org/f-self-hosting-homelabs) +--- Thread: Server for Hardware Transcoding (/t-server-for-hardware-transcoding) |
Server for Hardware Transcoding - kutosan - 2023-07-19 I have been a Kodi user for many years, but I am not up to date with the new technologies. I usually had a NAS that had my media and then installed Kodi clients (previously on fire tv 4k or nvidia shield tubes) on each tv. Recently with the cheaper android TVs, I just sideloaded Kodi and pointed it to the NAS. I am now noticing that certain mkv media isn't able to keep up and I'm pretty sure it's the low powered TVs that are the problem since a tablet in the same area can run just find. I am considering revamping my entire setup but am trying to use my existing NAS ( Synology DS418 ). If I were to get a small low power machine such as an intel NUC, point it to the NAS, and make it a dedicated Jellyfin server, would this be enough to stream and perform hardware transcoding to the android TVs? I would like 2 concurrent 4k streams if possible but 1 would be sufficient if it's significantly cheaper. I know I probably need to provide more specs but even if someone has an article to help me understand how to properly size the environment that would be greatly appreciated. RE: Server for Hardware Transcoding - TheDreadPirate - 2023-07-19 Most newish Intel CPUs should be able to transcode two 4K streams. Which Intel CPU generation depends on whether you need AV1 or not. 13th gen+ for AV1. 11th and 12th gen if you only need HEVC. RE: Server for Hardware Transcoding - traptegies - 2023-07-25 (2023-07-19, 09:27 PM)TheDreadPirate Wrote: Most newish Intel CPUs should be able to transcode two 4K streams. Which Intel CPU generation depends on whether you need AV1 or not. 13th gen+ for AV1. 11th and 12th gen if you only need HEVC. Looks like 10th gen is also sufficient for HEVC: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000057555/graphics.html RE: Server for Hardware Transcoding - Shadowghost - 2023-07-25 If you just want HEVC and HDR tonemapping, any Intel CPU/iGPU combo sice 7th gen is sufficient. More recent gens are more efficient though and might produce better output. E.g. my J4105 handles one 4k HDR -> 1080p SDR trancode with tonemapping just fine (it might struggle with high bitrates though, I'd advise for something more recent). RE: Server for Hardware Transcoding - jamhandman - 2023-08-26 (2023-07-19, 09:12 PM)kutosan Wrote: I have been a Kodi user for many years, but I am not up to date with the new technologies. I usually had a NAS that had my media and then installed Kodi clients (previously on fire tv 4k or nvidia shield tubes) on each tv. Recently with the cheaper android TVs, I just sideloaded Kodi and pointed it to the NAS. I am now noticing that certain mkv media isn't able to keep up and I'm pretty sure it's the low powered TVs that are the problem since a tablet in the same area can run just find. Have you considered reencoding your content to get direct play working? I run jellyfin of my NAS and direct play makes this possible. Audio transcoding is fine, but van also be avoided if needed... Video transcoding is the worst... |